United States, et al. v. Election Systems and Software, Inc.; Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement, 12256-12270 [2010-5519]
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BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States, et al. v. Election
Systems and Software, Inc.; Proposed
Final Judgment and Competitive
Impact Statement
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,
15 U.S.C. 16(b)–(h), that a proposed
Final Judgment, Stipulation and
Competitive Impact Statement have
been filed with the United States
District Court for the District of
Columbia in United States, et al. v.
Election Systems and Software Inc.,
Civil Action No. 10–00380. On March 8,
2010, the United States filed a
Complaint alleging that the proposed
acquisition by Election Systems and
Software, Inc., (‘‘ES&S’’) of Premier
Election Services, Inc., and PES
Holdings, Inc. violated Section 7 of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. The proposed
Final Judgment, filed the same time as
the Complaint, requires ES&S to divest
certain tangible and intangible assets.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed
Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact
Statement are available for inspection at
the Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, Antitrust Documents Group,
450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite 1010,
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202–
514–2481), on the Department of
Justice’s Web site at https://
www.usdoj.gov/atr, and at the Office of
the Clerk of the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia.
Copies of these materials may be
obtained from the Antitrust Division
upon request and payment of the
copying fee set by Department of Justice
regulations.
Public comment is invited within 60
days of the date of this notice. Such
comments, and responses thereto, will
be published in the Federal Register
and filed with the Court. Comments
should be directed to Maribeth Petrizzi,
Chief, Litigation II Section, Antitrust
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Division, U.S. Department of Justice,
450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite 8700,
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202–
307–0924).
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations.
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia
CASE: 1:10–cv–00380
Assigned To: Bates, John D.
Assign Date: 3/8/2010
Description: Antitrust
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Department of Justice, Antitrust
Division, 450 5th Street, NW., Suite
8700, Washington, D.C. 20530; STATE
OF ARIZONA Office of the Attorney
General, 1275 West Washington,
Phoenix, Arizona 85007; STATE OF
COLORADO Office of the Attorney
General, 1525 Sherman St., Seventh
Floor, Denver, Colorado 80203; STATE
OF FLORIDA Office of the Attorney
General, PL–01, The Capitol,
Tallahassee, Florida 32399; STATE OF
MAINE Office of the Attorney General,
6 State House Station, Augusta, Maine
04333; STATE OF MARYLAND Office
of the Attorney General, Antitrust
Division, 200 St. Paul Place, 19th Floor,
Baltimore, Maryland 21202;
COMMONWEALTH OF
MASSACHUSETTS Office of the
Attorney General Martha Coakley, One
Ashburton Place, Boston, Massachusetts
02108; STATE OF NEW MEXICO Office
of the Attorney General of New Mexico,
111 Lomas Blvd. NW., Suite 300,
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102;
STATE OF TENNESSEE Office of the
Attorney General and Reporter, 425
Fifth Avenue North, Nashville,
Tennessee 37243; and STATE OF
WASHINGTON Office of the Attorney
General, 800 Fifth Avenue, Suite 2000,
Seattle, Washington 98104; Plaintiffs, v.
ELECTION SYSTEMS AND
SOFTWARE, INC. 11208 John Galt
Boulevard, Omaha, Nebraska 68137;
Defendant.
COMPLAINT
Plaintiffs, the United States of
America (‘‘United States’’), acting under
the direction of the Attorney General of
the United States, and the States of
Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maine,
Maryland, New Mexico, Tennessee, and
Washington, and the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts (the ‘‘Plaintiff States’’),
acting under the direction of their
respective Attorneys General, bring this
civil antitrust action against defendant
Election Systems and Software, Inc.
(‘‘ES&S’’), to obtain a permanent
injunction and other relief to remedy
the harm to competition caused by
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ES&S’s acquisition of Premier Election
Solutions, Inc. and PES Holdings, Inc.
(collectively, ‘‘Premier’’). Plaintiffs allege
as follows:
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I. NATURE OF THE ACTION
1. ES&S is the largest provider of
voting equipment systems in the United
States. On September 2, 2009, ES&S
acquired Premier, a subsidiary of
Diebold, Inc. (‘‘Diebold’’), then the
second largest provider of voting
equipment systems in the United States.
As a result of that acquisition, ES&S
provides more than 70 percent of the
voting equipment systems that
registered voters rely on to vote in
federal, state and local elections held in
the United States.
2. Competition in the provision of
voting equipment systems is critical to
ensure that vendors continue to develop
accurate, reliable and secure systems,
and provide those systems to state,
county and local election administrators
at competitive prices.
3. ES&S’s acquisition of Premier
combined the two largest providers of
voting equipment systems in the United
States and the two firms that had been,
for many customers, the closest bidders
for the provision of voting equipment
systems. As a result of this transaction,
prices for voting equipment systems
likely will increase, while quality and
innovation likely will decline, as a
consequence of reduced competition in
violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18.
II. THE DEFENDANT
4. Defendant Election Systems and
Software, Inc. (‘‘ES&S’’) is a Nebraska
corporation with its headquarters in
Omaha, Nebraska, and includes its
successors and assigns, its subsidiaries,
including Premier, and its divisions,
groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees. Prior
to its acquisition of Premier, ES&S was
already the largest provider of voting
equipment systems in the United States,
had systems installed in at least 41
states, and collected revenue of $149.4
million in 2008. Premier, now an ES&S
subsidiary, was the second largest
provider of voting equipment systems in
the United States prior to its acquisition,
had equipment installed in 33 states,
and collected revenue of approximately
$88.3 million in 2008.
III. JURISDICTION AND VENUE
5. The United States brings this action
against defendant ES&S under Section
15 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 25, as
amended, to prevent and restrain ES&S
from continuing to violate Section 7 of
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the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18. Each of
the Plaintiff States brings this action
under Section 16 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. § 26, to prevent and restrain the
violation by Defendant of Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18. The
Plaintiff States, by and through their
respective Attorneys General, or other
authorized officials, bring this action in
their sovereign capacities and as parens
patriae on behalf of the citizens, general
welfare, and economy of each of their
states.
6. Defendant ES&S develops, sells and
services voting equipment systems in
the flow of interstate commerce. ES&S’s
activities in developing, selling and
servicing voting equipment systems
substantially affect interstate commerce.
The Court has jurisdiction over this
action and over the parties pursuant to
15 U.S.C. § 25 and 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331
and 1337.
7. ES&S transacts business, and has
consented to venue and personal
jurisdiction, in the District of Columbia.
Venue is therefore proper in this District
under Section 12 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. § 22 and 28 U.S.C. § 1391(c).
IV. BACKGROUND
8. In the wake of the 2000 Presidential
Election, Congress enacted the Help
America Vote Act (HAVA) to address
perceived shortfalls in the accuracy,
security and reliability of voting
equipment. 42 U.S.C. 15301–15545
(2002). HAVA authorized funding of
approximately $3.86 billion to
encourage jurisdictions responsible for
the administration of elections to
replace mechanical voting devices such
as lever and punch card machines with
new electronic voting equipment
systems. HAVA also created a new
agency, the Election Assistance
Commission (EAC), to adopt standards
for and certify voting equipment
systems to ensure their reliability and
security. The EAC issued standards in
2002 and 2005, and those standards
continue to evolve. HAVA also required
that voting equipment systems contain
devices that allow disabled voters to
cast and verify their votes privately and
independently. 42 U.S.C.
15481(a)(3)(A)–(B) (2002).
9. State law sets the certification
requirements for any voting equipment
system installed within a state. Most
states require that voting equipment
systems or the devices that comprise
those systems be certified, either at the
federal level by the EAC, or at the state
level according to standards set by the
election authorities of that state. State
certification regimes may be more or
less rigorous than that of the EAC, and
some states require that a vendor be
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certified by both the EAC and the state’s
own process. A minority of states
require neither federal nor state
certification, but describe technical
standards for vendors responding to
requests for proposal (‘‘RFP’’) for voting
equipment systems.
10. Voting equipment systems are
purchased either by a state agency or by
an election board or official at the
county or local level. A jurisdiction
typically goes through an extensive
public procurement process to identify
the correct system to meet its needs and
determine its preferred vendor. Before
bids are seriously considered, vendors
often must be qualified by meeting
certain financial criteria. The
procurement process for large, complex
customers can span more than a year,
involves extensive communications
between the customer and vendors,
typically requires public demonstrations
of equipment, and often involves thirdparty consultants hired by the customer.
As vendors proceed through the
procurement process, they usually
become more familiar with the needs of
the customer and the competing
vendors under consideration. Often,
customers allow a discrete group of
vendors to proceed to a best and final
round, where vendors may revise the
terms of their bids, including price
terms, before a winning bid is selected.
11. Performance of voting equipment
systems on Election Day is critical
because the failure of a system, or any
of the devices within a system, can
affect the integrity of the democratic
process, a failure that often cannot be
remedied. Although certification testing
of voting equipment systems and
devices is designed to identify technical
deficiencies, many certified devices
have demonstrated security and
accuracy problems when deployed in
the field for an election. However,
customers typically use voting
equipment systems only once or twice
every two years, so opportunities to test
the reliability of equipment are few. As
a result, an established record of
successful voting equipment
performance is of great importance to
customers in evaluating the likely
accuracy and reliability of a voting
equipment system. Election
administrators, who often are elected
officials themselves, use successful past
experience as one basis for judging the
reliability of a voting equipment system.
12. The significant variation of
election laws and practices among
jurisdictions results in substantial
differences in customers’ technical
requirements for their voting equipment
systems. A jurisdiction’s voting
equipment system needs also may be
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based on the number of registered
voters; the density of population within
geographic boundaries; the number of
polling sites; accommodation of the
needs of disabled voters; ballot
complexity, including legal
requirements for ballot design, and the
number of different ballot layouts,
languages, and political parties;
frequency of elections; requirements for
processing absentee ballots; timing of
reporting results; and other issues.
13. Between 2002 and 2006, most
states procured new voting equipment
systems, exhausting their HAVA funds.
Most of these jurisdictions anticipate
that their new systems will last at least
ten years. Given the current economic
environment, many jurisdictions are
considering attempts to extend the life
of existing systems by investing in
repair, service, and upgrades, in order to
forestall the need to purchase new
systems. However, a few states and
several large counties anticipate
purchasing a new voting equipment
system in the next year or two. A
number of other jurisdictions have
relatively old voting equipment systems
that may need to be replaced within the
next several years.
14. Since 2005, several jurisdictions
have required that voting equipment
systems create a paper-based record of
each vote cast, out of concern that the
electronic audit component of some
devices within the system was
insufficiently secure to guarantee the
accuracy of election results. Vendors
believe this movement has created and
will continue to create additional
demand for new voting equipment
systems over the next few years, despite
the exhaustion of HAVA funding.
V. TRADE AND COMMERCE
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A. The Relevant Product Market
15. A voting equipment system is the
integrated collection of customized
hardware, software, firmware and
associated services used to
electronically record, tabulate, transmit
and report votes in an election. The
number, variety, and operation of
electronic components vary depending
on the needs of the jurisdiction
responsible for administering elections,
which may be the state, county or local
government, depending on state law.
16. A voting equipment system differs
from the mechanical lever and punch
card voting devices used in the past in
conjunction with manual tabulation
methods. Mechanical systems cannot
accommodate speedy tabulation across a
large number of voters; do not allow
disabled voters the opportunity to cast
an independent, private ballot; and are
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considered less accurate and reliable
than voting equipment systems.
17. Hardware devices used to
electronically record votes vary by
recording method, and can be used for
a variety of functions. These devices
may include precinct or central count
Optical Scan (‘‘OS’’) devices; Direct
Recording Electronic (‘‘DRE’’) devices;
and Ballot Marking Devices (‘‘BMD’’). In
addition to the basic function of
recording a vote cast on Election Day,
these devices may be used to create a
paper record of each vote, to allow
independent voting by disabled voters,
and to read votes cast by absentee or
vote-by-mail voters. Depending on the
needs of the jurisdiction, a voting
equipment system may include only one
type of device, or several different types
of devices used in concert. All three
types of recording devices feed votes
into a tabulator, which counts each vote
and prepares a report, with the
assistance of associated software and
firmware.
18. OS devices create a paper record
of each vote and are commonly used to
read absentee ballots, but cannot
provide a completely private and
independent voting experience for any
disabled voter. OS devices require a
voter to mark an individual paper ballot,
which is then inserted into a scanner to
be electronically read. Central Count OS
devices, particularly high-speed, digital
models, are commonly used to read
ballots submitted by absentee or voteby-mail voters. Most OS devices read
and record voter marks as data, though
some digital devices capture the actual
image of the ballot, to better judge the
intent of the voter. Typically, OS
devices cannot fully enable a disabled
voter to cast a ballot independently, as
assistance in marking the ballot and
transferring it to the ballot box is
required.
19. DRE devices, sometimes referred
to as touch screens, allow a voter to
enter a vote by interfacing directly with
a monitor screen, and some models are
equipped with a device that creates a
scrolling paper record of the votes
recorded, often referred to as a Voter
Verified Paper Trail. DRE devices allow
disabled voters to cast their vote
independently, so they often are
provided exclusively for the use of
disabled voters at polling places that
may otherwise rely on OS equipment.
DRE devices cannot be used to read
ballots submitted by mail.
20. BMD’s require a voter to insert an
individual paper ballot into an
electronic device, and then mark that
ballot using a small monitor interface
and specialized electronic pen. BMDs
are designed to accommodate disabled
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voters, allowing the independent
recording of a vote, but pollworker
assistance still is required to transfer the
marked ballot to the ballot box. BMDs
cannot be used to read ballots submitted
by mail.
21. The recording and tabulation
devices contained within a voting
equipment system are bound together by
a collection of proprietary election
management software and firmware.
The software and firmware enables the
operation of each device,
communication between devices and
reporting of the election results.
22. Jurisdictions purchase voting
equipment systems bundled with a
variety of services for the initial
implementation and long-term service
and support of the system. Initial
implementation services often include
project management, equipment
delivery, administrator and pollworker
training, and warrantees on devices.
Post-implementation services include
hardware, software and firmware
maintenance agreements, and also may
include annual services such as ballot
layout, ballot printing, Election Day
help-desk support and other Election
Day services. Typically, any service that
may require changes to hardware,
software or firmware must be performed
by the original vendor, or that vendor’s
licensed representative.
23. Jurisdictions evaluate competing
bids to provide voting equipment
systems based on compliance with state
law, technical standards, certification
standards, experience in other
jurisdictions and commercial standards
such as price, delivery schedule and
other terms of sale. The combined
technical and commercial needs of the
customer differ for each voting
equipment system bid.
24. A small but significant increase in
the price that vendors bid to provide
voting equipment systems to customers
would not cause customers to substitute
away from electronic voting equipment
systems so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable. Accordingly,
voting equipment systems are a line of
commerce and relevant product market
within the meaning of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
B. Geographic Market
25. In the United States, customers of
voting equipment systems prefer
suppliers with a substantial physical
presence in the United States, including
a network of sales, technical and
support personnel and parts
distribution.
26. Customers prefer such vendors
because, during the design, bid, and
implementation phases of installing a
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new voting equipment system,
customers interact with vendors to test
system functionality, adjust technical
specifications, correct design flaws,
track progress and ensure successful
implementation. Further, customers
require that vendors have a significant
local service presence to assist annually
in the preparation for Election Day, and
to immediately address system
problems arising on Election Day.
27. A small but significant increase in
the price of voting equipment systems
would not cause a sufficient number of
U.S. customers to turn to suppliers of
voting equipment systems that do not
have a substantial physical presence in
the United States so as to make such a
price increase unprofitable.
Accordingly, the United States is a
relevant geographic market within the
meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
C. Anticompetitive Effects of the
Acquisition
28. ES&S’s acquisition of Premier
united two firms that many customers
considered the two closest competitors
in the provision of voting equipment
systems, with the likely effects of higher
prices, a decline in quality and
innovation and changes in other key
elements that are considered
detrimental by most U.S. customers in
the evaluation of bids to provide voting
equipment systems. ES&S and Premier
were considered the closest competitors
by many customers because the two
companies offer systems certified in the
greatest number of jurisdictions; offer a
complete suite of voting equipment
system products; and have a reputation
for reliable equipment. Having acquired
its closest competitor, ES&S will have a
reduced incentive to compete as
aggressively for bids or to invest in new
products, unilaterally reducing the
quality and increasing the price of
voting equipment systems available to
most jurisdictions.
29. Some customers identified ES&S
and Premier as the only vendors
qualified to meet the jurisdiction’s
certification requirements. For instance,
ES&S and Premier are the only two
vendors that offer EAC-certified voting
equipment systems that include an OS
device and a BMD. Indeed, at the time
of the acquisition, ES&S and Premier
were the only active vendors that had
achieved EAC-certification at all.
Likewise, ES&S and Premier voting
equipment systems are certified or
approved in 42 and 33 states,
respectively; more states, by far, than
any other vendor.
