United States v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., et al., Proposed Final Judgments and Competitive Impact Statement

Published date22 August 2019
Citation84 FR 44124
Record Number2019-17987
SectionNotices
CourtAntitrust Division,Justice Department
Federal Register, Volume 84 Issue 163 (Thursday, August 22, 2019)
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 163 (Thursday, August 22, 2019)]
                [Notices]
                [Pages 44124-44159]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2019-17987]
                [[Page 44123]]
                Vol. 84
                Thursday,
                No. 163
                August 22, 2019
                Part IV Department of Justice-----------------------------------------------------------------------Antitrust Division----------------------------------------------------------------------- United States v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., et al.; Proposed
                Final Judgments and Competitive Impact Statement; Notice
                Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 163 / Thursday, August 22, 2019 /
                Notices
                [[Page 44124]]
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                DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
                Antitrust Division
                United States v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., et al., Proposed
                Final Judgments and Competitive Impact Statement
                 Notice is hereby given pursuant to the Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. 16(b)-(h), that proposed Final Judgments,
                Stipulations, and a Competitive Impact Statement as to CBS Corporation
                (``CBS''), Cox Enterprises, Inc. (``Cox''), The E.W. Scripps Company
                (``Scripps''), Fox Corporation (``Fox''), and TEGNA Inc. (``TEGNA'')
                have been filed with the United States District Court for the District
                of Columbia in United States of America v. Sinclair Broadcast Group,
                Inc., et al., Civil Action No. 1:18-cv-2609. On August 1, 2019, a
                Second Amended Complaint was filed, alleging that CBS, Cox, Scripps,
                Fox, and TEGNA, among others, violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15
                U.S.C. 1, by agreeing to unlawfully exchange station-specific,
                competitively sensitive information regarding spot advertising
                revenues. The proposed Final Judgments, filed on August 13, 2019,
                prohibit sharing of competitively sensitive information, require
                Defendants to implement antitrust compliance training programs, and
                impose cooperation and reporting requirements on Defendants.
                 Copies of the Complaint, proposed Final Judgments, and Competitive
                Impact Statement are available for inspection on the Antitrust
                Division's website at http://www.justice.gov/atr and at the Office of
                the Clerk of the United States District Court for the District of
                Columbia. Copies of these materials may be obtained from the Antitrust
                Division upon request and payment of the copying fee set by Department
                of Justice regulations.
                 Public comment is invited within 60 days of the date of this
                notice. Such comments, including the name of the submitter, and
                responses thereto, will be posted on the Antitrust Division's website,
                filed with the Court, and, under certain circumstances, published in
                the Federal Register. Comments should be directed to Owen Kendler,
                Chief, Media, Entertainment, and Professional Services Section,
                Antitrust Division, Department of Justice, 450 Fifth Street NW, Suite
                4000, Washington, DC 20530 (telephone: 202-616-5935).
                Amy R. Fitzpatrick,
                Counsel to the Director of Civil Enforcement.
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States Of America, 450 Fifth Street NW, Washington, DC
                20530; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., 10706 Beaver
                Dam Road, Hunt Valley, MD 21030; Raycom Media, Inc., 201 Monroe
                Street, Montgomery, AL 36104; Tribune Media Company, 435 North
                Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611; Meredith Corporation, 1716
                Locust Street, Des Moines, IA 50309; Griffin Communications, LLC,
                7401 N. Kelley Avenue, Oklahoma City, OK 73111; Dreamcatcher
                Broadcasting, LLC, 2016 Broadway, Santa Monica, CA 90404; Nexstar
                Media Group, Inc., 545 E. John Carpenter Freeway, Suite 700, Irving,
                TX 75062; CBS Corporation, 51 West 52nd Street, New York, NY 10019;
                Cox Enterprises, Inc., 6205-A Peachtree Dunwoody Road, Atlanta, GA
                30328;, The E.W. Scripps Company, Scripps Center, 312 Walnut Street,
                Suite 2800, Cincinnati, OH 45202; Fox Corporation, 1211 Avenue of
                the Americas, New York, NY 10036; and, TEGNA Inc., 8350 Broad
                Street, Suite 2000, McLean, VA 22102, Defendants.
