DOJ Investigation Kicks Into High Gear
The US Department of Justice
announced this week British Airways and South Korean-based Korean
Air Lines Co. Ltd. have each agreed to plead guilty and pay
separate $300 million criminal fines for their roles in
conspiracies to fix the prices of passenger and cargo flights. The
plea agreements are the first to arise from the Antitrust
Division’s ongoing investigation into the air transportation
industry.
The charges against the two airline companies were filed this
week in the US. District Court for the District of Columbia. Under
the plea agreements, which are subject to court approval, British
Airways and Korean Air have agreed to cooperate with the
Department’s ongoing investigation.
“The Department of Justice is committed to vigorous
antitrust enforcement and will continue to bring to justice those
who fix prices and thereby deprive the American public of the
benefits afforded by a truly competitive market,” said
Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales. “International law
enforcement cooperation is crucial in prosecuting global cartels
such as these, and today’s enforcement actions represent the
successful coordination between the United States and the
UK’s Office of Fair Trading.”
The Department said that passengers who flew on British Airways
flights between the United Kingdom and the United States during the
charged period paid more for their tickets as a result of the
illegal cartel. In 2004, British Airways’ fuel surcharge for
round-trip passenger tickets was around $10 per ticket. By the time
the passenger conspiracy was cracked in 2006, the surcharge was
nearly $110 per ticket -- a 10-fold increase, said the
Department.

The DOJ also noted during the air cargo conspiracy, British
Airways’ fuel surcharge on shipments to and from the United
States changed more than 20 times and increased from four cents per
kilogram of cargo shipped to as high as 72 cents per kilogram.
The Department charged Korean Air with agreeing with air cargo
competitors on rates charged to customers in the United States and
elsewhere for international air cargo shipments. The Department
noted that the conspirators agreed to increase the fuel surcharge
over time from 10 cents per kilogram to as high as 60 cents for
each kilogram of cargo shipped from the United States. The
Department also charged that Korean Air reached an agreement with
its rival to fix certain passenger fares for flights from the
United States to Korea.
“When British
Airways, Korean Air and their co-conspirators got together and
agreed to raise prices for passenger and air cargo fares, American
consumers and businesses ended up picking up the tab for their
illegal conduct,” said Acting Associate Attorney General
William W. Mercer. “Today’s enforcement actions
demonstrate that the Antitrust Division will investigate and
prosecute illegal cartel activity–here and abroad–in
order to ensure that American consumers and businesses are not
harmed by illegal cartel activities.”
Two other airlines – Virgin Atlantic and Lufthansa AG
– have agreed to cooperate in the Division’s ongoing
investigations. Both Virgin Atlantic and Lufthansa have been
conditionally accepted into the Antitrust Division’s
Corporate Leniency Program, which allows a qualifying company that
is the first to voluntarily disclose its participation in an
antitrust crime and which fully cooperates in the subsequent
investigation to avoid criminal conviction and a heavy fine.
Virgin Atlantic entered the program after reporting its
participation with British Airways in the passenger fuel surcharge
conspiracy. As ANN reported last year,
Lufthansa was conditionally accepted after it disclosed its role in
the international cargo conspiracy in which British Airways and
Korean Air were participants.
Virgin Atlantic and Lufthansa are obligated to pay restitution
to the US victims of their conspiracies, according to the DOJ.