Voices

New commissioner says FTC should get tough on companies like Facebook, Google

By Jesse Eisinger, ProPublica   |   May 15, 2018 at 9:00 AM
Federal Trade Commissioner Rohit Chopra is former assistant director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI

May 15 (UPI) -- Declaring that "the credibility of law enforcement and regulatory agencies has been undermined by the real or perceived lax treatment of repeat offenders," newly installed Democratic Federal Trade Commissioner Rohit Chopra Google, are under FTC consent orders for various alleged transgressions (such as, in Facebook's case, not keeping its promises to protect the privacy of its users' data). Typically, a first FTC action essentially amounts to a warning not to do it again. The second carries potential penalties that are more serious.

Some critics charge that that approach has encouraged companies to treat FTC and other regulatory orders casually, often violating their terms. They also say the FTC and other regulators and law enforcers have gone easy on corporate recidivists.

In 2012, a Republican FTC commissioner, J. Thomas Rosch, Elizabeth Warren and a former assistant director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. President Donald Trump nominated him to his post in October, and he was confirmed last month. The FTC is led by a five-person commission, with a chairman from the president's party.

The Chopra memo is also a tacit criticism of enforcement in the Obama years. Chopra cites the SEC's practice of giving waivers to banks that have been sanctioned by the Department of Justice or regulators allowing them to continue to receive preferential access to capital markets. The habitual waivers Wells Fargo and the giant British bank HSBC too lightly after repeated misconduct.

"When companies violate orders, this is usually the result of serious management dysfunction, a calculated risk that the payoff of skirting the law is worth the expected consequences, or both," he wrote. Both require more serious, structural remedies, rather than small fines.

The repeated bad behavior and soft penalties "undermine the rule of law," he argued.

Chopra called for the FTC to use more aggressive tools: referring criminal matters to the Department of Justice; holding individual executives accountable, even if they weren't named in the initial complaint; and "meaningful" civil penalties.

The FTC used such aggressive tactics in going after Kevin Trudeau, infomercial marketer of miracle treatments for bodily ailments. Chopra implied that the commission does not treat corporate recidivists with the same toughness. "Regardless of their size and clout, these offenders, too, should be stopped cold," he writes.

Chopra also suggested other remedies. He called for the FTC to consider banning companies from engaging in certain business practices; requiring that they close or divest the offending business unit or subsidiary; requiring the dismissal of senior executives; and clawing back executive compensation, among other forceful measures.

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