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Three Years After Policy Shift, Still No Wage-Fixing or No-Poach Prosecutions from DOJ

October 10, 2019

Three Years After Policy Shift, Still No Wage-Fixing or No-Poach Prosecutions from DOJ

October 10, 2019

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Whatever the reason for the lack of prosecutions, the DOJ wields a significant hammer for violators.

In an October 2016 guidance document, the United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division (DOJ) and the Federal Trade Commission alerted human resources professionals to potential violations of the antitrust laws in hiring and compensation decisions. The guidance included the announcement that, “Going forward, the DOJ intends to proceed criminally against naked wage-fixing or no-poaching agreements.” A naked agreement is one that is not ancillary to a broader, legitimate collaboration between businesses.

The DOJ’s decision to proceed criminally against such agreements is significant. Although the Sherman Act allows the DOJ to proceed either criminally or civilly against antitrust violators, before the guidance was issued the DOJ had treated agreements between competitors not to solicit each other’s employees as merely civil violations. Following the guidance, companies and individuals suddenly had to worry about criminal fines and potential jail sentences for entering into such agreements. Nevertheless, three years have now passed without a single such indictment being filed.

The DOJ’s No-Poach Activity

There were indications early in 2018 that criminal wage-fixing and no-poach prosecutions would be forthcoming. In January 2018, Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust Makan Delrahim said that the DOJ had several criminal no-poach investigations underway, that he had been “shocked” by how many such agreements are out there, and that announcements would be made in the coming months. But no such announcements have come from the DOJ.

This is not to say that the DOJ has been on the sidelines with respect to no-poach agreements since issuing the guidance document. In April 2018, the DOJ reached a civil settlement of no-poach allegations with two of the world’s largest rail equipment suppliers, Knorr-Bremse AG and Westinghouse Air Brake Technologies Corporation (Wabtec). Knorr and Wabtec had agreed in 2009 not to solicit each other’s employees. Because the conduct had occurred prior to the October 2016 announcement of the new policy, the DOJ did not charge a criminal violation in that case. In addition to that settlement, the DOJ has also filed several “statements of interest” in civil no-poach cases throughout the country.

In Seaman v. Duke University, a federal case involving an alleged agreement between Duke University and the University of North Carolina not to hire each other’s faculty, the DOJ filed a statement of interest supporting the plaintiff’s position on the proper standard to apply in evaluating the no-poach agreement. In its statement, the DOJ urged the court to evaluate the agreement under the per se standard, rather than the harder-to-prove “rule of reason” standard, if the evidence proved that Duke and UNC had entered into a naked no-poach agreement. If, on the other hand, the evidence showed that the agreement was reasonably necessary to a separate, legitimate business transaction or collaboration between the employers, it should be judged under the rule of reason, the DOJ argued.

The DOJ also filed statements of interest in several related cases in Washington state involving no-poach provisions in franchise agreements among fast-food companies. The DOJ sided with the defendants in those cases and urged the court to apply the rule of reason, and not the per se standard, when determining whether the plaintiffs had stated a claim that the agreements violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act. The reason that the DOJ argued for application of the rule of reason in those cases is that, unlike the Seaman v. Duke case, the alleged agreements were vertical ones between franchisors and their franchisees. Vertical arrangements are almost always assessed under the rule of reason.

No-Poach Agreements Still a “High Priority” for the DOJ

On September 23, 2019, the DOJ held a public workshop on competition in labor markets. In his remarks at the workshop, Assistant Attorney General Delrahim sought to reassure the audience that the DOJ was still focused on bringing criminal wage-fixing and no-poach cases: “While we cannot comment on the status or the timing of our criminal no-poach and wage-fixing investigations, I want to reaffirm that criminal prosecution of naked no-poach and wage-fixing agreements remains a high priority for the Antitrust Division.” Indirectly addressing the lack of prosecutions, he stated, “The success of the department in this initiative is not based on quantitative metrics, but on the qualitative performance of our investigative work. That is especially true in matters implicating an individual’s liberty interest.”

Some have speculated that the DOJ is waiting for the perfect set of facts before bringing an indictment in a wage-fixing or no-poach case. It is worth noting that since Delrahim’s January 2018 statement that there would be forthcoming announcements of criminal prosecutions, the DOJ has lost several high-profile antitrust trials, including the failed AT&T/Time Warner merger challenge in June 2018 and the acquittal of three London-based former foreign exchange traders of price-fixing charges in October 2018. In light of these trial setbacks, the DOJ may be hesitant to bring charges unless the case is airtight, so as not to risk another loss at trial.

Severe Penalties for No-Poach Violators

Whatever the reason for the lack of prosecutions, the DOJ wields a significant hammer for violators. The Sherman Act contains severe penalties for anticompetitive agreements such as wage-fixing or no-poach agreements. Violations are punishable by up to $100 million in fines for companies and $1 million in fines for individuals, or twice the gross gain or loss from the offense, whichever is greater. Individuals can be sentenced to up to 10 years of imprisonment. In addition, private lawsuits—which inevitably follow such prosecutions—could lead to companies paying significant damages. And in antitrust cases, plaintiffs are entitled to three times the amount the plaintiff actually suffered, plus attorney fees.

Thus, wage-fixing or no-poach agreements could result in serious consequences. Regardless of when the DOJ brings its first indictment, these consequences should serve as an adequate deterrent for any company or individual contemplating such agreements.

For Further Information

If you have any questions about this Alert, please contact Christopher H. Casey, any of the attorneys in our Antitrust and Competition Groupattorneys in our White-Collar Criminal Defense, Corporate Investigations and Regulatory Compliance Group or the attorney in the firm with whom you are regularly in contact.

Disclaimer: This Alert has been prepared and published for informational purposes only and is not offered, nor should be construed, as legal advice. For more information, please see the firm's full disclaimer.