Responding to an FTC Bureau of Competition Civil Investigative Demand (CID)
So your probably holding this FTC civil investigative demand about antitrust violations and your entire business strategy is unraveling. Maybe competitors complained about your pricing. Maybe your merger triggered review. Or maybe your just caught up in there latest monopolization crusade. Look, we get it. Your ABSOLUTELY PANICKED. And you should be! Because FTC can block mergers, break up companies, and refer cases for CRIMINAL prosecution with executives facing 10 YEARS in federal prison!
What Makes FTC Competition CIDs So Terrifying?
Let me explain the antitrust nightmare your facing. The Bureau of Competition has virtually unlimited investigative powers to destroy any business they think is “anticompetitive”!
The FTC doesn’t need court approval to issue CIDs – they just send them! Demand millions of documents? Done! Force executives to testify under oath? Easy! Access your most sensitive business strategies? ABSOLUTELY! We’ve seen companies spend $10 million just responding to impossible CID demands!
Here’s what’s really scary – FTC can demand ANY information they claim is “relevant” to there investigation! Your pricing algorithms? Hand them over! Customer contracts? All of them! Internal strategy emails? Every single one! They literally demand your entire business playbook!
How Crushing Are Antitrust Penalties?
Hold onto your market share because these penalties will destroy everything you’ve built!
Civil penalties are devastating – merger blocked? Years of planning and millions in fees wasted! Forced divestiture? Sell your best assets at fire-sale prices! Behavioral remedies? Let competitors access your innovations! We’ve seen billion-dollar deals killed by FTC opposition!
But criminal antitrust is TERRIFYING! Sherman Act violations carry 10 years federal prison and $100 million corporate fines! Price fixing? Executives go to prison! Market allocation? PRISON! Bid rigging? Definitely prison! One CEO got 5 years for a single meeting with competitors!
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(212) 300-5196What Triggers FTC Competition Investigations?
Your probably wondering “Who complained about us?” Let me tell you what puts companies in FTC’s crosshairs:
FTC has “streamlined” investigations in key areas meaning they target specific industries aggressively! Tech companies, healthcare, pharma, energy – if your successful in these sectors, your a target!
Competitor complaints are the deadliest trigger! Losing market share? Complain to FTC about “anticompetitive conduct”! Can’t match prices? Claim predatory pricing! We’ve seen companies weaponize FTC to destroy more efficient competitors!
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.
What Does an FTC Competition CID Demand?
The scope is absolutley overwhelming! FTC demands impossibly broad categories of information:

Your company just received a Civil Investigative Demand from the FTC's Bureau of Competition requesting five years of internal pricing communications, market analysis documents, and executive emails related to your recent acquisition of a smaller competitor. The CID has a 30-day response deadline and demands production of over 200 categories of documents, many of which contain trade secrets and privileged attorney-client communications.
Can I push back on the scope of this CID or do I have to turn over everything the FTC is asking for, including our privileged strategy documents?
You absolutely have the right to negotiate the scope of a CID and to withhold privileged materials, but you need to act quickly and strategically. Under Section 20 of the FTC Act (15 U.S.C. § 57b-1), you can file a petition to limit or quash the CID in federal court if the demands are unreasonable, overly broad, or unduly burdensome — but that petition must be filed within 20 days of service. We typically work with the FTC staff to negotiate reasonable modifications to the document requests, create a proper privilege log for any withheld materials, and establish search term protocols that protect sensitive business information while still satisfying the Bureau's investigative needs. Ignoring the deadline or producing documents haphazardly can expose your company to civil penalties or, worse, give the FTC ammunition to pursue a full-blown enforcement action under Section 5 of the FTC Act.
This is general information only. Contact us for advice specific to your situation.
All documents relating to competition – how do you even define that? Every email mentioning competitors, pricing, or market share! Strategic plans, board presentations, financial projections! Customer communications, supplier contracts, distribution agreements! Even personal phones and texts of executives!
The worst part? Short deadlines! 30 days to produce millions of documents! Extensions rarely granted! Miss the deadline? FTC goes to court like they did with Total Wine – federal judge orders compliance or face contempt!