30. Prior to the acquisition, ES&S and
Premier had the unique ability to offer
a complete suite of voting equipment
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choices. An array of devices often is
important to meet the goals of providing
a paper-based system, accommodating
disabled voters, and processing absentee
ballots expeditiously. Because voting
equipment systems use proprietary
software, customers do not have the
option of selecting the best in breed of
each type of device from many vendors
and integrating those pieces into a
coherent system. A vendor that can offer
a full complement of equipment choices
within a given system often provides a
benefit to the customer.
31. In order to better secure voting
equipment systems that have been
tested by past experience in similar
jurisdictions, many customers view the
past experience of a vendor’s equipment
as a key element in evaluating its bid.
Moreover, the more that past experience
replicates conditions anticipated in the
customer’s jurisdiction, the more it
augurs for success. ES&S and Premier
are two of only three vendors whose
voting equipment systems have been
deployed in multiple statewide
implementations. Likewise, the two
companies have the broadest range of
past experiences to call upon, making
them most likely to be the bidders with
the most experience and the most
relevant experience for any particular
bid.
32. Only three other firms compete to
provide voting equipment systems.
None of these competitors is likely to
replace the constraint Premier once
exercised on ES&S’s bidding behavior.
Each of these firms is limited by the
level of certification obtained, lack of a
full product line, and the lack of proven
equipment. At least one of these firms
is also limited by the lack of financial
ability to expand. None of these vendors
shares the attributes that made Premier
a close competitor to ES&S, and none is
likely to substantially constrain ES&S’s
behavior in future bids.
33. In contrast, numerous
jurisdictions have benefitted from
vigorous price competition between
ES&S and Premier in the past. ES&S and
Premier were the first and second
lowest bidders for recent bids let by
states for statewide voting equipment
systems. In at least three recent bids for
county-wide voting equipment systems,
each worth between $1 million and $6
million, ES&S and Premier were the
closest bidders.
34. ES&S and Premier have been more
successful than any other vendor in
competing to meet the disparate
requirements of U.S. customers, as
evidenced by each company’s portion of
the installed base of voting equipment
systems. Prior to the acquisition, ES&S
was the incumbent provider to 47
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percent of all registered voters in the
United States, and Premier was the
incumbent to 23 percent of all registered
voters. As a result of its acquisition of
Premier, ES&S became the incumbent
for more than 70 percent of all
registered voters in the United States.
35. One recent state-wide
procurement illustrates the closeness of
competition between ES&S and Premier,
and how that competition restrained
ES&S’s bidding behavior. The state
issued a long-anticipated set of RFPs for
procurement of a new statewide voting
equipment system that called for the
provision of a system that included OS
devices that had been tested by an EACcertified laboratory. As part of the
scoring methodology, the RFPs also
required that bidders identify past
installations of voting equipment
systems, and describe the scope and
complexity of the installed jurisdiction.
ES&S anticipated Premier would be the
front runner for this opportunity. In
early 2009, ES&S projected that Premier
would low-ball the bid, and gave serious
consideration to changing its bid price
in response. Six days before bids were
due, ES&S acquired Premier. Bids were
submitted on behalf of both Premier and
ES&S, but the state could not consider
the Premier bid as a result of ES&S’s
acquisition of and changes to Premier.
No other vendor responded to this RFP,
and ES&S was approved by the state
board overseeing the procurement in
December 2009.
36. The acquisition of Premier both
ended its competitive influence on
specific bids, and reduced ES&S’s
incentive to develop new products and
upgrade existing products. In response
to continuing concerns about the
security and reliability of voting
equipment systems, technical standards
for voting equipment systems are
constantly evolving. ES&S considered
Premier the firm most responsive to
these evolving certification standards,
and elected to follow Premier’s lead in
the development of new products. For
example, in the Fall of 2009, ES&S
introduced its own digital scan highspeed OS central count device in
response to a similar device introduced
by Premier a year earlier. ES&S is
unlikely to continue such innovation
absent competition from Premier. Prior
to its acquisition, Premier submitted an
improved voting equipment system to
certification authorities for testing in
two states, but ES&S withdrew those
applications following the acquisition.
In the absence of competitive pressure
from Premier, ES&S is unlikely to have
the same incentive to develop new
products in the future.
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37. ES&S’s acquisition of Premier,
therefore, likely will substantially lessen
competition in the United States market
for voting equipment systems, which
likely will lead to higher prices, lower
quality and less innovation in violation
of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
D. Difficulty of Entry Into the Provision
of Voting Equipment Systems
38. Successful entry into the
provision of voting equipment systems
is challenging, time-consuming, and
costly. Entry requires not only the
design and development of hardware,
software and firmware products, but
also obtaining multiple levels of
certification, establishing a reputation
for reliable performance, and financial
wherewithal sufficient to assure a buyer
of long-term service capabilities.
39. EAC certification may cost more
than $1 million for each system
certified, and may take fifteen to twentyfour months. These costs are in addition
to internal development costs, estimated
at $2.5 to $5 million. Previous
certification attempts by established
companies such as Premier have
consumed more than $3 million and
required three years. For at least three
of the largest state jurisdictions,
certification requires an additional
investment of time and money. ES&S,
for instance, spent approximately $4
million to become certified in one state.
Other states may be even more rigorous,
requiring that voting systems be
certified both by the EAC and by the
state.
40. Certification alone is not sufficient
for a company that does not have
equipment with a proven record of
reliable performance. One company
recently obtained 2005 EACcertification for its new OS device, after
two years of product development and
testing, and an investment of millions of
dollars. Despite the time and money
invested, the company has yet to sell a
single certified device.
41. Given the time and expense
required for certification, the long
lifecycle of voting equipment systems,
the time required to demonstrate
reliable performance of equipment, and
the absence of ready capital to fund new
investment in the voting equipment
system industry, entry into the
provision of voting equipment systems
would not be timely, likely and
sufficient to prevent an exercise of
market power by ES&S.
VI. VIOLATION ALLEGED
42. ES&S’s acquisition of Premier
substantially lessened competition in
the U.S. market for voting equipment
systems in interstate trade and
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commerce in violation of Section 7 of
the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18.
43. This acquisition has had the
following anticompetitive effects,
among others:
a. competition between ES&S and
Premier in the provision of voting
equipment systems in the United States
has been eliminated;
b. competition generally in the
provision of voting equipment systems
in the United States has been
substantially lessened; and
c. prices will likely increase, quality
will likely decrease, and innovation will
be less likely.
VII. REQUESTED RELIEF
44. Plaintiffs request that this Court:
a. Adjudge and decree that the
Defendant ES&S’s acquisition of Premier
violated Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. § 18;
b. Compel ES&S to divest Premier
assets related to the development,
manufacture and sale of the relevant
products to enable independent and
effective competition;
c. Award such temporary and
preliminary injunctive and ancillary
relief as may be necessary to avert the
likelihood of the dissipation of
Premier’s tangible and intangible assets
during the pendency of this action and
to preserve the possibility of effective
final relief;
d. Award the Plaintiffs the cost of this
action; and
e. Grant the Plaintiffs such other and
further relief as the case requires and
the Court deems just and proper.
Dated: March 8, 2010.
Respectfully submitted,
FOR PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA
/s/ lll
Molly S. Boast,
Acting Assistant Attorney General.
/s/ lll
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations.
/s/ lll
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section,
D.C. Bar # 435204.
/s/ lll
Dorothy B. Fountain,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section,
D.C. Bar #439469.
Stephanie A. Fleming, James K. Foster,
Erin Carter Grace, Blake Rushforth,
Attorneys, U.S. Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division, Litigation II
Section, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite
8700, Washington, D.C. 20530, Tel:
(202) 514–9228, Fax: (202) 514–9033,
Email: Stephanie.Fleming@usdoj.gov.
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I, Stephanie Fleming, hereby certify
that on March 8, 2010, I caused a copy
of the Complaint to be served on
defendant Election Systems and
Software, Inc., by mailing the document
via email to the duly authorized legal
representative of the defendant, as
follows:
FOR ELECTION SYSTEMS &
SOFTWARE, INC.
Joseph G. Krauss, Hogan & Hartson LLP,
555 Thirteenth Street, NW.,
Washington, DC. 20004, (202) 637–
5600, jgkrauss@hhlaw.com
/s/ lll
Stephanie A. Fleming, Esq.
United States Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division, Litigation II
Section, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite
8700, Washington, D.C. 20530, (202)
514–9228, (202) 514–9033,
stephanie.fleming@usdoj.gov
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CASE NO.:
JUDGE:
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et
al., Plaintiffs, v. ELECTION SYSTEMS
AND SOFTWARE, INC., Defendant.
FINAL JUDGMENT
WHEREAS, Plaintiffs, the United
States of America (‘‘United States’’), the
States of Arizona, Colorado, Florida,
Maine, Maryland, New Mexico,
Tennessee, and Washington, and the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts (the
‘‘Plaintiff States’’), filed their Complaint
on March 8, 2010; Plaintiffs and
Defendant, Election Systems and
Software, Inc., by their respective
attorneys, have consented to the entry of
this Final Judgment without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law,
and without this Final Judgment
constituting any evidence against or
admission by any party regarding any
issue of fact or law;
AND WHEREAS, Defendant agrees to
be bound by the provisions of this Final
Judgment pending its approval by the
Court;
AND WHEREAS, the essence of this
Final Judgment is the prompt and
certain divestiture of certain rights or
assets by Defendant to restore
competition;
AND WHEREAS, the United States
requires Defendant to make certain
divestitures for the purpose of
remedying the loss of competition
alleged in the Complaint;
AND WHEREAS, Defendant has
represented to the United States that the
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divestiture required below can and will
be made and that it will later raise no
claim of hardship or difficulty as
grounds for asking the Court to modify
any of the divestiture provisions
contained below;
NOW THEREFORE, before any
testimony is taken, without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law,
and upon consent of the parties, it is
ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED:
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I. JURISDICTION
This Court has jurisdiction over the
subject matter of and each of the parties
to this action. The Complaint states a
claim upon which relief may be granted
against Defendant under Section 7 of the
Clayton Act, as amended (15 U.S.C.
§ 18).
II. DEFINITIONS
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ‘‘Acquirer’’ means the entity to
whom Defendant divests the Divestiture
Assets.
B. ‘‘ES&S’’ means Defendant, Election
Systems & Software, Inc., a Delaware
corporation with its headquarters in
Omaha, Nebraska, its successors and
assigns, its subsidiaries, including
Premier Election Solutions, Inc. and
PES Holdings, Inc., both Delaware
corporations (collectively, ‘‘Premier’’),
and its divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships and joint ventures, and
their directors, officers, managers,
agents, and employees.
C. ‘‘Premier Voting Equipment System
Products’’ means all versions, past,
present, and in development, of Premier
hardware, software, and firmware used
to record, tabulate, transmit or report
votes, including all such systems
certified by federal certification
authorities (including, but not limited to
the Assure 1.2 system that was certified
by the United States Election Assistance
Commission on August 6, 2009), and all
such systems certified by the election
authorities of any state.
D. ‘‘AutoMARK Products’’ means
ES&S’s ballot marking device that
allows voters with disabilities to
privately and independently mark a
ballot.
E. ‘‘Divestiture Assets’’ means:
(1) all intangible assets related to the
use, operation, certification, design,
production, modification, enhancement,
distribution, sale, repair or service of the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products, including, but not limited to,
intellectual property (including, but not
limited to, patents, patent applications,
licenses, sublicenses, copyrights,
databases containing design information
and, with respect to the Assure 1.2 suite
of products only, trademarks, trade
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secrets, trade names, service marks,
service names, slogans, domain names,
logos and trade dress); the unregistered
trademark ‘‘Premier’’; data related to the
use, operation, certification testing,
internal testing, and beta testing;
documentation of pending and current
certification efforts with the United
States Election Assistance Commission
(‘‘EAC’’) and the election authorities of
any state; technical information,
software, software source code and
related documentation, know-how,
drawings, blueprints, designs, design
tools and simulation capability, and
specifications for materials, parts, and
devices; safety procedures for the
handling of materials and substances;
quality assurance and control
procedures; all manuals, performance,
financial, operational, and other records
Defendant provides to its own
employees, customers, suppliers, agents,
dealers or licensees; and all available
research data concerning historic and
current research and development
efforts relating to the Premier Voting
Equipment System Products, including,
but not limited to, designs of
experiments and the results of
successful and unsuccessful designs and
experiments;
(2) tangible assets, including:
(a) all tooling and fixed assets owned
by Defendant and used in connection
with the manufacture, assembly,
production, service and repair of the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products, as detailed in Section 2.7 and
Schedule 2.7(a) of the Purchase
Agreement by and among ES&S,
Diebold, Inc., Premier Election
Solutions, Inc., PES Holdings, Inc., and
Premier Election Solutions Canada ULC,
dated September 2, 2009 (‘‘Diebold
Purchase Agreement’’).
(b) inventory, parts and components
for both the Premier Voting Equipment
Products and the AutoMARK Products,
including those that are not
commercially available, sufficient for
the Acquirer to assemble, manufacture,
produce, service and repair the Premier
Voting Equipment System Products and
the AutoMARK Products.
(3) a fully paid-up, non-exclusive,
perpetual, transferable license to certify,
produce, modify, enhance, distribute,
sell, repair and service the AutoMARK
Products. Such license shall include all
intellectual property (including, but not
limited to, patents, patent applications,
licenses, sublicenses, copyrights,
trademarks, trade names, trade secrets,
service marks, service names, slogans,
domain names, logos, and trade dress),
data, drawings, ideas, concepts, knowhow, procedures, processes, technical
information, software, software source
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code and related documentation,
blueprints, specifications, manuals, and
any other intangible assets related to the
use, operation, certification, production,
modification, enhancement,
distribution, sale, repair or service of the
AutoMARK Products.
III. APPLICABILITY
A. This Final Judgment applies to
ES&S, as defined above, and all other
persons in active concert or
participation with it who receive actual
notice of this Final Judgment by
personal service or otherwise.
B. If, prior to complying with Section
IV and V of this Final Judgment,
Defendant sells or otherwise disposes of
all or substantially all of its assets or of
lesser business units that include the
Divestiture Assets, it shall require the
purchaser to be bound by the provisions
of this Final Judgment. Defendant need
not obtain such an agreement from the
Acquirer of the assets divested pursuant
to this Final Judgment.
IV. DIVESTITURE
A. Defendant is ordered and directed,
within sixty (60) calendar days after the
filing of the Complaint in this matter, or
five (5) calendar days after notice of the
entry of this Final Judgment by the
Court, whichever is later, to divest the
Divestiture Assets in a manner
consistent with this Final Judgment to
an Acquirer acceptable to the United
States, in its sole discretion, after
consultation with the Plaintiff States.
The United States, in its sole discretion,
after consultation with the Plaintiff
States, may agree to one or more
extensions of this time period not to
exceed sixty (60) calendar days in total,
and shall notify the Court in such
circumstances. Defendant agrees to use
its best efforts to divest the Divestiture
Assets as expeditiously as possible.
B. In accomplishing the divestiture
ordered by this Final Judgment,
Defendant promptly shall make known,
by usual and customary means, the
availability of the Divestiture Assets.
Defendant shall inform any person
making inquiry regarding a possible
purchase of the Divestiture Assets that
they are being divested pursuant to this
Final Judgment and provide that person
with a copy of this Final Judgment.
Defendant shall offer to furnish to any
prospective Acquirer, subject to
customary confidentiality assurances,
all information and documents relating
to the Divestiture Assets customarily
provided in a due diligence process,
except such information or documents
subject to the attorney-client privilege or
work-product doctrine. Defendant shall
make available such information to the
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United States at the same time that such
information is made available to any
other person.
C. Defendant shall provide the
Acquirer and the United States
information relating to its current and
former employees involved in the use,
operation, certification, design,
production, modification, enhancement,
distribution, sale, repair or service of the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products and/or Premier’s use of the
AutoMARK Products to enable the
Acquirer to make offers of employment
to such personnel. Defendant shall not
interfere with any negotiations by the
Acquirer to employ any such employee
whose primary responsibility is the use,
operation, certification, design,
production, modification, enhancement,
distribution, sale, repair or service of the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products and/or Premier’s use of the
AutoMARK Products.
D. Defendant shall waive all
nondisclosure and noncompete
agreements for all of the current and
former employees of Premier for a
period of six (6) months following the
date of the divestiture of the Divestiture
Assets, for the exclusive purpose of
allowing those employees to seek
employment with the Acquirer.
E. Defendant shall permit any
prospective Acquirer of the Divestiture
Assets to have reasonable access to
personnel involved in the use,
operation, certification, design,
production, modification, enhancement,
distribution, sale, repair or service of the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products and/or the AutoMARK
Products, and access to any and all
financial, operational, or other
documents and information customarily
provided as part of a due diligence
process.
F. At the option of the Acquirer,
Defendant shall enter into a contract for
the purchase of additional parts and
inventory for up to two (2) years
sufficient to meet the Acquirer’s needs
to assemble, manufacture, produce,
service or repair the Premier Voting
Equipment System Products. The terms
and conditions of any sale or
contractual arrangement intended to
satisfy this provision must be
commercially reasonable.
