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Justice Department indicts president of Taiwan LCD maker

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A federal grand jury in San Francisco has returned an indictment against the current president of Taiwan’s Hannstar Display Corporation, Ding Hui Joe (a.k.a. David Joe) for participating in a global conspiracy to fix prices for TFT-LCD display panels from September 2001 through January 2006. The indictment makes Joe the 22nd executive to be charged in the broad-ranging conspiracy, which has also seen indictments, fines, and even jail time for executives from companies like LG, Chunghwa, Sharp, Hitachi, and others.

According to the one-count felony charge, Joe participated in so-called “Crystal Meetings” held in hotel rooms in Taipei as which manufacturers exchanged information on sales of TFT-LCD displays and agreed to fix pricing for the products. Joe faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a fine of $1 million, although the fine can be increased to double the gain derived from the anticompetitive activity if that would be greater than the statutory fine. The Justice Department alleges that as a result of the conspiracy, competition in the LCD market was suppressed, leading to higher prices being paid by leading computer and television manufacturers like Dell, Apple, and Hewlett-Packard…and, of course, those costs were passed right along to consumers.

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Back in June, Hannstar plead guilty to pricing fixing and agreed to pay a $30 million fine, and former Hannstar director Jui Hung Wu pleaded guilty to participating in the scheme, agreeing to serve a seven-month prison term and pay a $200,000 fine, as well as assist the Justice Department with its ongoing investigation.

The indictment against Joe is just the latest in a string of fines and charges against LCD manufacturers; so far, the Justice Department has netted almost $900 million in fines from manufacturers, and charged 22 executives at eight companies for participating in the scheme.

Many of the companies involved with the price-fixing scheme face lawsuits from gear-makers like Dell and Nokia. Early last year, executives from LG and Chunghwa pleaded guilty to participating in the scheme and drew jail time as well as substantial personal fines.

Geoff Duncan
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Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
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