The House Judiciary Committee accused the company of withholding information in an antitrust case.
The House Judiciary Committee has requested that the Justice Department look into Amazon and certain of its executives for possible criminal obstruction of Congress. Committee members on both sides of the aisle claim in a letter obtained by The Wall Street Journal that Amazon refused to share material pertaining to an antitrust inquiry.
Jerrold Nadler, David Cicilline, Ken Buck, Matt Gaetz, and Pramila Jayapal, all members of the House of Representatives, urged Amazon in October to submit proof to back their testimony about the use of third-party seller data.
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Amazon “refused to turn over business documents or communications that would either corroborate its claims or correct the record,” the committee members wrote in their most recent letter. “And it appears to have done so to conceal the truth about its use of third-party sellers’ data to advantage its private-label business and its preferencing of private-label products in search results — subjects of the Committee’s investigation.”
“There’s no factual basis for this, as demonstrated in the huge volume of information we’ve provided over several years of good faith cooperation with this investigation,” an Amazon spokesperson told Engadget.
In 2020, Jeff Bezos, then the company’s CEO, told the committee Amazon doesn’t allow staff to use data from individual sellers to make competing products, but couldn’t guarantee “that policy has never been violated.” Executives also said in testimony that the company doesn’t use seller data to copy products and then promote its versions in search results, despite reports to the contrary.
The committee opened an antitrust investigation into Amazon, Apple, Meta and Alphabet in 2019. Of the four, the members have only accused Amazon of illegally obstructing the process.
“Amazon repeatedly endeavored to thwart the Committee’s efforts to uncover the truth about Amazon’s business practices,” they wrote. “For this, it must be held accountable.” They informed the DOJ of “potentially criminal conduct by Amazon and certain of its executives.”
“Amazon’s misconduct demonstrates the need for both accountability and change,” Antitrust Subcommittee chair Cicilline wrote on Twitter. “The DOJ needs to determine whether Amazon’s conduct constitutes chargeable obstruction of Congress.”