G. In addition, Defendant shall
provide any Acquirer of the Divestiture
Assets information relating to suppliers
of parts and components used for the
assembly, manufacture, production,
repair or service of the Premier Voting
Equipment System Products and the
AutoMARK Products. Defendant shall
not interfere with the Acquirer’s ability
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to contract for the supply of parts or
components from any vendor.
H. Defendant shall immediately
provide any Acquirer with a list of all
current and former customers for the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products.
I. To the extent that current Premier
contracts prevent Premier customers
from selecting the Acquirer as its
provider of equipment or services
related to the Premier Voting Equipment
System Products, the Defendant agrees
to waive any such contractual
impediment at the option of the
customer.
J. At the option of the Acquirer,
Defendant shall enter into a transition
services agreement sufficient to meet the
Acquirer’s needs for assistance in the
use, operation, certification, design,
production, modification, enhancement,
distribution, sale, repair or service of the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products and/or the AutoMARK
Products for a period of up to six (6)
months. The terms and conditions of
any contractual arrangement intended to
satisfy this provision must be
commercially reasonable.
K. On the date of the sale of the
Divestiture Assets, Defendant shall
provide Acquirer with copies of
contracts with all current and former
customers for any of the Premier Voting
Equipment System Products.
L. The Acquirer shall grant Defendant
a non-exclusive license to use the
Premier Voting Equipment System
Products and the assets described in
II(E)(2)(A), but Defendant may not use
such a license to attempt to compete for
any opportunity to sell or lease Premier
Voting Equipment System Products
contained within a Request for Proposal
(or RFP) or a Request for Quote (or RFQ)
for a voting equipment system, or any
upgrade, request or order that calls for
replacement of 50 percent or more of a
customer’s installed voting equipment,
other than in the case of a force majeure
event (i.e., Act of God, fire, earthquake,
flood, explosion, war, or terrorist act), or
to the extent the Defendant is obligated
under a contract with a Premier or
Diebold customer in existence at the
time of Closing, or to the extent that the
Defendant is obligated under a
settlement agreement formed by Diebold
pursuant to Section 4.2(d) of the
Diebold Purchase Agreement. Subject to
the limitations described in Section IV,
Defendant may use the license
described in this paragraph to provide
equipment and services to current
customers.
M. Any improvement or modification
to the Divestiture Assets developed by
either Defendant or the Acquirer shall
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be owned solely by the developing
party.
N. Defendant shall not take any action
that will impede in any way the
operation or divestiture of the
Divestiture Assets.
O. Unless the United States, in its sole
discretion, after consultation with the
Plaintiff States, otherwise consents in
writing, the divestiture pursuant to
Section IV, or by trustee appointed
pursuant to Section V, of this Final
Judgment shall include the entire
Divestiture Assets, and shall be
accomplished in such a way as to satisfy
the United States, in its sole discretion,
after consultation with the Plaintiff
States, that the Divestiture Assets can
and will be used by the Acquirer as part
of a viable, ongoing business that is
engaged in the provision of voting
equipment systems and services. The
divestiture, whether pursuant to Section
IV or Section V of this Final Judgment:
(1) Shall be made to an Acquirer that,
in the United State’s sole judgment,
after consultation with the Plaintiff
States, has the intent and capability
(including the necessary managerial,
operational, technical and financial
capability) of competing effectively in
the provision of voting equipment
systems and services; and
(2) Shall be accomplished so as to
satisfy the United States, in its sole
discretion, after consultation with the
Plaintiff States, that none of the terms of
any agreement between an Acquirer and
Defendant gives Defendant the ability
unreasonably to raise the Acquirer’s
costs, to lower the Acquirer’s efficiency,
or otherwise to interfere in the ability of
the Acquirer to compete effectively.
V. Appointment of Trustee
A. If Defendant has not divested the
Divestiture Assets within the time
period specified in Section IV(A), it
shall notify the United States of that fact
in writing. Upon application of the
United States, the Court shall appoint a
trustee selected by the United States and
approved by the Court to effect the
divestiture of the Divestiture Assets.
B. After the appointment of a trustee
becomes effective, only the trustee shall
have the right to sell the Divestiture
Assets. The trustee shall have the power
and authority to accomplish the
divestiture to an Acquirer acceptable to
the United States, in its sole discretion,
after consultation with the Plaintiff
States, at such price and on such terms
as are then obtainable upon reasonable
effort by the trustee, subject to the
provisions of Sections IV, V, and VI of
this Final Judgment, and shall have
such other powers as this Court deems
appropriate. Subject to Section V(D) of
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this Final Judgment, the trustee may
hire at the cost and expense of
Defendant any investment bankers,
attorneys, or other agents, who shall be
solely accountable to the trustee,
reasonably necessary in the trustee’s
judgment to assist in the divestiture.
C. Defendant shall not object to a sale
by the trustee on any ground other than
the trustee’s malfeasance. Any such
objections by Defendant must be
conveyed in writing to the United States
and the trustee within ten (10) calendar
days after the trustee has provided the
notice required under Section VI.
D. The trustee shall serve at the cost
and expense of Defendant, on such
terms and conditions as the United
States approves, and shall account for
all monies derived from the sale of the
assets sold by the trustee and all costs
and expenses so incurred. After
approval by the Court of the trustee’s
accounting, including fees for its
services and those of any professionals
and agents retained by the trustee, all
remaining money shall be paid to
Defendant and the trust shall then be
terminated. The compensation of the
trustee and any professionals and agents
retained by the trustee shall be
reasonable in light of the value of the
Divestiture Assets and based on a fee
arrangement providing the trustee with
an incentive based on the price and
terms of the divestiture and the speed
with which it is accomplished, but
timeliness is paramount.
E. Defendant shall use its best efforts
to assist the trustee in accomplishing
the required divestiture. The trustee and
any consultants, accountants, attorneys,
and other persons retained by the
trustee shall have full and complete
access to the personnel, books, records,
and facilities of the business to be
divested, and Defendant shall develop
financial and other information relevant
to such business as the trustee may
reasonably request, subject to reasonable
protection for trade secret or other
confidential research, development, or
commercial information. Defendant
shall take no action to interfere with or
to impede the trustee’s accomplishment
of the divestiture.
F. After its appointment, the trustee
shall file monthly reports with the
United States, the Plaintiff States, and
the Court setting forth the trustee’s
efforts to accomplish the divestiture
ordered under this Final Judgment. To
the extent such reports contain
information that the trustee deems
confidential, such reports shall not be
filed in the public docket of the Court.
Such reports shall include the name,
address, and telephone number of each
person who, during the preceding
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month, made an offer to acquire,
expressed an interest in acquiring,
entered into negotiations to acquire, or
was contacted or made an inquiry about
acquiring, any interest in the Divestiture
Assets, and shall describe in detail each
contact with any such person. The
trustee shall maintain full records of all
efforts made to divest the Divestiture
Assets.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished
the divestiture ordered under this Final
Judgment within six (6) months after its
appointment, the trustee shall promptly
file with the Court a report setting forth:
(1) The trustee’s efforts to accomplish
the required divestiture; (2) the reasons,
in the trustee’s judgment, why the
required divestiture has not been
accomplished; and (3) the trustee’s
recommendations. To the extent such
reports contain information that the
trustee deems confidential, such reports
shall not be filed in the public docket
of the Court. The trustee shall at the
same time furnish such report to the
United States and the Plaintiff States,
which shall have the right to make
additional recommendations consistent
with the purpose of the trust. The Court
thereafter shall enter such orders as it
shall deem appropriate to carry out the
purpose of the Final Judgment, which
may, if necessary, include extending the
trust and the term of the trustee’s
appointment by a period requested by
the United States.
VI. Notice of Proposed Divestiture
A. Within two (2) business days
following execution of a definitive
divestiture agreement, Defendant shall
notify the United States, and the
Plaintiff States, of any proposed
divestiture required by Section IV of
this Final Judgment. Within two (2)
business days following execution of a
definitive divestiture agreement, the
trustee shall notify the United States of
any proposed divestiture required by
Section V of this Final Judgment. The
notice shall set forth the details of the
proposed divestiture and list the name,
address, and telephone number of each
person not previously identified who
offered or expressed an interest in or
desire to acquire any ownership interest
in the Divestiture Assets, together with
full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of
receipt by the United States and the
Plaintiff States of such notice, the
United States and any Plaintiff State
may request from Defendant, the
proposed Acquirer, any other third
party, or the trustee if applicable,
additional information concerning the
proposed divestiture, the proposed
Acquirer, and any other potential
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Acquirer. Defendant and the trustee
shall furnish any additional information
requested within fifteen (15) calendar
days of the receipt of the request, unless
the parties shall otherwise agree.
C. Within thirty (30) calendar days
after receipt of the notice or within
twenty (20) calendar days after the
United States has been provided the
additional information requested from
Defendant, the proposed Acquirer, any
third party, and the trustee, whichever
is later, the United States, in its sole
discretion, after consultation with the
Plaintiff States, shall provide written
notice to Defendant and the trustee, if
there is one, stating whether or not it
objects to the proposed divestiture. If
the United States, after consultation
with the Plaintiff States, provides
written notice that it does not object, the
divestiture may be consummated,
subject only to Defendant’s limited right
to object to the sale under Section V(C)
of this Final Judgment. Absent written
notice that the United States does not
object to the proposed Acquirer or upon
objection by the United States, a
divestiture proposed under Section IV
or Section V shall not be consummated.
Upon objection by Defendant under
Section V(C), a divestiture proposed
under Section V shall not be
consummated unless approved by the
Court.
VII. FINANCING
Defendant shall not finance all or any
part of any purchase made pursuant to
Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
VIII. ASSET PRESERVATION
Until the divestiture required by this
Final Judgment has been accomplished,
Defendant shall take all steps necessary
to comply with the Asset Preservation
Stipulation and Order entered by this
Court. Defendant shall take no action
that would jeopardize the divestiture
ordered by this Court.
IX. AFFIDAVITS
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days
of the filing of the Complaint in this
matter, and every thirty (30) calendar
days thereafter until the divestiture has
been completed under Section IV or V,
Defendant shall deliver to the United
States, the Plaintiff States, an affidavit
as to the fact and manner of its
compliance with Section IV or V of this
Final Judgment. Each such affidavit
shall include the name, address, and
telephone number of each person who,
during the preceding thirty (30)
calendar days, made an offer to acquire,
expressed an interest in acquiring,
entered into negotiations to acquire, or
was contacted or made an inquiry about
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acquiring, any interest in the Divestiture
Assets, and shall describe in detail each
contact with any such person during
that period. Each such affidavit shall
also include a description of the efforts
Defendant have taken to solicit buyers
for the Divestiture Assets, and to
provide required information to
prospective Acquirers, including the
limitations, if any, on such information.
Assuming the information set forth in
the affidavit is true and complete, any
objection by the United States, after
consultation with the Plaintiff States, to
information provided by Defendant,
including limitation on information,
shall be made within fourteen (14)
calendar days of receipt of such
affidavit.
B. Within twenty (20) calendar days
of the filing of the Complaint in this
matter, Defendant shall deliver to the
United States an affidavit that describes
in reasonable detail all actions it has
taken and all steps Defendant has
implemented on an ongoing basis to
comply with Section VIII of this Final
Judgment. Defendant shall deliver to the
United States, the Plaintiff States, an
affidavit describing any changes to the
efforts and actions outlined in
Defendant’s earlier affidavits filed
pursuant to this section within fifteen
(15) calendar days after the change is
implemented.
C. Defendant shall keep all records of
all efforts made to preserve and divest
the Divestiture Assets until one year
after such divestiture has been
completed.
X. COMPLIANCE INSPECTION
A. For the purposes of determining or
securing compliance with this Final
Judgment, or of determining whether
the Final Judgment should be modified
or vacated, and subject to any legally
recognized privilege, from time to time
authorized representatives of the United
States Department of Justice Antitrust
Division (‘‘Antitrust Division’’),
including consultants and other persons
retained by the United States, shall,
upon written request of an authorized
representative of the Assistant Attorney
General in charge of the Antitrust
Division, and on reasonable notice to
Defendant, be permitted:
(1) Access during Defendant’s office
hours to inspect and copy, or at the
option of the United States, to require
Defendant to provide hard copy or
electronic copies of, all books, ledgers,
accounts, records, data, and documents
in the possession, custody, or control of
Defendant, relating to any matters
contained in this Final Judgment; and
(2) to interview, either informally or
on the record, Defendant’s officers,
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employees, or agents, who may have
their individual counsel present,
regarding such matters. The interviews
shall be subject to the reasonable
convenience of the interviewee and
without restraint or interference by
Defendant.
B. Upon the written request of an
authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of
the Antitrust Division, Defendant shall
submit written reports or response to
written interrogatories, under oath if
requested, relating to any of the matters
contained in this Final Judgment as may
be requested.
C. No information or documents
obtained by the means provided in this
section shall be divulged by the United
States to any person other than an
authorized representative of the
executive branch of the United States, or
to the Attorneys General of any of the
Plaintiff States, except in the course of
legal proceedings to which the United
States is a party (including grand jury
proceedings), or for the purpose of
securing compliance with this Final
Judgment, or as otherwise required by
law.
D. If at the time information or
documents are furnished by Defendant
to the United States, Defendant
represents and identifies in writing the
material in any such information or
documents to which a claim of
protection may be asserted under Rule
26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, and Defendant marks each
pertinent page of such material, ‘‘Subject
to claim of protection under Rule
26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure,’’ then the United States shall
give Defendant ten (10) calendar days
notice prior to divulging such material
in any legal proceeding (other than a
grand jury proceeding).
XI. NOTIFICATION
Unless such transaction is otherwise
subject to the reporting and waiting
period requirements of the Hart-ScottRodino Antitrust Improvements Act of
1976, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 18a (the
‘‘HSR Act’’), Defendant, without
providing advance notification to the
Antitrust Division, the Plaintiff States,
shall not directly or indirectly acquire
any assets of or any interest (including,
but not limited to, any financial,
security, loan, equity, or management
interest) in any entity engaged in the
provision of voting equipment systems
and services in the United States during
the term of this Final Judgment.
Such notification shall be provided to
the Antitrust Division, the Plaintiff
States, in the same format as, and per
the instructions relating to the
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Notification and Report Form set forth
in the Appendix to Part 803 of Title 16
of the Code of Federal Regulations as
amended, except that the information
requested in Items 5 through 9 of the
instructions must be provided only
about voting equipment systems and
services. Notification shall be provided
at least thirty (30) calendar days prior to
acquiring any such interest, and shall
include, beyond what may be required
by the applicable instructions, the
names of the principal representatives
of the parties to the agreement who
negotiated the agreement, and any
management or strategic plans
discussing the proposed transaction. If,
within the 30-day period after
notification, representatives of the
Antitrust Division make a written
request for additional information,
Defendant shall not consummate the
proposed transaction or agreement until
thirty (30) calendar days after
submitting all such additional
information. Early termination of the
waiting periods in this paragraph may
be requested and, where appropriate,
granted in the same manner as is
applicable under the requirements and
provisions of the HSR Act and rules
promulgated thereunder. This Section
shall be broadly construed and any
ambiguity or uncertainty regarding the
filing of notice under this Section shall
be resolved in favor of filing notice.
XII. NO REACQUISITION
Defendant may not reacquire any part
of the Divestiture Assets during the term
of this Final Judgment.
XIII. RETENTION OF JURISDICTION
This Court retains jurisdiction to
enable any party to this Final Judgment
to apply to this Court at any time for
further orders and directions as may be
necessary or appropriate to carry out or
construe this Final Judgment, to modify
any of its provisions, to enforce
compliance, and to punish violations of
its provisions.
XIV. EXPIRATION OF FINAL
JUDGMENT
Unless this Court grants an extension,
this Final Judgment shall expire ten (10)
years from the date of its entry.
XV. PUBLIC INTEREST
DETERMINATION
Entry of this Final Judgment is in the
public interest. The parties have
complied with the requirements of the
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act,
15 U.S.C. § 16, including making copies
available to the public of this Final
Judgment, the Competitive Impact
Statement, and any comments thereon
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and the United States’s responses to
comments. Based upon the record
before the Court, which includes the
Competitive Impact Statement and any
comments and responses to comments
filed with the Court, entry of this Final
Judgment is in the public interest.
Date: llllllllllllllll
Court approval subject to procedures of
Antitrust Procedures and Penalties
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 16
llllllllllllllllll
l
United States District Judge
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CASE: 1:10–cv–00380
Assigned To: Bates, John D.
Assign Date: 3/8/2010
Description: Antitrust
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et
al., Plaintiffs, v. ELECTION SYSTEMS &
SOFTWARE, Inc., Defendant.
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COMPETITIVE IMPACT STATEMENT
Plaintiff United States of America
(‘‘United States’’), pursuant to Section
2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act (‘‘APPA’’ or ‘‘Tunney Act’’),
15 U.S.C. § 16(b)–(h), files this
Competitive Impact Statement relating
to the proposed Final Judgment
submitted for entry in this civil antitrust
proceeding.
