Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen told Reuters last month that
the Justice Department was moving "full tilt" on a probe of
Google and other Big Tech platforms.
A complaint, which had been expected around Labor Day, is now
expected this month but potentially as late as mid-October, and
is likely to focus on two sets of allegations, the sources said.
A person briefed on the matter confirmed that some career
Justice Department attorneys have pushed to delay filing of a
case pending further work, while Attorney General William Barr
has pressed to move faster.
Barr told the Wall Street Journal last month that he was "hoping
to make a decision by the end of the summer" on the Google
probe.
The department is focusing on allegations that Google violates
antitrust law by favoring its own businesses, for example
YouTube, in search results rather than presenting neutral search
results, the sources said.
A Federal Trade Commission (FTC) probe of Google that included
this allegation and wrapped up in 2013 found no justification to
take action on it.
Since then, the European Union has fined Google $2.6 billion for
favoring its own price-comparison shopping service over smaller
European rivals.
Executives knowledgeable about the advertising industry have
alleged that Google abuses its dominance in display search
advertising by requiring companies that want to use Google's
popular ad exchange to also use Google Ad Manager to serve their
ads. This has pushed several ad tech companies to switch to
other businesses.
"While we continue to engage with ongoing investigations, our
focus is firmly on providing free services that help people
every day, lower costs for small businesses, and enable
increased choice and competition," Google spokesperson Jose
Castaneda said.
The Justice Department had no immediate comment.
A lawsuit would be the next big step in an investigation that
the Justice Department said in July 2019 it opened to determine
whether major technology firms engage in anticompetitive
practices. The FTC is probing Facebook Inc and Amazon.com Inc.
Parallel to the Justice Department, a large group of state
attorneys general are probing Google and holding regular
meetings with federal law enforcers. At least 12 of these will
likely sign on to the Justice Department lawsuit, and perhaps
many more, one of the sources said.
There is some concern among Democratic state attorneys general
that the federal government will move too fast and file a
lawsuit that needs more work, the second source said. A third
source agreed.
(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Additional reporting by Paresh Dave
and David Shepardson; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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