                Case No. 1:18-cv-2609-TSC
                SECOND AMENDED COMPLAINT
                 The United States of America, acting under the direction of the
                Attorney General of the United States, brings this civil antitrust
                action to obtain equitable relief against Defendants Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc. (``Sinclair''), Raycom Media, Inc. (``Raycom''), Tribune
                Media Company (``Tribune''), Meredith Corporation (``Meredith''),
                Griffin Communications, LLC (``Griffin''), Dreamcatcher Broadcasting,
                LLC (``Dreamcatcher''), Nexstar Media Group, Inc. (``Nexstar''), CBS
                Corporation (``CBS''), Cox Enterprises, Inc. (``Cox''), The E.W.
                Scripps Company (``Scripps''), Fox Corporation (``Fox''), and TEGNA
                Inc. (``TEGNA'') alleging as follows:
                I. NATURE OF THE ACTION
                 1. This action challenges under Section 1 of the Sherman Act
                Defendants' agreements to unlawfully exchange competitively sensitive
                information among broadcast television stations.
                 2. Sinclair, Raycom, Tribune, Meredith, Griffin, Dreamcatcher,
                Nexstar, CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA (``Defendants'') and certain
                other television broadcast station groups (``Other Broadcasters'')
                compete in various configurations in a number of designated marketing
                areas (``DMAs'') in the market for broadcast television spot
                advertising. Certain national sales representation firms (``Sales Rep
                Firms''), including Cox subsidiary Cox Reps, Inc. (``Cox Reps'')
                represent broadcast station groups, including the Defendants, in their
                sales of spot advertising to advertisers. Defendants', Other
                Broadcasters', and Sales Rep Firms' concerted behavior in exchanging
                competitively sensitive information has enabled the Defendants and
                Other Broadcasters to reduce competition in the sale of broadcast
                television spot advertising where they purport to compete head to head.
                 3. Defendants' agreements are restraints of trade that are unlawful
                under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. The Court should
                therefore enjoin Defendants from exchanging competitively sensitive
                information with and among competing broadcast television stations.
                II. JURISDICTION AND VENUE
                 4. Each Defendant sells spot advertising to advertisers throughout
                the United States, or owns and operates broadcast television stations
                in multiple states or in DMAs that cross state lines. Sales Rep Firms
                represent broadcast stations throughout the United States, including
                each of the Defendants, in the sale of spot advertising to advertisers
                throughout the United States. Such activities, including the exchanges
                of competitively sensitive information featured in this Complaint, are
                in the flow of and substantially affect interstate commerce. The Court
                has subject matter jurisdiction under Section 4 of the Sherman Act, 15
                U.S.C. Sec. 4, and under 28 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 1331 and 1337, to
                prevent and restrain the Defendants from violating Section 1 of the
                Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1.
                 5. Defendants have consented to venue and personal jurisdiction in
                this District. Venue is proper in this judicial district under Section
                12 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 22, and 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1391.
                III. DEFENDANTS
                 6. Defendant Sinclair is a Maryland corporation with its principal
                place of business in Hunt Valley, Maryland. Sinclair owns or operates
                191 television stations in 89 DMAs and had over $3.0 billion in
                revenues in 2018.
                 7. Defendant Raycom was a Delaware corporation with its principal
                place of business in Montgomery, Alabama. Raycom owned or operated 55
                television stations in 43 DMAs and had over $670 million in revenues in
                2017. On January 2, 2019, Gray Television, Inc. closed on its
                acquisition of Raycom.
                 8. Defendant Tribune is a Delaware corporation with its principal
                place of business in Chicago, Illinois. Tribune
                [[Page 44125]]
                owns or operates 44 television stations in 33 DMAs and had over $2.0
                billion in revenues in 2018.
                 9. Defendant Meredith is an Iowa corporation with its principal
                place of business in Des Moines, Iowa. Meredith owns or operates 17
                television stations in 12 DMAs and had over $2.2 billion in revenues in
                2018.
                 10. Defendant Griffin is an Oklahoma corporation with its principal
                place of business in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Griffin owns or operates
                four television stations in two DMAs and had over $74 million in
                revenues in 2018.
                 11. Defendant Dreamcatcher is a Delaware limited liability company
                with its principal place of business in Santa Monica, California.
