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				Also on Monday, in the same federal courthouse in Washington, 
				the Justice Department will argue before a different judge that 
				UnitedHealth Group's $8 billion deal to buy Change Healthcare 
				should be stopped.
 In the publisher merger trial, the government has focused not on 
				what consumers pay for books but on advances paid to the most 
				successful authors, especially those given $250,000 or more.
 
 "The evidence will show that the proposed merger would likely 
				result in authors of anticipated top-selling books receiving 
				smaller advances, meaning authors who labor for years over their 
				manuscripts will be paid less for their efforts," the government 
				said in a pretrial brief.
 
 The government also intends to show there was concern among the 
				merging parties that the deal is not legal. It previously 
				disclosed an email sent by Simon & Schuster CEO Jonathan Karp 
				who wrote: "I'm pretty sure the Department of Justice wouldn't 
				allow Penguin Random House to buy us, but that's assuming we 
				still have a Department of Justice."
 
 King, author of "The Shining," "Carrie" and other blockbusters, 
				will testify for the government, along with publishing 
				executives and authors' agents.
 
 Penguin Random House, the largest book publisher in the United 
				States, said it planned to buy rival Simon & Schuster in 
				November 2020. Penguin Random House is owned by German media 
				conglomerate Bertelsmann. Simon & Schuster is owned by ViacomCBS, 
				now Paramount Global. The Justice Department filed its lawsuit 
				in November 2021.
 
 The defense, led by lawyer Daniel Petrocelli who defeated the 
				Trump administration's 2018 bid to stop AT&T Inc from buying 
				Time Warner, will argue the market for books, and for publishers 
				to win top-selling authors, is competitive and that the merger 
				will make it even more so.
 
 The publishers will likely argue that the evidence shows that in 
				bidding for potential bestsellers Penguin Random House and Simon 
				& Schuster "are rarely the top two bidders."
 
 The top five publishers are Penguin Random House, HarperCollins, 
				Macmillan, Simon & Schuster and Hachette, with Walt Disney Co 
				and Amazon.com Inc also in the market. HarperCollins is owned by 
				News Corp.
 
 Judge Florence Pan of the U.S. District Court for the District 
				of Columbia will decide if the deal may go forward. The trial is 
				expected to last two to three weeks.
 
 (Reporting by Diane Bartz in Washington; Editing by David 
				Shepardson and Matthew Lewis)
 
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