US judge extends temporary order halting Nexstar, Tegna merger

Industry:    1 day ago

A U.S. judge on Friday extended an order temporarily freezing Nexstar’s acquisition of rival broadcast station ​owner Tegna for another week as he decides whether to issue a ‌preliminary injunction.

U.S. District Judge Troy Nunley in Sacramento, California on March 27 issued an order requiring Nexstar to keep Tegna’s assets separate in response to a federal antitrust lawsuit filed by ​DirecTV. He said on Friday he would make some changes to the order to ​address concerns raised by Nexstar.

The companies quickly closed the $3.54 billion deal ⁠after the Justice Department and the Federal Communications Commission approved it on March ​19.

DirecTV argues the deal will irreparably drive up consumer costs, reduce local competition, shutter ​local newsrooms and increase both the frequency and duration of blackouts of key local sports teams. Eight states led by California and New York have also sought a temporary restraining order to ​stop the merger.

The states argue the deal, which creates the largest broadcast station ​group in the U.S. reaching 80% of American households, would “put more broadcast programming in the hands ‌of ⁠fewer people, cut local jobs, increase cable bills, and significantly impact the delivery of news and other media content to Americans nationwide.”

Alexander Okuliar, a lawyer for Nexstar, defended the deal in a court hearing this week saying larger size is critical to ​protect local broadcast ​news. “We don’t want ⁠local broadcast to end up like the local newspaper industry did 30, 40 years ago,” he said.

Republican Ohio Attorney General Dave ​Yost this week also raised concerns about the deal.

“The consolidation ​of ownership ⁠of TV stations means fewer ways for news to flow to the people, and greater corporate control,” Yost wrote, saying he has deep reservations about the merger, adding it ⁠will “directly ​impact the Cleveland and Columbus markets and limit ​independent voices.”

Nunley’s order says Tegna must operate as a separate, independently managed business unit and must be maintained ​as an economically viable and active competitor.

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