Saturday, March 7, 2026

In Live Nation Antitrust Trial Exhibits Withheld and Testimony Unheard

SDNY COURTHOUSE, March 4–  The United States versus Live Nation trial began on March 2 with jury selection, before U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York Judge Arun Subramanian.  

 In the run-up, the parties and some non-parties like counsel to Irving Azoff, arguing for sealing and redaction of documents. As it has done in other SDNY cases, Inner City Press anticipates filing when necessary to unseal. 

  On March 4, it happened. A request was made to seal an exhibit, and then nothing else could be covered. Inner City Press filed with Judge Subramanian, cc-ing DOJ and Live Nation's counsel:

"Inner City Press has been covering the above captioned case, like many others, since the Complaint was filed in May 2024.    Now that trial has begun, exhibits and filings are being withheld - this specifically challenges the withholding of an exhibit this morning, seemingly a text message between witness Abbamondi and Patty Kim of Live Nation.    It was said, cut off the public view - but then, exclusion...  In the courtroom, it seems many seats have been set aside for the parties, but too few for the press and public. Therefore Inner City Press relies on the feed, and it is not working, making it nearly impossible to cover this important trial.    This also challenges last night's formal request to seal by Tennessee Football LLC (Dkt 1108), and that of the LA Clippers (Dkt 1091), IMP (Dkt 1071) -   A better process should be established" - full letter on DocumentCloud here

More March 2 details, and the names, on X for Subscribers here and Substack here

On March 3, three opening statements - David Dahlquist out of Chicago for the US, Jonathan Hatch for NY and the other states, and Latham's Marriott for Live Nation. The first witness was supposed to take the stand after that, but Judge Subramanian cited technical issues and sent the jurors home.

More March 3 detailing including on upcoming witnesses on X for Subscribers here and Substack here

The case is United States of America et al v. Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. et al., 24-cv-3973 (Subramanian)