                Dreamcatcher owns or operates three television stations in two DMAs and
                had over $50 million in revenues in 2017.
                 12. Defendant Nexstar is a Delaware corporation with its principal
                place of business in Irving, Texas. Nexstar owns or operates 171
                television stations in 100 DMAs and had over $2.8 billion in revenues
                in 2018.
                 13. Defendant CBS is a Delaware corporation with its principal
                place of business in New York, New York. CBS owns or operates 28
                television stations in 18 DMAs, and had over $14.5 billion in revenues
                in 2018.
                 14. Defendant Cox is a Delaware corporation with its principal
                place of business in Atlanta, Georgia. Cox owns or operates 14
                television stations in 10 DMAs, owns Cox Reps, and had an estimated $20
                billion in revenues in 2018.
                 15. Defendant Scripps is an Ohio corporation with its principal
                place of business in Cincinnati, Ohio. Scripps owns or operates 60
                television stations in 42 DMAs, and had over $917 million in revenues
                in 2018.
                 16. Defendant Fox is a Delaware corporation with its principal
                place of business in New York, New York. Fox owns or operates 17
                television stations in 17 DMAs. Fox is a corporate entity recently
                created from certain former 21st Century Fox assets, including its
                broadcast station assets, after The Walt Disney Company acquired 21\st\
                Century Fox and spun-out Fox. 21\st\ Century Fox's television segment
                earned over $5 billion in 2017.
                 17. Defendant TEGNA is a Delaware corporation with its principal
                place of business in McLean, Virginia. TEGNA owns or operates 49
                television stations in 41 DMAs, and had $2.2 billion in revenues in
                2018.
                IV. INDUSTRY BACKGROUND
                 18. Broadcast television is important to both viewers and
                advertisers. For viewers, broadcast stations, including local
                affiliates of the networks ABC, CBS, FOX, and NBC (collectively, the
                ``Big 4'' stations), offer not only highly rated entertainment and
                sports programming, but also local reporting of the news and events in
                their own communities and regions. The wide popularity of broadcast
                station programming--and the concomitant opportunity to reach a large
                local audience--also make broadcast television critical to advertisers,
                including local businesses that seek to reach potential customers in
                their own communities.
                 19. Broadcast stations sell advertising ``spots'' during breaks in
                their programming. An advertiser purchases spots from a broadcast
                station to communicate its message to viewers within the DMA in which
                the broadcast television station is located.
                 20. Broadcast stations typically divide their sale of spot
                advertising into two categories: local sales and national sales. Local
                sales are sales a broadcast station makes through its own local sales
                staff, typically to advertisers located within the DMA. National sales
                are sales a broadcast station makes through either a Sales Rep Firm or
                through a centrally located broadcast group staff, typically to
                regional or national advertisers.
                 21. Sales Rep Firms represent broadcast stations in negotiations
                with advertisers' or advertisers' agents regarding the sale of
                broadcast stations' spot advertising. There are two primary Sales Rep
                Firms in the United States, including Cox Reps. Often a Sales Rep Firm
                represents two or more competing stations in the same DMA. In those
                cases, the Sales Rep Firms purportedly erect firewalls to prevent
                coordination and information sharing between sales teams representing
                competing stations.
                V. THE UNLAWFUL AGREEMENTS
                 22. Defendants, Other Broadcasters, and Sales Rep Firms have agreed
                in many DMAs across the United States to reciprocally exchange revenue
                pacing information. Certain Defendants also engaged in the exchange of
                other forms of competitively sensitive sales information in certain
                DMAs. Pacing compares a broadcast station's revenues booked for a
                certain time period to the revenues booked for the same point in time
                in the previous year. Pacing indicates how each station is performing
                versus the rest of the market and provides insight into each station's
                remaining spot advertising inventory for the period.
                 23. Defendants' exchange of competitively sensitive information has
                taken at least two forms.