I. NATURE AND PURPOSE OF THE
PROCEEDING
Defendant Election Systems and
Software, Inc. (‘‘ES&S’’) executed a
Purchase Agreement on September 2,
2009, pursuant to which ES&S agreed to
acquire Premier Election Solutions, Inc.
and PES Holdings, Inc. (collectively,
‘‘Premier’’), and other subsidiaries of
Diebold, Inc (‘‘Diebold’’). ES&S’s
acquisition of Premier was
consummated on the same day. Since
the acquisition, Premier no longer
functions as an independent subsidiary,
but has been integrated into ES&S’s
corporate structure.
The United States and the States of
Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maine,
Maryland, New Mexico, Tennessee, and
Washington, and the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts (the ‘‘Plaintiff States’’),
filed a civil antitrust Complaint on
March 8, 2010, seeking injunctive and
other relief to remedy the likely
anticompetitive effects arising from
ES&S’s acquisition of Premier. The
Complaint alleged that the acquisition
combined the two largest providers of
voting equipment systems in the United
States, and the two firms that had been,
for many customers, the closest bidders
for the provision of voting equipment
systems. This combination resulted in a
substantial reduction in competition for
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the provision of voting equipment
systems in the United States, in
violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 18. The loss of Premier
as an independent competitor likely
would result in higher prices, a
reduction in quality, and less
innovation in the U.S. voting equipment
systems market.
At the same time the Complaint was
filed, the United States filed an Asset
Preservation Stipulation and Order
(‘‘APSO’’) and proposed Final Judgment,
which are designed to eliminate the
anticompetitive effects of ES&S’s
consummated acquisition of Premier.
Under the proposed Final Judgment,
which is explained more fully below,
ES&S is required to divest all of the
assets needed for an acquirer to compete
to provide voting equipment systems,
including the intellectual property
related to the Premier voting equipment
systems that it purchased from Diebold;
the tooling and fixed assets used to
manufacture those systems; and existing
inventory and parts related to the
Premier voting equipment systems
(collectively, ‘‘Divestiture Assets’’). In
addition, ES&S is required to divest a
fully paid-up, non-exclusive,
irrevocable license to ES&S’s
AutoMARK products. Under the
proposed Final Judgment, only the
Acquirer may offer Premier systems to
compete for a new voting equipment
system procurement, including orders
that would require replacement of more
than fifty percent of an installed system.
To facilitate the Acquirer’s ability to
service the existing installations of
Premier voting equipment systems, the
proposed Final Judgment also requires
that ES&S waive all non-competition
agreements for employees and waive
any contractual terms that would
otherwise prevent customers from
selecting the Acquirer as their voting
equipment system service provider.
ES&S must also provide transition
services to the Acquirer. Under the
terms of the APSO, ES&S will take
certain steps to ensure that the
Divestiture Assets are preserved in their
current condition and segregated from
ES&S.
The United States and ES&S have
stipulated that the proposed Final
Judgment may be entered after
compliance with the APPA. Entry of the
proposed Final Judgment would
terminate this action, except that the
Court would retain jurisdiction to
construe, modify, or enforce the
provisions of the Final Judgment until
the divestiture is consummated and to
punish violations thereof.
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II. DESCRIPTION OF THE EVENTS
GIVING RISE TO THE ALLEGED
VIOLATIONS
A. The Defendant
Election Systems and Software, Inc. is
the largest provider of voting equipment
systems in the United States. Prior to its
acquisition of Premier, ES&S provided
47 percent of installed systems, in at
least 41 states, and collected revenue of
$149.4 million in 2008. Premier, now an
ES&S subsidiary, was the second largest
provider of voting equipment systems in
the United States prior to its acquisition,
with approximately 23 percent of all
installed systems in 33 states, and
collected revenue of approximately
$88.3 million in 2008. On September 2,
2009, ES&S acquired Premier and other
Diebold Inc., subsidiaries, for $5 million
in cash, and 70 percent of certain
receivables.1
B. The Competitive Effects of the
Acquisition on the U.S. Market for
Voting Equipment Systems
1. Relevant Markets
Since the 2002 implementation of the
Help America Vote Act (‘‘HAVA’’), 42
U.S.C. 15301–15545, most Americans
rely on voting equipment systems to
electronically cast their votes in local,
state and federal elections. HAVA
authorized funding for voting
equipment systems to replace
mechanical voting devices, such as lever
and punch card machines, and
established a new federal certification
agency, the Election Assistance
Commission (EAC), in order to ensure
the accuracy, security and reliability of
the voting process. Id. The EAC issued
standards for voting equipment systems
in 2002 and 2005, and those standards
are continually evolving. HAVA also
required that the voting equipment
systems provide disabled voters the
opportunity to cast a private and
independent ballot. 42 U.S.C.
15481(a)(3)(A)–(B) (2002).
A voting equipment system consists
of the integrated collection of
customized hardware, software,
firmware and associated services used
to electronically record, tabulate,
transmit and report votes in an election.
Hardware components may include
recording devices such as precinct or
central count Optical Scan (‘‘OS’’)
machines; Direct Recording Electronic
1 Because the purchase price for this transaction
fell below the reporting thresholds of the HartScott-Rodino (‘‘HSR’’) Antitrust Improvements Act
of 1976, ES&S was not required to report the
acquisition to the Department of Justice or the
Federal Trade Commission before consummation.
See 15 U.S.C. § 18a(a)(2)(B)(i) (2000); 75 Fed. Reg.
3468 (Jan. 21, 2010).
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(‘‘DRE’’) machines; and Ballot Marking
Devices (‘‘BMD’’). Recording devices
may be used not only to cast votes, but
also to create a paper record of each
vote, to allow independent voting by
disabled voters, and to read votes cast
by absentee or vote-by-mail voters.
Depending on the needs of the
jurisdiction, a voting equipment system
may include only one type of device, or
several different types of devices used
in concert. Each type of recording
device feeds votes into a tabulator,
which counts each vote and prepares a
report. All devices are bound together
by a collection of proprietary election
management software and firmware,
which enables their operation and the
communication and reporting of
election results.
The number, variety, and operation of
electronic components within a voting
equipment system vary depending on
the needs of the jurisdiction responsible
for administering elections, which may
be the state, county or local government,
depending on state law. Voting
equipment systems typically are sold to
state, county and municipal
jurisdictions, pursuant to request for
proposals. The jurisdictions typically
evaluate competing bids using a public
procurement process and select a
winning bid based on its compliance
with state law, technical standards,
certification standards, experience in
other jurisdictions and commercial
terms, such as price, delivery schedule
and other conditions of sale. The
combined technical and commercial
needs vary among customers. Most
successful bids also include multi-year
service agreements.
A voting equipment system differs
from the mechanical lever and punch
card voting devices used in the past in
conjunction with manual tabulation
methods. Mechanical systems cannot
accommodate speedy tabulation across a
large number of voters; do not allow
disabled voters the opportunity to cast
an independent, private ballot; and are
considered less accurate and reliable
than voting equipment systems.
A small but significant increase in the
price that vendors bid to provide voting
equipment systems to customers would
not cause customers to substitute away
from electronic voting equipment
systems so as to make such a price
increase unprofitable. Accordingly, the
Plaintiffs allege that voting equipment
systems are a relevant product market
within the meaning of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
In the United States, customers of
voting equipment systems prefer
suppliers with a substantial physical
presence in the United States, including
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a network of sales, technical and
support personnel and parts
distribution. Customers prefer such
vendors because, during the design, bid,
and implementation phases of installing
a new voting equipment system,
customers interact with vendors to test
system functionality, adjust technical
specifications, correct design flaws,
track progress and ensure successful
implementation. A significant local
service presence also is required to
assist annually in the preparation for
Election Day, and to address
immediately system problems arising on
Election Day.
A small but significant increase in the
price of voting equipment systems in
the United States would not cause a
sufficient number of U.S. customers to
turn to suppliers of voting equipment
systems that do not have a substantial
physical presence in the United States
so as to make such a price increase
unprofitable. Accordingly, the Plaintiffs
allege that the United States is a
relevant geographic market within the
meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
2. Anticompetitive Effects
ES&S’s acquisition of Premier
combined two firms that many
customers considered the two closest
competitors in the provision of voting
equipment systems, and the two largest
providers of U.S. voting equipment
systems, substantially reducing
competition for the provision of voting
equipment systems in the United States.
As a result of ES&S’s acquisition of its
closest competitor, ES&S has a reduced
incentive both to compete as
aggressively for bids and to invest in
new products, thereby increasing the
price and reducing the quality of the
voting equipment systems available to
most jurisdictions.
Prior to the acquisition, ES&S and
Premier were considered the closest
competitors by many customers because
the two companies offered voting
equipment systems certified in the
greatest number of jurisdictions; offered
a complete suite of voting equipment
system products; had a reputation for
reliable equipment; and enjoyed an
incumbent vendor’s expertise on
election administration in several
jurisdictions. ES&S and Premier were
certified in more states by far than any
other vendor, and were the only two
active vendors with EAC certification at
the time of the acquisition. Prior to the
acquisition, ES&S and Premier also
offered two of the most complete suites
of voting equipment choices, an
important factor for many jurisdictions
because proprietary election
management software prevents
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customers from selecting the best in
breed of each type of device. Further,
ES&S and Premier voting equipment
systems had the broadest installed bases
prior to the acquisition, which helped
assure customers that the systems were
proven by experience in the field. A
proven voting equipment system is an
important consideration for many
customers because, although
certification testing is designed to
screen out technical problems, even
certified machines have demonstrated
security and accuracy problems when
deployed in an actual election, which
can undermine the integrity of the
democratic process. In addition to
supplying customers with proven
equipment, ES&S and Premier
employees provided a variety of
valuable services to their customers,
which gave the companies greater
familiarity with the needs of each
customer, and a resulting advantage in
competing to sell each customer a new
installation in the future.
A number of recent bid events
substantiate the close competition
between ES&S and Premier prior to the
acquisition, and demonstrate that ES&S
has responded to Premier’s competition
by reducing its own prices and offering
other favorable terms. ES&S’s
acquisition of Premier eliminated
ES&S’s strongest competitor and, as a
result, has given ES&S both the
incentive and ability to profitably raise
its bid prices significantly above the
level they would be absent the
acquisition. The remaining three
competitors, limited by the lack of a full
product line, inadequate certification, a
limited record of proven equipment
and, in at least one case, lack of
financing, cannot fully constrain a
unilateral exercise of market power by
ES&S.
The acquisition of Premier also
reduces ES&S’s incentive to develop
new, more accurate, and more secure
voting equipment system products. In
the past, ES&S has responded to
Premier’s efforts to meet new standards
by following Premier’s lead in the
development of new products. The
acquisition removes the firms’
competitive pressure on each other to
innovate, and is likely to reduce the
quality and variety of new products
brought to the market, reducing the
choices offered to customers. Since its
acquisition of Premier, ES&S has
already withdrawn Premier products
from certification testing in two states.
In the absence of competitive pressure
from Premier, ES&S is unlikely to have
the same incentive to develop new
products in the future.
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Finally, entry or expansion by any
other firm into the U.S. market for the
provision of voting equipment systems
is unlikely to prevent the substantial
lessening of competition resulting from
ES&S’s acquisition of Premier. Firms
attempting to enter into the
development, production, and sale of
voting equipment systems in the United
States face several barriers that make
successful entry challenging, timeconsuming, and costly. Entry requires
not only the design and development of
hardware, software and firmware
products, but also obtaining multiple
levels of certification, establishing a
reputation for reliable equipment
performance, and the financial
wherewithal sufficient to assure a buyer
of long-term service capabilities. The
design and development of technology
requires a considerable, risky capital
investment over a period of several
years. Most jurisdictions also require
that vendors obtain federal and/or state
certification, which can cost millions
and take multiple years to complete. In
addition, firms must establish a
reputation for reliable system
performance. As most voting equipment
systems are used only once or twice
every two years, establishing a
reputation for reliable system operation
takes several years of successful
performance. Finally, providers of
voting equipment systems must
demonstrate both that they are
financially sound and that they will
respond quickly and effectively to
requests for service or parts for many
years after a new voting equipment
system has been installed.
Therefore, ES&S’s completed
acquisition of Premier likely will
substantially lessen competition in the
United States market for voting
equipment systems, which likely will
lead to higher prices, lower quality and
less innovation in violation of Section 7
of the Clayton Act.
III. ALTERNATIVES TO THE
PROPOSED FINAL JUDGMENT
The United States considered, as an
alternative to the proposed Final
Judgment, a full trial on the merits
against Defendant. The United States
could have continued the litigation and
sought a permanent injunction requiring
that ES&S divest the Premier assets and
voting securities. However, the
acquisition of Premier by ES&S was
consummated before the United States
learned of the transaction and could
commence an investigation. Given the
diminution of the Premier assets since
ES&S acquired the company, relief that
replicates the condition of Premier prior
to the acquisition is not available.
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Premier operated as an independent
subsidiary of Diebold prior to the
acquisition. After ES&S acquired the
company, it dismantled the business
units necessary for independent
operation, subsuming Premier
operations into the ES&S corporate
structure. Less than a month after the
acquisition, the Premier business units
responsible for sales, product design
and development, and voting equipment
system certification all were dismantled,
and most employees of these business
units were terminated. While ES&S
continues to serve current Premier
customers, it does so with the assistance
of ES&S resources, staffing and
operations. Consequently, unwinding
the transaction to require a divestiture
of only Premier voting securities and
remaining assets would not be sufficient
to restore the Premier entity that existed
prior to ES&S’s acquisition of the
company.
Further, the litigation process would
likely take considerable time. The
Premier assets likely would diminish
substantially during the pendency of
litigation, particularly as preliminary
relief is not available to compel ES&S to
invest in ongoing research, development
and certification of future Premier
voting equipment systems. Even if a
court ultimately ordered a divestiture,
the delay would diminish, if not
forestall, the competitive value of the
Premier assets in the hands of a
divestiture buyer because the standards
for voting equipment systems would
have evolved away from Premier’s
current line of products. The United
States is satisfied that the proposed
Final Judgment has allowed the
government to secure relief more
quickly than if the matter had gone to
litigation, and that the divestiture of the
assets described in the proposed Final
Judgment will preserve competition for
the provision of voting equipment
systems in the United States. Thus, the
proposed Final Judgment will achieve
all or substantially all of the relief the
United States would have obtained
through litigation, but avoids the time,
expense, and uncertainty of a full trial
on the merits of the Complaint.
IV. EXPLANATION OF THE PROPOSED
FINAL JUDGMENT
The divestiture required by the
proposed Final Judgment will eliminate
the anticompetitive effects that would
otherwise likely result from ES&S’s
acquisition of Premier. The divestiture
will restore competition by making
available to an independent competitor
the Premier assets necessary to equip an
economically viable competitor to ES&S
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in the provision of voting equipment
systems in the United States.
The proposed Final Judgment requires
ES&S to take certain actions, including
divesting, within sixty (60) days after
the filing of the Complaint, or five (5)
days after notice of the entry of the Final
Judgment by the Court, whichever is
later, the following assets: (1) all of the
intangible assets related to past and
present Premier voting equipment
system products, as well as those that
were in development at the time of the
acquisition; (2) tangible assets including
all tooling and fixed assets related to the
production, assembly and repair of
those products; and (3) inventory and
parts sufficient to meet the needs of the
Acquirer.
In addition to these divestitures, the
proposed Final Judgment also requires
ES&S to grant a fully paid-up, nonexclusive, irrevocable license to ES&S’s
AutoMARK products. The AutoMARK
products are Ballot Marking Devices
(‘‘BMD’’), used in some jurisdictions to
allow some disabled voters the
opportunity to cast a private and
independent ballot. Prior to the
acquisition, Premier used a limited,
non-exclusive license from ES&S to
offer AutoMARK products as part of its
EAC-certified Assure 1.2 system. To
allow customers the greatest number of
choices of systems that include an EACcertified BMD, ES&S must provide the
Acquirer with a license to use, service,
repair, modify and improve the
AutoMARK products.
In order to facilitate the Acquirer’s
ability to provide services related to
voting equipment systems to existing
Premier customers, the proposed Final
Judgement also requires that ES&S
waive all non-competition and nondisclosure agreements for all current
and former Premier employees. Access
to Premier employees will allow the
Acquirer to recruit employees with
experience serving current customers,
and expertise related to the
development, sale, repair or service of
Premier voting equipment system
products. Allowing such recruitment
will enable the Acquirer to re-establish
the experience and expertise of Premier
before its acquisition by ES&S, and so
will facilitate its ability to restore
competition in the sale of voting
equipment systems. In addition to
waiving all non-competition and nondisclosure agreements, ES&S is
prohibited from interfering with the
Acquirer’s efforts to recruit Premier
employees. The waiver is limited to six
months, in order to encourage the
Acquirer to solicit staff expeditiously,
and minimize the disruption to
upcoming elections that otherwise
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might result from significant staff
turnover.
