The
US
Department of Justice (DoJ) has subpoenaed 24 companies over alleged price
fixing in the semiconductor market.
Toshiba,
SanDisk,
Samsung
and the Hitachi/Mitsubishi joint venture
Renesas
have so far admitted being served with grand jury subpoenas by the DoJ.
However, SanDisk revealed in a regulatory filing made on 14 September that
the enquiry will stretch to 24 companies in total.
SanDisk also stated that the
Canadian
Competition Bureau had begun a similar price fixing probe in the same
market.
A spokesman for
Intel said that
the company had not been served with a legal request concerning its partnership
with Micron
in the SRam market, and that it is not expecting to receive one.
The latest probe mirrors an investigation into the DRam market that started
in 2002, in which the DoJ accused
Infineon,
Hynix, Micron,
Mosel
Vitelic,
Nanya,
Elpida
Memory and
NEC
Electronics of banding together to artificially inflate prices between 1998
and 2002.
The DoJ investigation led to guilty pleas from Samsung, Hynix, Infineon and
Elpida, and payment of $730m in fines.
Four vice presidents at Infineon Technologies were also
jailed for four to six
months in 2004 as part of the same case.
In 2006 a group of 34 US states filed another lawsuit against seven makers of
DRam memory chips for
alleged
price fixing.
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