                 24. First, Defendants and Other Broadcasters regularly exchanged
                pacing information through the Sales Rep Firms, exchanges which the
                Sales Rep Firms agreed to facilitate or knowingly facilitated. At least
                once per quarter, but frequently more often, the Sales Rep Firms
                representing the Big 4 stations in a DMA exchanged real-time pacing
                information regarding each station's revenues, and reported the
                information to the Defendants and the other Big 4 station owners in the
                DMA. Typically, the exchanges included data on individual stations'
                booked sales for current and future months as well as a comparison to
                past periods. To the extent a Sales Rep Firm represents more than one
                Big 4 station in a DMA through sales teams separated by a supposed
                firewall, the exchange of pacing and other competitively sensitive
                information occurred between the sales teams and through those
                firewalls. Once given to the Defendants and Other Broadcasters in the
                DMA, the competitors' pacing information was then disseminated to the
                stations' sales managers and other individuals with authority over
                pricing and sales for the broadcast stations. These exchanges occurred
                with Defendants' knowledge and frequently at Defendants' instruction,
                and occurred in DMAs across the United States.
                 25. Second, in some DMAs, Defendants and Other Broadcasters
                exchanged competitively sensitive information, including real-time
                pacing information for booked sales for current and future months,
                directly between broadcast station employees. These exchanges
                predominantly concerned local sales, but sometimes pertained to all
                sales or national sales.
                 26. These exchanges of pacing information allowed stations to
                better understand, in real time, the availability of inventory on
                competitors' stations, which is often a key factor affecting
                negotiations with buyers over spot advertising prices. The exchanges
                also helped stations to anticipate whether competitors were likely to
                raise, maintain, or lower spot advertising prices. Understanding
                competitors' pacing can help stations gauge competitors' and
                advertisers' negotiation strategies, inform their own pricing
                strategies, and help them resist more effectively advertisers' attempts
                to obtain lower prices by playing stations off of one another.
                Defendants' information exchanges therefore distorted the normal price-
                setting mechanism in the spot advertising market and harmed the
                competitive process.
                [[Page 44126]]
                 27. Defendants' and Other Broadcasters' regular information
                exchanges, directly and through the Sales Rep Firms, reflect concerted
                action between horizontal competitors in the broadcast television spot
                advertising market.
                VI. VIOLATION ALLEGED
                (Violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act)
                 28. The United States repeats and realleges paragraphs 1 through 26
                as if fully set forth herein.
                 29. Defendants violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.
                Sec. 1, by agreeing to exchange competitively sensitive information,
                either directly or through Sales Rep Firms. Cox Reps also violated
                Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, by agreeing to or
                knowingly facilitating the exchange of competitively sensitive
                information among another Sales Rep Firm, certain Defendants, and Other
                Broadcasters. Defendants' exchange of pacing information resulted in
                anticompetitive effects in the broadcast television spot advertising
                markets in many DMAs throughout the United States.
                 30. The scheme consists of exchanges between Defendants and Other
                Broadcasters, either directly or through the Sales Rep Firms, in many
                DMAs, of their stations' revenue pacing information or, for certain
                Defendants in certain DMAs, other competitively sensitive information
                concerning spot advertising sales.
                 31. These unlawful information sharing agreements between
                Defendants, Other Broadcasters, and Sales Rep Firms have had, and
                likely will continue to have, anticompetitive effects in spot
                advertising markets by disrupting the normal mechanisms for negotiating
                and setting prices and harming the competitive process.
                 32. Defendants' agreements to exchange competitively sensitive
                information are unreasonable restraints of interstate trade and
                commerce. This offense is likely to continue and recur unless the
                requested relief is granted.
                VII. REQUESTED RELIEF
                 33. The United States requests that the Court:
                 a. adjudge that the information sharing agreements unreasonably
                restrain trade and are unlawful under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15
                U.S.C. Sec. 1;
                 b. permanently enjoin and restrain Defendants from sharing pacing
                or other competitively sensitive information or agreeing to share such
                information with any other broadcast station or broadcast station
                group, directly or indirectly, and requiring Defendants to take such
                internal measures as are necessary to ensure compliance with that
                injunction;
                 c. permanently enjoin and restrain Cox, acting through Cox Reps,
                from sharing competitively sensitive information, agreeing to share
                competitively sensitive information, facilitating the sharing of pacing
                or other competitively sensitive information or agreeing to facilitate
                the sharing of such information among any broadcast stations or
                broadcast station groups, directly or indirectly, and requiring Cox to
                take such internal measures as are necessary to ensure compliance with
                that injunction;
                 d. award the United States the costs of this action; and
                 e. award such other relief to the United States as the Court may
                deem just and proper.