Under the terms of the proposed Final
Judgment, only the Acquirer will be
permitted to offer Premier voting
equipment systems to existing
customers for new installations. New
installations of voting equipment
systems are defined broadly to capture
any procurement let under a Request for
Proposal or Request for Quote, as well
as any procurement that calls for
replacement of 50 percent or more of a
customer’s installed equipment. By
providing the Acquirer with the
exclusive right to offer the Premier
voting equipment systems to customers
for new installations, the remedy
replicates the incentive that Premier
would have had, giving the Acquirer the
greatest incentive to invest in the
development of new Premier products.
The proposed Final Judgment also
provides for the creation of new
competition in the provision of services
related to voting equipment systems, in
order to permit the Acquirer to replace
the competition in the sale of voting
equipment systems that was lost as a
result of ES&S’s acquisition of Premier.
Currently, only one vendor typically is
able to provide certain services to a
voting equipment system customer, as
these services are linked to the
proprietary election management
software that a particular vendor
provides. The proposed Final Judgment,
however, will allow both the Acquirer
and ES&S to compete to provide all
services related to Premier voting
equipment systems, giving customers
the option to switch to the Acquirer or
to remain with ES&S for service of their
existing Premier voting equipment
systems. ES&S is required to waive any
contractual provisions that otherwise
would prevent or hinder the Acquirer
from competing to provide services to
current Premier customers. The
potential to serve current customers
enhances competition in the sale of
voting equipment systems by enabling
the Acquirer to develop expertise about
a customer’s election administration
needs and practices. These provisions
further enhance the divestiture’s
efficacy by ensuring that ES&S does not
retain sole control over the quality and
extent of service on the installed base of
Premier equipment, and would not be
able to use its provision of service to
undermine the competitive goals of the
divestiture. Leaving the ultimate choice
of service providers to customers
accommodates customer concerns that
an outright divestiture of customer
service contracts would disrupt the
administration of upcoming primaries
and elections.
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In addition, the proposed Final
Judgment requires that ES&S provide a
transition services agreement and a
transitional supply agreement for parts
and inventory. The transition services
agreement must be sufficient to meet the
Acquirer’s needs for assistance in
matters relating to the utilization of the
divestiture assets for a period of up to
six months. ES&S also must agree to
supply parts and inventory to the
Acquirer at commercially reasonable
terms for up to two years, in order to
allow the Acquirer access to parts and
inventory while it arranges for
independent manufacturing. ES&S also
must not interfere with the Acquirer’s
efforts to contract with third party
manufacturers, on whom vendors
typically rely for the manufacture of
parts and assembly of finished devices.
The divestiture must be accomplished
in such a way as to satisfy the United
States in its sole discretion, after
consultation with the Plaintiff States,
that these assets can and will be
operated by the Acquirer as a viable,
ongoing business that will compete
effectively in the development,
production, sale, repair, and service of
voting equipment systems in the United
States. ES&S must take all reasonable
steps necessary to accomplish the
divestiture quickly and shall cooperate
with prospective purchasers.
In the event that ES&S does not
accomplish the divestiture within the
periods prescribed in the proposed
Final Judgment, the Final Judgment
provides that the Court will appoint a
trustee selected by the United States to
effect the divestiture. If a trustee is
appointed, the proposed Final Judgment
provides that ES&S will pay all costs
and expenses of the trustee. The
trustee’s commission will be structured
so as to provide an incentive for the
trustee based on the price and terms
obtained and the speed with which the
divestiture is accomplished. After his or
her appointment becomes effective, the
trustee will file monthly reports with
the Court and the United States setting
forth his or her efforts to accomplish the
divestiture. At the end of six (6) months,
if the divestiture has not been
accomplished, the trustee and the
United States will make
recommendations to the Court, which
shall enter such orders as appropriate,
in order to carry out the purpose of the
trust, including extending the trust or
the term of the trustee’s appointment.
The divestiture and other provisions
of the proposed Final Judgment will
eliminate the anticompetitive effects
that likely would result from ES&S’s
acquisition of Premier.
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V. REMEDIES AVAILABLE TO
POTENTIAL PRIVATE LITIGANTS
Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15
U.S.C. § 15, provides that any person
who has been injured as a result of
conduct prohibited by the antitrust laws
may bring suit in federal court to
recover three times the damages the
person has suffered, as well as costs and
reasonable attorneys’ fees. Entry of the
proposed Final Judgment will neither
impair nor assist the bringing of any
private antitrust damage action. Under
the provisions of Section 5(a) of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 16(a), the
proposed Final Judgment has no prima
facie effect in any subsequent private
lawsuit that may be brought against
Defendant.
VI. PROCEDURES AVAILABLE FOR
MODIFICATION OF THE PROPOSED
FINAL JUDGMENT
The United States and Defendant have
stipulated that the proposed Final
Judgment may be entered by the Court
after compliance with the provisions of
the APPA, provided that the United
States has not withdrawn its consent.
The APPA conditions entry upon the
Court’s determination that the proposed
Final Judgment is in the public interest.
The APPA provides a period of at
least sixty (60) days preceding the
effective date of the proposed Final
Judgment within which any person may
submit to the United States written
comments regarding the proposed Final
Judgment. Any person who wishes to
comment should do so within sixty (60)
days of the date of publication of this
Competitive Impact Statement in the
Federal Register, or the last date of
publication in a newspaper of the
summary of this Competitive Impact
Statement, whichever is later. All
comments received during this period
will be considered by the United States
Department of Justice, which remains
free to withdraw its consent to the
proposed Final Judgment at any time
prior to the Court’s entry of judgment.
The comments and the response of the
United States will be filed with the
Court and published in the Federal
Register. Written comments should be
submitted to:
Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief, Litigation II
Section, Antitrust Division, United
States Department of Justice, 450 Fifth
Street, N.W., Suite 8700, Washington,
D.C. 20530.
The proposed Final Judgment
provides that the Court retains
jurisdiction over this action and the
parties may apply to the Court for any
order necessary or appropriate for the
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modification, interpretation, or
enforcement of the Final Judgment.
VII. STANDARD OF REVIEW UNDER
THE APPA FOR THE PROPOSED FINAL
JUDGMENT
The Clayton Act, as amended by the
APPA, requires that proposed consent
judgments in antitrust cases brought by
the United States be subject to a sixtyday comment period, after which the
court shall determine whether entry of
the proposed Final Judgment ‘‘is in the
public interest.’’ 15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(1). In
making that determination in
accordance with the statute, the court is
required to consider:
(A) the competitive impact of such
judgment, including termination of
alleged violations, provisions for
enforcement and modification, duration
of relief sought, anticipated effects of
alternative remedies actually
considered, whether its terms are
ambiguous, and any other competitive
considerations bearing upon the
adequacy of such judgment that the
court deems necessary to a
determination of whether the consent
judgment is in the public interest; and
(B) the impact of entry of such
judgment upon competition in the
relevant market or markets, upon the
public generally and individuals
alleging specific injury from the
violations set forth in the complaint
including consideration of the public
benefit, if any, to be derived from a
determination of the issues at trial.
15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(1)(A)–(B). In
considering these statutory factors, the
court’s inquiry is necessarily a limited
one as the government is entitled to
‘‘broad discretion to settle with the
defendant within the reaches of the
public interest.’’ United States v.
Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461
(D.C. Cir. 1995); see generally United
States v. SBC Commc’ns, Inc., 489 F.
Supp. 2d 1 (D.D.C. 2007) (assessing
public interest standard under the
Tunney Act); United States v. InBev
N.V./S.A., 2009–2 Trade Cas. (CCH)
¶76,736, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787,
No. 08–1965 (JR), at *3 (D.D.C. Aug. 11,
2009) (noting that the court’s review of
a consent judgment is limited and only
inquires ‘‘into whether the government’s
determination that the proposed
remedies will cure the antitrust
violations alleged in the complaint was
reasonable, and whether the mechanism
to enforce the final judgment are clear
and manageable.’’).
As the United States Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia has held,
under the APPA a court considers,
among other things, the relationship
between the remedy secured and the
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15:34 Mar 12, 2010
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specific allegations set forth in the
government’s complaint, whether the
decree is sufficiently clear, whether
enforcement mechanisms are sufficient,
and whether the decree may positively
harm third parties. See Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1458–62. With respect to the
adequacy of the relief secured by the
decree, a court may not ‘‘engage in an
unrestricted evaluation of what relief
would best serve the public.’’ United
States v. BNS, Inc., 858 F.2d 456, 462
(9th Cir. 1988) (citing United States v.
Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th
Cir. 1981)); see also Microsoft, 56 F.3d
at 1460–62; United States v. Alcoa, Inc.,
152 F. Supp. 2d 37, 40 (D.D.C. 2001);
InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at
*3. Courts have held that:
[t]he balancing of competing social and
political interests affected by a proposed
antitrust consent decree must be left, in the
first instance, to the discretion of the
Attorney General. The court’s role in
protecting the public interest is one of
insuring that the government has not
breached its duty to the public in consenting
to the decree. The court is required to
determine not whether a particular decree is
the one that will best serve society, but
whether the settlement is ‘‘within the reaches
of the public interest.’’ More elaborate
requirements might undermine the
effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by
consent decree.
Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis
added) (citations omitted).2 In
determining whether a proposed
settlement is in the public interest, the
court ‘‘must accord deference to the
government’s predictions about the
efficacy of its remedies, and may not
require that the remedies perfectly
match the alleged violations.’’ SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 17; see
also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (noting
the need for courts to be ‘‘deferential to
the government’s predictions as to the
effect of the proposed remedies’’);
United States v. Archer-DanielsMidland Co., 272 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6
(D.D.C. 2003) (noting that the court
should grant due respect to the United
States’s prediction as to the effect of
proposed remedies, its perception of the
market structure, and its views of the
nature of the case).
Courts have greater flexibility in
approving proposed consent decrees
2 Cf. BNS, 858 F.2d at 464 (holding that the
court’s ‘‘ultimate authority under the [APPA] is
limited to approving or disapproving the consent
decree’’); United States v. Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp.
713, 716 (D. Mass. 1975) (noting that, in this way,
the court is constrained to ‘‘look at the overall
picture not hypercritically, nor with a microscope,
but with an artist’s reducing glass’’). See generally
Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (discussing whether ‘‘the
remedies [obtained in the decree are] so
inconsonant with the allegations charged as to fall
outside of the ‘reaches of the public interest’ ’’).
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12269
than in crafting their own decrees
following a finding of liability in a
litigated matter. ‘‘[A] proposed decree
must be approved even if it falls short
of the remedy the court would impose
on its own, as long as it falls within the
range of acceptability or is ‘within the
reaches of public interest.’ ’’ United
States v. Am. Tel. & Tel. Co., 552 F.
Supp. 131, 151 (D.D.C. 1982) (citations
omitted) (quoting United States v.
Gillette Co., 406 F. Supp. 713, 716 (D.
Mass. 1975)), aff’d sub nom. Maryland
v. United States, 460 U.S. 1001 (1983);
see also United States v. Alcan
Aluminum Ltd., 605 F. Supp. 619, 622
(W.D. Ky. 1985) (approving the consent
decree even though the court would
have imposed a greater remedy).
Therefore, the United States ‘‘need only
provide a factual basis for concluding
that the settlements are reasonably
adequate remedies for the alleged
harms.’’ SBC Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d
at 17.
Moreover, the court’s role under the
APPA is limited to reviewing the
remedy in relationship to the violations
that the United States has alleged in its
Complaint, and does not authorize the
court to ‘‘construct [its] own
hypothetical case and then evaluate the
decree against that case.’’ Microsoft, 56
F.3d at 1459; see also InBev, 2009 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *20 (‘‘the ‘public
interest’ is not to be measured by
comparing the violations alleged in the
complaint against those the court
believes could have, or even should
have, been alleged’’). Because the
‘‘court’s authority to review the decree
depends entirely on the government’s
exercising its prosecutorial discretion by
bringing a case in the first place,’’ it
follows that ‘‘the court is only
authorized to review the decree itself,’’
and not to ‘‘effectively redraft the
complaint’’ to inquire into other matters
that the United States did not pursue.
Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1459–60. As this
Court confirmed in SBC
Communications, courts ‘‘cannot look
beyond the complaint in making the
public interest determination unless the
complaint is drafted so narrowly as to
make a mockery of judicial power.’’ 489
F. Supp. 2d at 15.
In its 2004 amendments to the
Tunney Act,3 Congress made clear its
3 The 2004 amendments substituted the word
‘‘shall’’ for ‘‘may’’ when directing the courts to
consider the enumerated factors and amended the
list of factors to focus on competitive considerations
and address potentially ambiguous judgment terms.
Compare 15 U.S.C. § 16(e) (2004), with 15 U.S.C.
§ 16(e)(1) (2006); see also SBC Commc’ns, 489 F.
Supp. 2d at 11 (concluding that the 2004
amendments ‘‘effected minimal changes’’ to Tunney
Act review).
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intent to preserve the practical benefits
of utilizing consent decrees in antitrust
enforcement, stating: ‘‘[n]othing in this
section shall be construed to require the
court to conduct an evidentiary hearing
or to require the court to permit anyone
to intervene.’’ 15 U.S.C. § 16(e)(2). The
language wrote into the statute what
Congress intended when it enacted the
Tunney Act in 1974, as Senator Tunney
explained: ‘‘[t]he court is nowhere
compelled to go to trial or to engage in
extended proceedings which might have
the effect of vitiating the benefits of
prompt and less costly settlement
through the consent decree process.’’
119 Cong. Rec. 24,598 (1973) (statement
of Senator Tunney). Rather, the
procedure for the public interest
determination is left to the discretion of
the court, with the recognition that the
court’s ‘‘scope of review remains sharply
proscribed by precedent and the nature
of Tunney Act proceedings.’’ SBC
Commc’ns, 489 F. Supp. 2d at 11.4
VIII. DETERMINATIVE DOCUMENTS
There are no determinative materials
or documents within the meaning of the
APPA that were considered by the
United States in formulating the
proposed Final Judgment.
Dated: March 8, 2010
Respectfully submitted,
lll/s/lll
Stephanie A. Fleming, Esq.
United States Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division, Litigation II
Section, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite
8700, Washington, D.C. 20530, (202)
514–9228, (202) 514–9033,
stephanie.fleming@usdoj.gov.
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with NOTICES
I, Stephanie A. Fleming, hereby
certify that on March 8, 2010, I caused
a copy of the foregoing Competitive
Impact Statement to be served upon
Defendant Election Systems and
Software, Inc. and the Plaintiff States by
mailing the documents electronically to
4 See United States v. Enova Corp., 107 F. Supp.
2d 10, 17 (D.DC 2000) (noting that the ‘‘Tunney Act
expressly allows the court to make its public
interest determination on the basis of the
competitive impact statement and response to
comments alone’’); United States v. Mid-Am.
Dairymen, Inc., 1977–1 Trade Cas. (CCH) ¶ 61,508,
at 71,980 (W.D. Mo. 1977) (‘‘Absent a showing of
corrupt failure of the government to discharge its
duty, the Court, in making its public interest
finding, should * * * carefully consider the
explanations of the government in the competitive
impact statement and its responses to comments in
order to determine whether those explanations are
reasonable under the circumstances.’’); S. Rep. No.
93–298, 93d Cong., 1st Sess., at 6 (1973) (‘‘Where
the public interest can be meaningfully evaluated
simply on the basis of briefs and oral arguments,
that is the approach that should be utilized.’’).
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Jkt 220001
their duly authorized legal
representatives as follows:
FOR DEFENDANT, ELECTION
SYSTEMS & SOFTWARE, INC.
Joseph G. Krauss, Esq., Hogan &
Hartson, LLP, 555 Thirteenth Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20004, (202)
637–5832, jgkrauss@hhlaw.com
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF ARIZONA
Nancy M. Bonnell, Antitrust Unit Chief,
Consumer Protection & Advocacy
Section, 1275 West Washington,
Phoenix, AZ 85007, Tel: (602) 542–
7728, Fax: (602) 542–9088, Email:
Nancy.Bonnell@azag.gov
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF
COLORADO
Devin Laiho, Assistant Attorney
General, Antitrust Enforcement,
Office of the Attorney General, 1525
Sherman St., Seventh Floor, Denver,
Colorado 80203, Tel: (303) 866–5079,
devin.laiho@state.co.us
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF FLORIDA
Russell S. Kent, Special Counsel for
Litigation, Office of the Attorney
General, PL–01; The Capitol,
Tallahassee, FL 32399, Tel: (850) 414–
3300, Fax: (850) 488–9134, Email:
russell.kent@myfloridalegal.com
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF MAINE
Christina M. Moylan, Assistant Attorney
General, 6 State House Station,
Augusta, ME 04333, Tel: (207) 626–
8838, Fax: (207) 624–7730, Email:
christina.moylan@maine.gov
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF
MARYLAND
Ellen S. Cooper, Assistant Attorney
General, Chief, Antitrust Division, 200
St. Paul Place, 19th Floor, Baltimore,
MD 21202, Tel: (410) 576–6470, Fax:
(410) 576–7830, Email:
ecooper@oag.state.md.us
FOR PLAINTIFF COMMONWEALTH
OF MASSACHUSETTS
Matthew M. Lyons, Assistant Attorney
General, Office of Attorney General
Martha Coakley, One Ashburton
Place, Boston, MA 02108, Tel: (617)
727–2200, Fax: (617) 727–5765,
Email: Matthew.Lyons@state.ma.us
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF NEW
MEXICO
Deyonna Young, Assistant Attorney
General, Office of the Attorney
General of New Mexico, 111 Lomas
Blvd., NW., Suite 300, Albuquerque,
NM 87102, Tel: (505) 222–9089, Fax:
(505) 222–9086, Email:
dyoung@nmag.gov
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF
TENNESSEE
Victor J. Domen, Jr., Senior Counsel,
Office of the Tennessee Attorney
General, Consumer Advocate and
Protection Division, 425 Fifth Avenue
North, Nashville, TN 37243, Tel: (615)
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532–5732, Fax: (615) 532–2910,
Email: Vic.Domen@ag.tn.gov
FOR PLAINTIFF STATE OF
WASHINGTON
David Kerwin, Assistant Attorney
General, Washington State Attorney
General’s Office, 800 Fifth Avenue,
Suite 2000, Seattle, WA 98104, Tel:
(206) 464–7030, Fax: (206) 464–6338,
Email: davidk3@atg.wa.gov
lll/s/lll
Stephanie A. Fleming, Esq.
