Friday, May 15, 2026

DOJ Tells Judge of Tunney Act Process After It Denies FOIA Request so States to File in 2 Weeks

SDNY COURTHOUSE, May 7 –  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.   Then after a week of testimony it went on pause, and the DOJ and several states settled with Live Nation. 

   Inner City Press submitted a Freedom of Information Act requests to US DOJ on March 27, 2026.
 
   On March 16 the trial picked back up, with NYS' Hatch questioning AEG's Marciano followed by a grilling cross by Live Nation's Marriott, emphasizing the size and actions of AEG.  Then the states called Live Nation's Bob Roux, who repeatedly said he didn't remember and couldn't confirm.

Late on March 19, Inner City Press published TicketMonster in Court, here

On April 15, the jury found Live Nation to be a monopolist, verdict form here. Inner City Press immediately published "Ticketmaster Loses the Jury: Live Nation Death Sentence?" Ebook here, audiobook and paperback coming.

   On the DOJ FOIA requests, after DOJ correctly granted expedited processing and Inner City Press voluntarily limited the scope of its request in order to get the records more quickly, on April 20 a total denial by DOJ, full copy here

Inner City Press immediately appealed.

On April 24 a letter to Judge Subramanian: Live Nation's briefing for a new trial to July 2. But DOJ wants the Tunney Act process to move forward. Letter on Patreon here

On April 28, Judge Subramanian ordered a May 7 hearing. On May 7, he partially granted Inner City Press' unsealing request, writing that "the Court agrees with Inner City Press that these are judicial documents." Inner City Press live tweeted the hearing, and will cover the filings, and July 30.

April 9 extra/analysis on X for Subscribers here and Substack here

March 18 extra on "war room(s)" on X for Subscribers here and Substack here

On March 6, Inner City Press was in the courtroom at 8:30 am, and spoke to push for further unsealing, including of demonstratives. See new book, "TicketMonster: US v Live Nation 1," ebook, audiobook and paperback here.

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