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To: Gerald Walls who wrote (71763)1/21/1999 2:47:00 AM
From: Paul Engel  Respond to of 186894
 
Intel Investors - Intel's FTC Trial is delayed AGAIN.

Pushed back to March 9.

Paul

{========================}
ntel trial delayed until March 9

By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
January 20, 1999, 4:40 p.m. PT

The legal battle between the Federal Trade Commission and Intel has been pushed back to
March 9, a two-week delay that will allow both sides to better prepare their cases, but also may
force the FTC to amend its internal rules.

The administrative action filed by the FTC alleges that Intel used its dominant position in the
microprocessor market to unfairly force three computer vendors--Intergraph, Digital, and Compaq--to
license their intellectual property in a way that benefits Intel. Additionally, sources close to the FTC have
said that the agency is investigating a broader suit that examines whether the Santa Clara, California,
company's other business practices violate U.S. antitrust law.

The scope of the FTC's investigation, however, has generated a tidal wave of discovery. Hundreds of
thousands--perhaps millions--of document pages have been produced in discovery, according to sources
close to the case.

The FTC has also interviewed a number of third-party companies, including Intel competitors AMD and
National Semiconductor, over the past year and a half with regard to its suit. Academics at the University
of California and other major universities are also being lined up as expert witnesses by both sides.


Originally, the action was slated to begin on January 5, but was pushed to February 23 to accommodate
the schedule of Judge James Timony and to permit for further discovery.

While the delay will allow both sides to better prepare their case, it may run afoul of internal FTC rules.
Under current administrative regulations, the presiding judge must submit a
written opinion within a year that the complaint was filed, according to
Howard Morse, an attorney at Drinker, Biddle and Reath.

The FTC filed its action on June 8, 1997, which potentially puts Timony on a
relatively tight time schedule as the hearing is expected to last for several
weeks. But the agency can amend its own rules, Morse said.

Along with extending the dates , Timony directed both sides to finish turning
over documents to each other by February 12 and exchange final witness
lists by February 19. A pretrial hearing will be held March 5 to work out remaining issues before the trial
begins the following week.



To: Gerald Walls who wrote (71763)1/21/1999 2:49:00 AM
From: Ibexx  Respond to of 186894
 
Gerald,

You seemed to have some kind of reading problems? -- I already included, for your benefit, NOW's statement in my previous message.

Kindly refrain from posting to me further.

Ibexx