United States Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division, Litigation II
Section, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite
8700, Washington, D.C. 20530, (202)
514–9228, (202) 514–9033,
stephanie.fleming@usdoj.gov
[FR Doc. 2010–5519 Filed 3–12–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–11–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of Workers’ Compensation
Programs
Division of Federal Employees’
Compensation; Proposed Collection;
Comment Request
ACTION:
Notice.
SUMMARY: The Department of Labor, as
part of its continuing effort to reduce
paperwork and respondent burden,
conducts a preclearance consultation
program to provide the general public
and Federal agencies with an
opportunity to comment on proposed
and/or continuing collections of
information in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA95) [44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)]. This
program helps to ensure that requested
data can be provided in the desired
format, reporting burden (time and
financial resources) is minimized,
collection instruments are clearly
understood, and the impact of collection
requirements on respondents can be
properly assessed. Currently, the Office
of Workers’ Compensation Programs is
soliciting comments concerning the
proposed collection: Notice of Law
Enforcement Officer’s Injury or
Occupational Disease (CA–721) and
Notice of Law Enforcement Officer’s
Death (CA–722). A copy of the proposed
information collection request can be
obtained by contacting the office listed
below in the addresses section of this
Notice.
DATES: Written comments must be
submitted to the office listed in the
addresses section below on or before
May 14, 2010.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 49 (Monday, March 15, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12256-12270]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-5519]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
United States, et al. v. Election Systems and Software, Inc.;
Proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement
Notice is hereby given pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h), that a proposed Final Judgment,
Stipulation and Competitive Impact Statement have been filed with the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia in United
States, et al. v. Election Systems and Software Inc., Civil Action No.
10-00380. On March 8, 2010, the United States filed a Complaint
alleging that the proposed acquisition by Election Systems and
Software, Inc., (``ES&S'') of Premier Election Services, Inc., and PES
Holdings, Inc. violated Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. 18. The
proposed Final Judgment, filed the same time as the Complaint, requires
ES&S to divest certain tangible and intangible assets.
Copies of the Complaint, proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive
Impact Statement are available for inspection at the Department of
Justice, Antitrust Division, Antitrust Documents Group, 450 Fifth
Street, NW., Suite 1010, Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202-514-
2481), on the Department of Justice's Web site at https://www.usdoj.gov/atr, and at the Office of the Clerk of the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia. Copies of these materials may be obtained
from the Antitrust Division upon request and payment of the copying fee
set by Department of Justice regulations.
Public comment is invited within 60 days of the date of this
notice. Such comments, and responses thereto, will be published in the
Federal Register and filed with the Court. Comments should be directed
to Maribeth Petrizzi, Chief, Litigation II Section, Antitrust Division,
U.S. Department of Justice, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite 8700,
Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202-307-0924).
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations.
United States District Court for the District of Columbia
CASE: 1:10-cv-00380
Assigned To: Bates, John D.
Assign Date: 3/8/2010
Description: Antitrust
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Department of Justice, Antitrust Division,
450 5th Street, NW., Suite 8700, Washington, D.C. 20530; STATE OF
ARIZONA Office of the Attorney General, 1275 West Washington, Phoenix,
Arizona 85007; STATE OF COLORADO Office of the Attorney General, 1525
Sherman St., Seventh Floor, Denver, Colorado 80203; STATE OF FLORIDA
Office of the Attorney General, PL-01, The Capitol, Tallahassee,
Florida 32399; STATE OF MAINE Office of the Attorney General, 6 State
House Station, Augusta, Maine 04333; STATE OF MARYLAND Office of the
Attorney General, Antitrust Division, 200 St. Paul Place, 19th Floor,
Baltimore, Maryland 21202; COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS Office of the
Attorney General Martha Coakley, One Ashburton Place, Boston,
Massachusetts 02108; STATE OF NEW MEXICO Office of the Attorney General
of New Mexico, 111 Lomas Blvd. NW., Suite 300, Albuquerque, New Mexico
87102; STATE OF TENNESSEE Office of the Attorney General and Reporter,
425 Fifth Avenue North, Nashville, Tennessee 37243; and STATE OF
WASHINGTON Office of the Attorney General, 800 Fifth Avenue, Suite
2000, Seattle, Washington 98104; Plaintiffs, v. ELECTION SYSTEMS AND
SOFTWARE, INC. 11208 John Galt Boulevard, Omaha, Nebraska 68137;
Defendant.
COMPLAINT
Plaintiffs, the United States of America (``United States''),
acting under the direction of the Attorney General of the United
States, and the States of Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maine, Maryland,
New Mexico, Tennessee, and Washington, and the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts (the ``Plaintiff States''), acting under the direction of
their respective Attorneys General, bring this civil antitrust action
against defendant Election Systems and Software, Inc. (``ES&S''), to
obtain a permanent injunction and other relief to remedy the harm to
competition caused by
[[Page 12257]]
ES&S's acquisition of Premier Election Solutions, Inc. and PES
Holdings, Inc. (collectively, ``Premier''). Plaintiffs allege as
follows:
I. NATURE OF THE ACTION
1. ES&S is the largest provider of voting equipment systems in the
United States. On September 2, 2009, ES&S acquired Premier, a
subsidiary of Diebold, Inc. (``Diebold''), then the second largest
provider of voting equipment systems in the United States. As a result
of that acquisition, ES&S provides more than 70 percent of the voting
equipment systems that registered voters rely on to vote in federal,
state and local elections held in the United States.
2. Competition in the provision of voting equipment systems is
critical to ensure that vendors continue to develop accurate, reliable
and secure systems, and provide those systems to state, county and
local election administrators at competitive prices.
3. ES&S's acquisition of Premier combined the two largest providers
of voting equipment systems in the United States and the two firms that
had been, for many customers, the closest bidders for the provision of
voting equipment systems. As a result of this transaction, prices for
voting equipment systems likely will increase, while quality and
innovation likely will decline, as a consequence of reduced competition
in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18.
II. THE DEFENDANT
4. Defendant Election Systems and Software, Inc. (``ES&S'') is a
Nebraska corporation with its headquarters in Omaha, Nebraska, and
includes its successors and assigns, its subsidiaries, including
Premier, and its divisions, groups, affiliates, partnerships and joint
ventures, and their directors, officers, managers, agents, and
employees. Prior to its acquisition of Premier, ES&S was already the
largest provider of voting equipment systems in the United States, had
systems installed in at least 41 states, and collected revenue of
$149.4 million in 2008. Premier, now an ES&S subsidiary, was the second
largest provider of voting equipment systems in the United States prior
to its acquisition, had equipment installed in 33 states, and collected
revenue of approximately $88.3 million in 2008.
III. JURISDICTION AND VENUE
5. The United States brings this action against defendant ES&S
under Section 15 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 25, as amended, to
prevent and restrain ES&S from continuing to violate Section 7 of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18. Each of the Plaintiff States brings
this action under Section 16 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 26, to
prevent and restrain the violation by Defendant of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18. The Plaintiff States, by and through
their respective Attorneys General, or other authorized officials,
bring this action in their sovereign capacities and as parens patriae
on behalf of the citizens, general welfare, and economy of each of
their states.
6. Defendant ES&S develops, sells and services voting equipment
systems in the flow of interstate commerce. ES&S's activities in
developing, selling and servicing voting equipment systems
substantially affect interstate commerce. The Court has jurisdiction
over this action and over the parties pursuant to 15 U.S.C. Sec. 25
and 28 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 1331 and 1337.
7. ES&S transacts business, and has consented to venue and personal
jurisdiction, in the District of Columbia. Venue is therefore proper in
this District under Section 12 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 22
and 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1391(c).
IV. BACKGROUND
8. In the wake of the 2000 Presidential Election, Congress enacted
the Help America Vote Act (HAVA) to address perceived shortfalls in the
accuracy, security and reliability of voting equipment. 42 U.S.C.
15301-15545 (2002). HAVA authorized funding of approximately $3.86
billion to encourage jurisdictions responsible for the administration
of elections to replace mechanical voting devices such as lever and
punch card machines with new electronic voting equipment systems. HAVA
also created a new agency, the Election Assistance Commission (EAC), to
adopt standards for and certify voting equipment systems to ensure
their reliability and security. The EAC issued standards in 2002 and
2005, and those standards continue to evolve. HAVA also required that
voting equipment systems contain devices that allow disabled voters to
cast and verify their votes privately and independently. 42 U.S.C.
15481(a)(3)(A)-(B) (2002).
9. State law sets the certification requirements for any voting
equipment system installed within a state. Most states require that
voting equipment systems or the devices that comprise those systems be
certified, either at the federal level by the EAC, or at the state
level according to standards set by the election authorities of that
state. State certification regimes may be more or less rigorous than
that of the EAC, and some states require that a vendor be certified by
both the EAC and the state's own process. A minority of states require
neither federal nor state certification, but describe technical
standards for vendors responding to requests for proposal (``RFP'') for
voting equipment systems.
10. Voting equipment systems are purchased either by a state agency
or by an election board or official at the county or local level. A
jurisdiction typically goes through an extensive public procurement
process to identify the correct system to meet its needs and determine
its preferred vendor. Before bids are seriously considered, vendors
often must be qualified by meeting certain financial criteria. The
procurement process for large, complex customers can span more than a
year, involves extensive communications between the customer and
vendors, typically requires public demonstrations of equipment, and
often involves third-party consultants hired by the customer. As
vendors proceed through the procurement process, they usually become
more familiar with the needs of the customer and the competing vendors
under consideration. Often, customers allow a discrete group of vendors
to proceed to a best and final round, where vendors may revise the
terms of their bids, including price terms, before a winning bid is
selected.
11. Performance of voting equipment systems on Election Day is
critical because the failure of a system, or any of the devices within
a system, can affect the integrity of the democratic process, a failure
that often cannot be remedied. Although certification testing of voting
equipment systems and devices is designed to identify technical
deficiencies, many certified devices have demonstrated security and
accuracy problems when deployed in the field for an election. However,
customers typically use voting equipment systems only once or twice
every two years, so opportunities to test the reliability of equipment
are few. As a result, an established record of successful voting
equipment performance is of great importance to customers in evaluating
the likely accuracy and reliability of a voting equipment system.
Election administrators, who often are elected officials themselves,
use successful past experience as one basis for judging the reliability
of a voting equipment system.
12. The significant variation of election laws and practices among
jurisdictions results in substantial differences in customers'
technical requirements for their voting equipment systems. A
jurisdiction's voting equipment system needs also may be
[[Page 12258]]
based on the number of registered voters; the density of population
within geographic boundaries; the number of polling sites;
accommodation of the needs of disabled voters; ballot complexity,
including legal requirements for ballot design, and the number of
different ballot layouts, languages, and political parties; frequency
of elections; requirements for processing absentee ballots; timing of
reporting results; and other issues.
13. Between 2002 and 2006, most states procured new voting
equipment systems, exhausting their HAVA funds. Most of these
jurisdictions anticipate that their new systems will last at least ten
years. Given the current economic environment, many jurisdictions are
considering attempts to extend the life of existing systems by
investing in repair, service, and upgrades, in order to forestall the
need to purchase new systems. However, a few states and several large
counties anticipate purchasing a new voting equipment system in the
next year or two. A number of other jurisdictions have relatively old
voting equipment systems that may need to be replaced within the next
several years.
14. Since 2005, several jurisdictions have required that voting
equipment systems create a paper-based record of each vote cast, out of
concern that the electronic audit component of some devices within the
system was insufficiently secure to guarantee the accuracy of election
results. Vendors believe this movement has created and will continue to
create additional demand for new voting equipment systems over the next
few years, despite the exhaustion of HAVA funding.
V. TRADE AND COMMERCE
A. The Relevant Product Market
15. A voting equipment system is the integrated collection of
customized hardware, software, firmware and associated services used to
electronically record, tabulate, transmit and report votes in an
election. The number, variety, and operation of electronic components
vary depending on the needs of the jurisdiction responsible for
administering elections, which may be the state, county or local
government, depending on state law.
16. A voting equipment system differs from the mechanical lever and
punch card voting devices used in the past in conjunction with manual
tabulation methods. Mechanical systems cannot accommodate speedy
tabulation across a large number of voters; do not allow disabled
voters the opportunity to cast an independent, private ballot; and are
considered less accurate and reliable than voting equipment systems.
17. Hardware devices used to electronically record votes vary by
recording method, and can be used for a variety of functions. These
devices may include precinct or central count Optical Scan (``OS'')
devices; Direct Recording Electronic (``DRE'') devices; and Ballot
Marking Devices (``BMD''). In addition to the basic function of
recording a vote cast on Election Day, these devices may be used to
create a paper record of each vote, to allow independent voting by
disabled voters, and to read votes cast by absentee or vote-by-mail
voters. Depending on the needs of the jurisdiction, a voting equipment
system may include only one type of device, or several different types
of devices used in concert. All three types of recording devices feed
votes into a tabulator, which counts each vote and prepares a report,
with the assistance of associated software and firmware.
18. OS devices create a paper record of each vote and are commonly
used to read absentee ballots, but cannot provide a completely private
and independent voting experience for any disabled voter. OS devices
require a voter to mark an individual paper ballot, which is then
inserted into a scanner to be electronically read. Central Count OS
devices, particularly high-speed, digital models, are commonly used to
read ballots submitted by absentee or vote-by-mail voters. Most OS
devices read and record voter marks as data, though some digital
devices capture the actual image of the ballot, to better judge the
intent of the voter. Typically, OS devices cannot fully enable a
disabled voter to cast a ballot independently, as assistance in marking
the ballot and transferring it to the ballot box is required.
19. DRE devices, sometimes referred to as touch screens, allow a
voter to enter a vote by interfacing directly with a monitor screen,
and some models are equipped with a device that creates a scrolling
paper record of the votes recorded, often referred to as a Voter
Verified Paper Trail. DRE devices allow disabled voters to cast their
vote independently, so they often are provided exclusively for the use
of disabled voters at polling places that may otherwise rely on OS
equipment. DRE devices cannot be used to read ballots submitted by
mail.
20. BMD's require a voter to insert an individual paper ballot into
an electronic device, and then mark that ballot using a small monitor
interface and specialized electronic pen. BMDs are designed to
accommodate disabled voters, allowing the independent recording of a
vote, but pollworker assistance still is required to transfer the
marked ballot to the ballot box. BMDs cannot be used to read ballots
submitted by mail.
21. The recording and tabulation devices contained within a voting
equipment system are bound together by a collection of proprietary
election management software and firmware. The software and firmware
enables the operation of each device, communication between devices and
reporting of the election results.
22. Jurisdictions purchase voting equipment systems bundled with a
variety of services for the initial implementation and long-term
service and support of the system. Initial implementation services
often include project management, equipment delivery, administrator and
pollworker training, and warrantees on devices. Post-implementation
services include hardware, software and firmware maintenance
agreements, and also may include annual services such as ballot layout,
ballot printing, Election Day help-desk support and other Election Day
services. Typically, any service that may require changes to hardware,
software or firmware must be performed by the original vendor, or that
vendor's licensed representative.
23. Jurisdictions evaluate competing bids to provide voting
equipment systems based on compliance with state law, technical
standards, certification standards, experience in other jurisdictions
and commercial standards such as price, delivery schedule and other
terms of sale. The combined technical and commercial needs of the
customer differ for each voting equipment system bid.
24. A small but significant increase in the price that vendors bid
to provide voting equipment systems to customers would not cause
customers to substitute away from electronic voting equipment systems
so as to make such a price increase unprofitable. Accordingly, voting
equipment systems are a line of commerce and relevant product market
within the meaning of Section 7 of the Clayton Act.
B. Geographic Market
25. In the United States, customers of voting equipment systems
prefer suppliers with a substantial physical presence in the United
States, including a network of sales, technical and support personnel
and parts distribution.
26. Customers prefer such vendors because, during the design, bid,
and implementation phases of installing a
[[Page 12259]]
new voting equipment system, customers interact with vendors to test
system functionality, adjust technical specifications, correct design
flaws, track progress and ensure successful implementation. Further,
customers require that vendors have a significant local service
presence to assist annually in the preparation for Election Day, and to
immediately address system problems arising on Election Day.
27. A small but significant increase in the price of voting
equipment systems would not cause a sufficient number of U.S. customers
to turn to suppliers of voting equipment systems that do not have a
substantial physical presence in the United States so as to make such a
price increase unprofitable. Accordingly, the United States is a
relevant geographic market within the meaning of Section 7 of the
Clayton Act.
C. Anticompetitive Effects of the Acquisition
28. ES&S's acquisition of Premier united two firms that many
customers considered the two closest competitors in the provision of
voting equipment systems, with the likely effects of higher prices, a
decline in quality and innovation and changes in other key elements
that are considered detrimental by most U.S. customers in the
evaluation of bids to provide voting equipment systems. ES&S and
Premier were considered the closest competitors by many customers
because the two companies offer systems certified in the greatest
number of jurisdictions; offer a complete suite of voting equipment
system products; and have a reputation for reliable equipment. Having
acquired its closest competitor, ES&S will have a reduced incentive to
compete as aggressively for bids or to invest in new products,
unilaterally reducing the quality and increasing the price of voting
equipment systems available to most jurisdictions.
29. Some customers identified ES&S and Premier as the only vendors
qualified to meet the jurisdiction's certification requirements. For
instance, ES&S and Premier are the only two vendors that offer EAC-
certified voting equipment systems that include an OS device and a BMD.
Indeed, at the time of the acquisition, ES&S and Premier were the only
active vendors that had achieved EAC-certification at all. Likewise,
ES&S and Premier voting equipment systems are certified or approved in
42 and 33 states, respectively; more states, by far, than any other
vendor.
30. Prior to the acquisition, ES&S and Premier had the unique
ability to offer a complete suite of voting equipment choices. An array
of devices often is important to meet the goals of providing a paper-
based system, accommodating disabled voters, and processing absentee
ballots expeditiously. Because voting equipment systems use proprietary
software, customers do not have the option of selecting the best in
breed of each type of device from many vendors and integrating those
pieces into a coherent system. A vendor that can offer a full
complement of equipment choices within a given system often provides a
benefit to the customer.
31. In order to better secure voting equipment systems that have
been tested by past experience in similar jurisdictions, many customers
view the past experience of a vendor's equipment as a key element in
evaluating its bid. Moreover, the more that past experience replicates
conditions anticipated in the customer's jurisdiction, the more it
augurs for success. ES&S and Premier are two of only three vendors
whose voting equipment systems have been deployed in multiple statewide
implementations. Likewise, the two companies have the broadest range of
past experiences to call upon, making them most likely to be the
bidders with the most experience and the most relevant experience for
any particular bid.
32. Only three other firms compete to provide voting equipment
systems. None of these competitors is likely to replace the constraint
Premier once exercised on ES&S's bidding behavior. Each of these firms
is limited by the level of certification obtained, lack of a full
product line, and the lack of proven equipment. At least one of these
firms is also limited by the lack of financial ability to expand. None
of these vendors shares the attributes that made Premier a close
competitor to ES&S, and none is likely to substantially constrain
ES&S's behavior in future bids.
33. In contrast, numerous jurisdictions have benefitted from
vigorous price competition between ES&S and Premier in the past. ES&S
and Premier were the first and second lowest bidders for recent bids
let by states for statewide voting equipment systems. In at least three
recent bids for county-wide voting equipment systems, each worth
between $1 million and $6 million, ES&S and Premier were the closest
bidders.
34. ES&S and Premier have been more successful than any other
vendor in competing to meet the disparate requirements of U.S.
customers, as evidenced by each company's portion of the installed base
of voting equipment systems. Prior to the acquisition, ES&S was the
incumbent provider to 47 percent of all registered voters in the United
States, and Premier was the incumbent to 23 percent of all registered
voters. As a result of its acquisition of Premier, ES&S became the
incumbent for more than 70 percent of all registered voters in the
United States.
35. One recent state-wide procurement illustrates the closeness of
competition between ES&S and Premier, and how that competition
restrained ES&S's bidding behavior. The state issued a long-anticipated
set of RFPs for procurement of a new statewide voting equipment system
that called for the provision of a system that included OS devices that
had been tested by an EAC-certified laboratory. As part of the scoring
methodology, the RFPs also required that bidders identify past
installations of voting equipment systems, and describe the scope and
complexity of the installed jurisdiction. ES&S anticipated Premier
would be the front runner for this opportunity. In early 2009, ES&S
projected that Premier would low-ball the bid, and gave serious
consideration to changing its bid price in response. Six days before
bids were due, ES&S acquired Premier. Bids were submitted on behalf of
both Premier and ES&S, but the state could not consider the Premier bid
as a result of ES&S's acquisition of and changes to Premier. No other
vendor responded to this RFP, and ES&S was approved by the state board
overseeing the procurement in December 2009.
36. The acquisition of Premier both ended its competitive influence
on specific bids, and reduced ES&S's incentive to develop new products
and upgrade existing products. In response to continuing concerns about
the security and reliability of voting equipment systems, technical
standards for voting equipment systems are constantly evolving. ES&S
considered Premier the firm most responsive to these evolving
certification standards, and elected to follow Premier's lead in the
development of new products. For example, in the Fall of 2009, ES&S
introduced its own digital scan high-speed OS central count device in
response to a similar device introduced by Premier a year earlier. ES&S
is unlikely to continue such innovation absent competition from
Premier. Prior to its acquisition, Premier submitted an improved voting
equipment system to certification authorities for testing in two
states, but ES&S withdrew those applications following the acquisition.
In the absence of competitive pressure from Premier, ES&S is unlikely
to have the same incentive to develop new products in the future.
[[Page 12260]]
37. ES&S's acquisition of Premier, therefore, likely will
substantially lessen competition in the United States market for voting
equipment systems, which likely will lead to higher prices, lower
quality and less innovation in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act.
D. Difficulty of Entry Into the Provision of Voting Equipment Systems
38. Successful entry into the provision of voting equipment systems
is challenging, time-consuming, and costly. Entry requires not only the
design and development of hardware, software and firmware products, but
also obtaining multiple levels of certification, establishing a
reputation for reliable performance, and financial wherewithal
sufficient to assure a buyer of long-term service capabilities.
39. EAC certification may cost more than $1 million for each system
certified, and may take fifteen to twenty-four months. These costs are
in addition to internal development costs, estimated at $2.5 to $5
million. Previous certification attempts by established companies such
as Premier have consumed more than $3 million and required three years.
For at least three of the largest state jurisdictions, certification
requires an additional investment of time and money. ES&S, for
instance, spent approximately $4 million to become certified in one
state. Other states may be even more rigorous, requiring that voting
systems be certified both by the EAC and by the state.
40. Certification alone is not sufficient for a company that does
not have equipment with a proven record of reliable performance. One
company recently obtained 2005 EAC-certification for its new OS device,
after two years of product development and testing, and an investment
of millions of dollars. Despite the time and money invested, the
company has yet to sell a single certified device.
41. Given the time and expense required for certification, the long
lifecycle of voting equipment systems, the time required to demonstrate
reliable performance of equipment, and the absence of ready capital to
fund new investment in the voting equipment system industry, entry into
the provision of voting equipment systems would not be timely, likely
and sufficient to prevent an exercise of market power by ES&S.
VI. VIOLATION ALLEGED
42. ES&S's acquisition of Premier substantially lessened
competition in the U.S. market for voting equipment systems in
interstate trade and commerce in violation of Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18.
43. This acquisition has had the following anticompetitive effects,
among others:
a. competition between ES&S and Premier in the provision of voting
equipment systems in the United States has been eliminated;
b. competition generally in the provision of voting equipment
systems in the United States has been substantially lessened; and
c. prices will likely increase, quality will likely decrease, and
innovation will be less likely.
VII. REQUESTED RELIEF
44. Plaintiffs request that this Court:
a. Adjudge and decree that the Defendant ES&S's acquisition of
Premier violated Section 7 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18;
b. Compel ES&S to divest Premier assets related to the development,
manufacture and sale of the relevant products to enable independent and
effective competition;
c. Award such temporary and preliminary injunctive and ancillary
relief as may be necessary to avert the likelihood of the dissipation
of Premier's tangible and intangible assets during the pendency of this
action and to preserve the possibility of effective final relief;
d. Award the Plaintiffs the cost of this action; and
e. Grant the Plaintiffs such other and further relief as the case
requires and the Court deems just and proper.
Dated: March 8, 2010.
Respectfully submitted,
FOR PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
/s/ ------
Molly S. Boast,
Acting Assistant Attorney General.
/s/ ------
Patricia A. Brink,
Deputy Director of Operations.
/s/ ------
Maribeth Petrizzi,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section, D.C. Bar # 435204.
/s/ ------
Dorothy B. Fountain,
Assistant Chief, Litigation II Section, D.C. Bar #439469.
Stephanie A. Fleming, James K. Foster, Erin Carter Grace, Blake
Rushforth,
Attorneys, U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Litigation
II Section, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite 8700, Washington, D.C. 20530,
Tel: (202) 514-9228, Fax: (202) 514-9033, Email:
Stephanie.Fleming@usdoj.gov.
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I, Stephanie Fleming, hereby certify that on March 8, 2010, I
caused a copy of the Complaint to be served on defendant Election
Systems and Software, Inc., by mailing the document via email to the
duly authorized legal representative of the defendant, as follows:
FOR ELECTION SYSTEMS & SOFTWARE, INC.
Joseph G. Krauss, Hogan & Hartson LLP, 555 Thirteenth Street, NW.,
Washington, DC. 20004, (202) 637-5600, jgkrauss@hhlaw.com
/s/ ------
Stephanie A. Fleming, Esq.
United States Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Litigation II
Section, 450 Fifth Street, NW., Suite 8700, Washington, D.C. 20530,
(202) 514-9228, (202) 514-9033, stephanie.fleming@usdoj.gov
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CASE NO.:
JUDGE:
DECK TYPE: Antitrust
DATE STAMP:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et al., Plaintiffs, v. ELECTION SYSTEMS
AND SOFTWARE, INC., Defendant.
FINAL JUDGMENT
WHEREAS, Plaintiffs, the United States of America (``United
States''), the States of Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Maine, Maryland,
New Mexico, Tennessee, and Washington, and the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts (the ``Plaintiff States''), filed their Complaint on
March 8, 2010; Plaintiffs and Defendant, Election Systems and Software,
Inc., by their respective attorneys, have consented to the entry of
this Final Judgment without trial or adjudication of any issue of fact
or law, and without this Final Judgment constituting any evidence
against or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
AND WHEREAS, Defendant agrees to be bound by the provisions of this
Final Judgment pending its approval by the Court;
AND WHEREAS, the essence of this Final Judgment is the prompt and
certain divestiture of certain rights or assets by Defendant to restore
competition;
AND WHEREAS, the United States requires Defendant to make certain
divestitures for the purpose of remedying the loss of competition
alleged in the Complaint;
AND WHEREAS, Defendant has represented to the United States that
the
[[Page 12261]]
divestiture required below can and will be made and that it will later
raise no claim of hardship or difficulty as grounds for asking the
Court to modify any of the divestiture provisions contained below;
NOW THEREFORE, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
parties, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED:
I. JURISDICTION
This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of and each of
the parties to this action. The Complaint states a claim upon which
relief may be granted against Defendant under Section 7 of the Clayton
Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. Sec. 18).
II. DEFINITIONS
As used in this Final Judgment:
A. ``Acquirer'' means the entity to whom Defendant divests the
Divestiture Assets.
B. ``ES&S'' means Defendant, Election Systems & Software, Inc., a
Delaware corporation with its headquarters in Omaha, Nebraska, its
successors and assigns, its subsidiaries, including Premier Election
Solutions, Inc. and PES Holdings, Inc., both Delaware corporations
(collectively, ``Premier''), and its divisions, groups, affiliates,
partnerships and joint ventures, and their directors, officers,
managers, agents, and employees.
C. ``Premier Voting Equipment System Products'' means all versions,
past, present, and in development, of Premier hardware, software, and
firmware used to record, tabulate, transmit or report votes, including
all such systems certified by federal certification authorities
(including, but not limited to the Assure 1.2 system that was certified
by the United States Election Assistance Commission on August 6, 2009),
and all such systems certified by the election authorities of any
state.
D. ``AutoMARK Products'' means ES&S's ballot marking device that
allows voters with disabilities to privately and independently mark a
ballot.
E. ``Divestiture Assets'' means:
(1) all intangible assets related to the use, operation,
certification, design, production, modification, enhancement,
distribution, sale, repair or service of the Premier Voting Equipment
System Products, including, but not limited to, intellectual property
(including, but not limited to, patents, patent applications, licenses,
sublicenses, copyrights, databases containing design information and,
with respect to the Assure 1.2 suite of products only, trademarks,
trade secrets, trade names, service marks, service names, slogans,
domain names, logos and trade dress); the unregistered trademark
``Premier''; data related to the use, operation, certification testing,
internal testing, and beta testing; documentation of pending and
current certification efforts with the United States Election
Assistance Commission (``EAC'') and the election authorities of any
state; technical information, software, software source code and
related documentation, know-how, drawings, blueprints, designs, design
tools and simulation capability, and specifications for materials,
parts, and devices; safety procedures for the handling of materials and
substances; quality assurance and control procedures; all manuals,
performance, financial, operational, and other records Defendant
provides to its own employees, customers, suppliers, agents, dealers or
licensees; and all available research data concerning historic and
current research and development efforts relating to the Premier Voting
Equipment System Products, including, but not limited to, designs of
experiments and the results of successful and unsuccessful designs and
experiments;
(2) tangible assets, including:
(a) all tooling and fixed assets owned by Defendant and used in
connection with the manufacture, assembly, production, service and
repair of the Premier Voting Equipment System Products, as detailed in
Section 2.7 and Schedule 2.7(a) of the Purchase Agreement by and among
ES&S, Diebold, Inc., Premier Election Solutions, Inc., PES Holdings,
Inc., and Premier Election Solutions Canada ULC, dated September 2,
2009 (``Diebold Purchase Agreement'').
(b) inventory, parts and components for both the Premier Voting
Equipment Products and the AutoMARK Products, including those that are
not commercially available, sufficient for the Acquirer to assemble,
manufacture, produce, service and repair the Premier Voting Equipment
System Products and the AutoMARK Products.
(3) a fully paid-up, non-exclusive, perpetual, transferable license
to certify, produce, modify, enhance, distribute, sell, repair and
service the AutoMARK Products. Such license shall include all
intellectual property (including, but not limited to, patents, patent
applications, licenses, sublicenses, copyrights, trademarks, trade
names, trade secrets, service marks, service names, slogans, domain
names, logos, and trade dress), data, drawings, ideas, concepts, know-
how, procedures, processes, technical information, software, software
source code and related documentation, blueprints, specifications,
manuals, and any other intangible assets related to the use, operation,
certification, production, modification, enhancement, distribution,
sale, repair or service of the AutoMARK Products.
III. APPLICABILITY
A. This Final Judgment applies to ES&S, as defined above, and all
other persons in active concert or participation with it who receive
actual notice of this Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise.
B. If, prior to complying with Section IV and V of this Final
Judgment, Defendant sells or otherwise disposes of all or substantially
all of its assets or of lesser business units that include the
Divestiture Assets, it shall require the purchaser to be bound by the
provisions of this Final Judgment. Defendant need not obtain such an
agreement from the Acquirer of the assets divested pursuant to this
Final Judgment.
IV. DIVESTITURE
A. Defendant is ordered and directed, within sixty (60) calendar
days after the filing of the Complaint in this matter, or five (5)
calendar days after notice of the entry of this Final Judgment by the
Court, whichever is later, to divest the Divestiture Assets in a manner
consistent with this Final Judgment to an Acquirer acceptable to the
United States, in its sole discretion, after consultation with the
Plaintiff States. The United States, in its sole discretion, after
consultation with the Plaintiff States, may agree to one or more
extensions of this time period not to exceed sixty (60) calendar days
in total, and shall notify the Court in such circumstances. Defendant
agrees to use its best efforts to divest the Divestiture Assets as
expeditiously as possible.
B. In accomplishing the divestiture ordered by this Final Judgment,
Defendant promptly shall make known, by usual and customary means, the
availability of the Divestiture Assets. Defendant shall inform any
person making inquiry regarding a possible purchase of the Divestiture
Assets that they are being divested pursuant to this Final Judgment and
provide that person with a copy of this Final Judgment. Defendant shall
offer to furnish to any prospective Acquirer, subject to customary
confidentiality assurances, all information and documents relating to
the Divestiture Assets customarily provided in a due diligence process,
except such information or documents subject to the attorney-client
privilege or work-product doctrine. Defendant shall make available such
information to the
[[Page 12262]]
United States at the same time that such information is made available
to any other person.
C. Defendant shall provide the Acquirer and the United States
information relating to its current and former employees involved in
the use, operation, certification, design, production, modification,
enhancement, distribution, sale, repair or service of the Premier
Voting Equipment System Products and/or Premier's use of the AutoMARK
Products to enable the Acquirer to make offers of employment to such
personnel. Defendant shall not interfere with any negotiations by the
Acquirer to employ any such employee whose primary responsibility is
the use, operation, certification, design, production, modification,
enhancement, distribution, sale, repair or service of the Premier
Voting Equipment System Products and/or Premier's use of the AutoMARK
Products.
D. Defendant shall waive all nondisclosure and noncompete
agreements for all of the current and former employees of Premier for a
period of six (6) months following the date of the divestiture of the
Divestiture Assets, for the exclusive purpose of allowing those
employees to seek employment with the Acquirer.
E. Defendant shall permit any prospective Acquirer of the
Divestiture Assets to have reasonable access to personnel involved in
the use, operation, certification, design, production, modification,
enhancement, distribution, sale, repair or service of the Premier
Voting Equipment System Products and/or the AutoMARK Products, and
access to any and all financial, operational, or other documents and
information customarily provided as part of a due diligence process.
F. At the option of the Acquirer, Defendant shall enter into a
contract for the purchase of additional parts and inventory for up to
two (2) years sufficient to meet the Acquirer's needs to assemble,
manufacture, produce, service or repair the Premier Voting Equipment
System Products. The terms and conditions of any sale or contractual
arrangement intended to satisfy this provision must be commercially
reasonable.
G. In addition, Defendant shall provide any Acquirer of the
Divestiture Assets information relating to suppliers of parts and
components used for the assembly, manufacture, production, repair or
service of the Premier Voting Equipment System Products and the
AutoMARK Products. Defendant shall not interfere with the Acquirer's
ability to contract for the supply of parts or components from any
vendor.
H. Defendant shall immediately provide any Acquirer with a list of
all current and former customers for the Premier Voting Equipment
System Products.
I. To the extent that current Premier contracts prevent Premier
customers from selecting the Acquirer as its provider of equipment or
services related to the Premier Voting Equipment System Products, the
Defendant agrees to waive any such contractual impediment at the option
of the customer.
J. At the option of the Acquirer, Defendant shall enter into a
transition services agreement sufficient to meet the Acquirer's needs
for assistance in the use, operation, certification, design,
production, modification, enhancement, distribution, sale, repair or
service of the Premier Voting Equipment System Products and/or the
AutoMARK Products for a period of up to six (6) months. The terms and
conditions of any contractual arrangement intended to satisfy this
provision must be commercially reasonable.
K. On the date of the sale of the Divestiture Assets, Defendant
shall provide Acquirer with copies of contracts with all current and
former customers for any of the Premier Voting Equipment System
Products.
L. The Acquirer shall grant Defendant a non-exclusive license to
use the Premier Voting Equipment System Products and the assets
described in II(E)(2)(A), but Defendant may not use such a license to
attempt to compete for any opportunity to sell or lease Premier Voting
Equipment System Products contained within a Request for Proposal (or
RFP) or a Request for Quote (or RFQ) for a voting equipment system, or
any upgrade, request or order that calls for replacement of 50 percent
or more of a customer's installed voting equipment, other than in the
case of a force majeure event (i.e., Act of God, fire, earthquake,
flood, explosion, war, or terrorist act), or to the extent the
Defendant is obligated under a contract with a Premier or Diebold
customer in existence at the time of Closing, or to the extent that the
Defendant is obligated under a settlement agreement formed by Diebold
pursuant to Section 4.2(d) of the Diebold Purchase Agreement. Subject
to the limitations described in Section IV, Defendant may use the
license described in this paragraph to provide equipment and services
to current customers.
M. Any improvement or modification to the Divestiture Assets
developed by either Defendant or the Acquirer shall be owned solely by
the developing party.
N. Defendant shall not take any action that will impede in any way
the operation or divestiture of the Divestiture Assets.
O. Unless the United States, in its sole discretion, after
consultation with the Plaintiff States, otherwise consents in writing,
the divestiture pursuant to Section IV, or by trustee appointed
pursuant to Section V, of this Final Judgment shall include the entire
Divestiture Assets, and shall be accomplished in such a way as to
satisfy the United States, in its sole discretion, after consultation
with the Plaintiff States, that the Divestiture Assets can and will be
used by the Acquirer as part of a viable, ongoing business that is
engaged in the provision of voting equipment systems and services. The
divestiture, whether pursuant to Section IV or Section V of this Final
Judgment:
(1) Shall be made to an Acquirer that, in the United State's sole
judgment, after consultation with the Plaintiff States, has the intent
and capability (including the necessary managerial, operational,
technical and financial capability) of competing effectively in the
provision of voting equipment systems and services; and
(2) Shall be accomplished so as to satisfy the United States, in
its sole discretion, after consultation with the Plaintiff States, that
none of the terms of any agreement between an Acquirer and Defendant
gives Defendant the ability unreasonably to raise the Acquirer's costs,
to lower the Acquirer's efficiency, or otherwise to interfere in the
ability of the Acquirer to compete effectively.
V. Appointment of Trustee
A. If Defendant has not divested the Divestiture Assets within the
time period specified in Section IV(A), it shall notify the United
States of that fact in writing. Upon application of the United States,
the Court shall appoint a trustee selected by the United States and
approved by the Court to effect the divestiture of the Divestiture
Assets.
B. After the appointment of a trustee becomes effective, only the
trustee shall have the right to sell the Divestiture Assets. The
trustee shall have the power and authority to accomplish the
divestiture to an Acquirer acceptable to the United States, in its sole
discretion, after consultation with the Plaintiff States, at such price
and on such terms as are then obtainable upon reasonable effort by the
trustee, subject to the provisions of Sections IV, V, and VI of this
Final Judgment, and shall have such other powers as this Court deems
appropriate. Subject to Section V(D) of
[[Page 12263]]
this Final Judgment, the trustee may hire at the cost and expense of
Defendant any investment bankers, attorneys, or other agents, who shall
be solely accountable to the trustee, reasonably necessary in the
trustee's judgment to assist in the divestiture.
C. Defendant shall not object to a sale by the trustee on any
ground other than the trustee's malfeasance. Any such objections by
Defendant must be conveyed in writing to the United States and the
trustee within ten (10) calendar days after the trustee has provided
the notice required under Section VI.
D. The trustee shall serve at the cost and expense of Defendant, on
such terms and conditions as the United States approves, and shall
account for all monies derived from the sale of the assets sold by the
trustee and all costs and expenses so incurred. After approval by the
Court of the trustee's accounting, including fees for its services and
those of any professionals and agents retained by the trustee, all
remaining money shall be paid to Defendant and the trust shall then be
terminated. The compensation of the trustee and any professionals and
agents retained by the trustee shall be reasonable in light of the
value of the Divestiture Assets and based on a fee arrangement
providing the trustee with an incentive based on the price and terms of
the divestiture and the speed with which it is accomplished, but
timeliness is paramount.
E. Defendant shall use its best efforts to assist the trustee in
accomplishing the required divestiture. The trustee and any
consultants, accountants, attorneys, and other persons retained by the
trustee shall have full and complete access to the personnel, books,
records, and facilities of the business to be divested, and Defendant
shall develop financial and other information relevant to such business
as the trustee may reasonably request, subject to reasonable protection
for trade secret or other confidential research, development, or
commercial information. Defendant shall take no action to interfere
with or to impede the trustee's accomplishment of the divestiture.
F. After its appointment, the trustee shall file monthly reports
with the United States, the Plaintiff States, and the Court setting
forth the trustee's efforts to accomplish the divestiture ordered under
this Final Judgment. To the extent such reports contain information
that the trustee deems confidential, such reports shall not be filed in
the public docket of the Court. Such reports shall include the name,
address, and telephone number of each person who, during the preceding
month, made an offer to acquire, expressed an interest in acquiring,
entered into negotiations to acquire, or was contacted or made an
inquiry about acquiring, any interest in the Divestiture Assets, and
shall describe in detail each contact with any such person. The trustee
shall maintain full records of all efforts made to divest the
Divestiture Assets.
G. If the trustee has not accomplished the divestiture ordered
under this Final Judgment within six (6) months after its appointment,
the trustee shall promptly file with the Court a report setting forth:
(1) The trustee's efforts to accomplish the required divestiture; (2)
the reasons, in the trustee's judgment, why the required divestiture
has not been accomplished; and (3) the trustee's recommendations. To
the extent such reports contain information that the trustee deems
confidential, such reports shall not be filed in the public docket of
the Court. The trustee shall at the same time furnish such report to
the United States and the Plaintiff States, which shall have the right
to make additional recommendations consistent with the purpose of the
trust. The Court thereafter shall enter such orders as it shall deem
appropriate to carry out the purpose of the Final Judgment, which may,
if necessary, include extending the trust and the term of the trustee's
appointment by a period requested by the United States.
VI. Notice of Proposed Divestiture
A. Within two (2) business days following execution of a definitive
divestiture agreement, Defendant shall notify the United States, and
the Plaintiff States, of any proposed divestiture required by Section
IV of this Final Judgment. Within two (2) business days following
execution of a definitive divestiture agreement, the trustee shall
notify the United States of any proposed divestiture required by
Section V of this Final Judgment. The notice shall set forth the
details of the proposed divestiture and list the name, address, and
telephone number of each person not previously identified who offered
or expressed an interest in or desire to acquire any ownership interest
in the Divestiture Assets, together with full details of the same.
B. Within fifteen (15) calendar days of receipt by the United
States and the Plaintiff States of such notice, the United States and
any Plaintiff State may request from Defendant, the proposed Acquirer,
any other third party, or the trustee if applicable, additional
information concerning the proposed divestiture, the proposed Acquirer,
and any other potential Acquirer. Defendant and the trustee shall
furnish any additional information requested within fifteen (15)
calendar days of the receipt of the request, unless the parties shall
otherwise agree.
C. Within thirty (30) calendar days after receipt of the notice or
within twenty (20) calendar days after the United States has been
provided the additional information requested from Defendant, the
proposed Acquirer, any third party, and the trustee, whichever is
later, the United States, in its sole discretion, after consultation
with the Plaintiff States, shall provide written notice to Defendant
and the trustee, if there is one, stating whether or not it objects to
the proposed divestiture. If the United States, after consultation with
the Plaintiff States, provides written notice that it does not object,
the divestiture may be consummated, subject only to Defendant's limited
right to object to the sale under Section V(C) of this Final Judgment.
Absent written notice that the United States does not object to the
proposed Acquirer or upon objection by the United States, a divestiture
proposed under Section IV or Section V shall not be consummated. Upon
objection by Defendant under Section V(C), a divestiture proposed under
Section V shall not be consummated unless approved by the Court.
VII. FINANCING
Defendant shall not finance all or any part of any purchase made
pursuant to Section IV or V of this Final Judgment.
VIII. ASSET PRESERVATION
Until the divestiture required by this Final Judgment has been
accomplished, Defendant shall take all steps necessary to comply with
the Asset Preservation Stipulation and Order entered by this Court.
Defendant shall take no action that would jeopardize the divestiture
ordered by this Court.
IX. AFFIDAVITS
A. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint
in this matter, and every thirty (30) calendar days thereafter until
the divestiture has been completed under Section IV or V, Defendant
shall deliver to the United States, the Plaintiff States, an affidavit
as to the fact and manner of its compliance with Section IV or V of
this Final Judgment. Each such affidavit shall include the name,
address, and telephone number of each person who, during the preceding
thirty (30) calendar days, made an offer to acquire, expressed an
interest in acquiring, entered into negotiations to acquire, or was
contacted or made an inquiry about
[[Page 12264]]
acquiring, any interest in the Divestiture Assets, and shall describe
in detail each contact with any such person during that period. Each
such affidavit shall also include a description of the efforts
Defendant have taken to solicit buyers for the Divestiture Assets, and
to provide required information to prospective Acquirers, including the
limitations, if any, on such information. Assuming the information set
forth in the affidavit is true and complete, any objection by the
United States, after consultation with the Plaintiff States, to
information provided by Defendant, including limitation on information,
shall be made within fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of such
affidavit.
B. Within twenty (20) calendar days of the filing of the Complaint
in this matter, Defendant shall deliver to the United States an
affidavit that describes in reasonable detail all actions it has taken
and all steps Defendant has implemented on an ongoing basis to comply
with Section VIII of this Final Judgment. Defendant shall deliver to
the United States, the Plaintiff States, an affidavit describing any
changes to the efforts and actions outlined in Defendant's earlier
affidavits filed pursuant to this section within fifteen (15) calendar
days after the change is implemented.
C. Defendant shall keep all records of all efforts made to preserve
and divest the Divestiture Assets until one year after such divestiture
has been completed.
X. COMPLIANCE INSPECTION
A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
Final Judgment, or of determining whether the Final Judgment should be
modified or vacated, and subject to any legally recognized privilege,
from time to time authorized representatives of the United States
Department of Justice Antitrust Division (``Antitrust Division''),
including consultants and other persons retained by the United States,
shall, upon written request of an authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on
reasonable notice to Defendant, be permitted:
(1) Access during Defendant's office hours to inspect and copy, or
at the option of the United States, to require Defendant to provide
hard copy or electronic copies of, all books, ledgers, accounts,
records, data, and documents in the possession, custody, or control of
Defendant, relating to any matters contained in this Final Judgment;
and
(2) to interview, either informally or on the record, Defendant's
officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual counsel
present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be subject to the
reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without restraint or
interference by Defendant.
B. Upon the written request of an authorized representative of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division,
Defendant shall submit written reports or response to written
interrogatories, under oath if requested, relating to any of the
matters contained in this Final Judgment as may be requested.
C. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
this section shall be divulged by the United States to any person other
than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the United
States, or to the Attorneys General of any of the Plaintiff States,
except in the course of legal proceedings to which the United States is
a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the purpose of
securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or as otherwise required
by law.
D. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
Defendant to the United States, Defendant represents and identifies in
writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(1)(G) of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and Defendant marks each pertinent
page of such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule
26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United
States shall give Defendant ten (10) calendar days notice prior to
divulging such material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand
jury proceeding).
XI. NOTIFICATION
Unless such transaction is otherwise subject to the reporting and
waiting period requirements of the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust
Improvements Act of 1976, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 18a (the ``HSR
Act''), Defendant, without providing advance notification to the
Antitrust Division, the Plaintiff States, shall not directly or
indirectly acquire any assets of or any interest (including, but not
limited to, any financial, security, loan, equity, or management
interest) in any entity engaged in the provision of voting equipment
systems and services in the United States during the term of this Final
Judgment.
Such notification shall be provided to the Antitrust Division, the
Plaintiff States, in the same format as, and per the instructions
relating to the Notification and Report Form set forth in the Appendix
to Part 803 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations as amended,
except that the information requested in Items 5 through 9 of the
instructions must be provided only about voting equipment systems and
services. Notification shall be provided at least thirty (30) calendar
days prior to acquiring any such interest, and shall include, beyond
what may be required by the applicable instructions, the names of the
principal representatives of the parties to the agreement who
negotiated the agreement, and any management or strategic plans
discussing the proposed transaction. If, within the 30-day period after
notification, representatives of the Antitrust Division make a written
request for additional information, Defendant shall not consummate the
proposed transaction or agreement until thirty (30) calendar days after
submitting all such additional information. Early termination of the
waiting periods in this paragraph may be requested and, where
appropriate, granted in the same manner as is applicable under the
requirements and provisions of the HSR Act and rules promulgated
thereunder. This Section shall be broadly construed and any ambiguity
or uncertainty regarding the filing of notice under this Section shall
be resolved in favor of filing notice.
XII. NO REACQUISITION
Defendant may not reacquire any part of the Divestiture Assets
during the term of this Final Judgment.
XIII. RETENTION OF JURISDICTION
This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe
this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
XIV. EXPIRATION OF FINAL JUDGMENT
Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
expire ten (10) years from the date of its entry.
XV. PUBLIC INTEREST DETERMINATION
Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16, including making copies available to
the public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement,
and any comments thereon
[[Page 12265]]
and the United States's responses to comments. Based upon the record
before the Court, which includes the Competitive Impact Statement and
any comments and responses to comments filed with the Court, entry of
this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
Date:------------------------------------------------------------------
Court approval subject to procedures of Antitrust Procedures and
Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
United States District Judge
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CASE: 1:10-cv-00380
Assigned To: Bates, John D.
Assign Date: 3/8/2010
Description: Antitrust
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et al., Plaintiffs, v. ELECTION SYSTEMS &
SOFTWARE, Inc., Defendant.
COMPETITIVE IMPACT STATEMENT
Plaintiff United States of America (``United States''), pursuant to
Section 2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act (``APPA'' or
``Tunney Act''), 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(b)-(h), files this Competitive
Impact Statement relating to the proposed Final Judgment submitted for
entry in this civil antitrust proceeding.
I. NATURE AND PURPOSE OF THE PROCEEDING
Defendant Election Systems and Software, Inc. (``ES&S'') executed a
Purchase Agreement on September 2, 2009, pursuant to which ES&S agreed
to acquire Premier Election Solutions, Inc. and PES Holdings, Inc.
(collectively, ``Pr