                Dated: June 17, 2019
                Respectfully submitted,
                FOR PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
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                MAKAN DELRAHIM (D.C. Bar 457795),
                Assistant Attorney General for Antitrust.
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                WILLIAM J. RINNER,
                Chief of Staff and Senior Counsel.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                PATRICIA A. BRINK,
                Director of Civil Enforcement.
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                OWEN M. KENDLER,
                Chief, Media, Entertainment & Professional Services Section.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                YVETTE TARLOV (D.C. Bar 442452),
                Assistant Chief, Media, Entertainment & Professional Services
                Section.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                LEE F. BERGER (D.C. Bar 482435),
                MEAGAN K. BELLSHAW,
                GREGG MALAWER (D.C. Bar 481685),
                BENNETT J. MATELSON (D.C. Bar 454551),
                KATE M. RIGGS (D.C. Bar 984784),
                ETHAN D. STEVENSON,
                United States Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Media,
                Entertainment & Professional Services Section, 450 Fifth Street NW,
                Suite 4000, Washington, DC 20530, Telephone: (202) 514-0230,
                Facsimile: (202) 514-730.
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                [PROPOSED] FINAL JUDGMENT
                 WHEREAS, Plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Second
                Amended Complaint on ___, 2019, alleging that Defendant CBS
                Corporation, among others, violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15
                U.S.C. Sec. 1, the United States and Defendant, by their respective
                attorneys, have consented to the entry of this Final Judgment without
                trial or adjudication of any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, this Final Judgment does not constitute any evidence
                against or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, the United States and Defendant agree to be bound by
                the provisions of this Final Judgment pending its approval by this
                Court;
                 AND WHEREAS, the Defendant agrees to undertake certain actions and
                to refrain from engaging in certain forms of information sharing with
                its competitors;
                 NOW THEREFORE, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
                adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
                parties, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
                I. JURISDICTION
                 This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and each of the
                parties to this action. The allegations in the Second Amended Complaint
                arise under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec.
                1. See 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1331.
                II. DEFINITIONS
                 As used in this Final Judgment:
                 A. ``Advertiser'' means an advertiser, an advertiser's buying
                agent, or an advertiser's representative.
                 B. ``Agreement'' means any agreement, understanding, pact,
                contract, or arrangement, formal or informal, oral or written, between
                two or more Persons.
                 C. ``Communicate,'' ``Communicating,'' and ``Communication(s)''
                means to provide, send, discuss, circulate, exchange, request, or
                solicit information, whether directly or indirectly, and regardless of
                the means by which it is accomplished, including orally or by written
                means of any kind, such as electronic communications, e-mails,
                facsimiles, telephone communications, voicemails, text messages, audio
                recordings, meetings, interviews, correspondence, exchange of written
                or recorded information, or face-to-face meetings.
                 D. ``Competitively Sensitive Information'' means any of the
                following information, less than eighteen months old, of Defendant, or
                any broadcast television station regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations: Non-Public Information relating to
                pricing or
                [[Page 44127]]
                pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or market
                shares. Reports containing only aggregated market-level or national
                data are not Competitively Sensitive Information, but reports
                (including by paid subscription) that are customized or confidential to
                a particular Station or broadcast television station group are
                Competitively Sensitive Information. For the avoidance of doubt, spot
                advertising does not include network television advertising sold by the
                Defendant or television advertising sold by the Defendant in its
                capacity as an agent of the owners of syndicated programming.
                 E. ``Cooperative Agreement'' means (1) joint sales agreements,
                joint operating agreements, local marketing agreements, news share
                agreements, or shared services agreements, or (2) any agreement through
                which a Person exercises control over any broadcast television station
                not owned by the Person.
                 F. ``CTS'' means the CBS Television Stations group, its successors
                and assigns, and its officers and employees. CTS is an unincorporated
                division of CBS Corporation that consists of Defendant's 29 owned-and-
                operated broadcast television stations. CTS functions as an independent
                operating group within Defendant with its own officers and directors.
                To the extent any Defendant-owned broadcast television station comes
                under the control or operation of a division or subsidiary of Defendant
                other than the CBS Television Stations group, that other division or
                subsidiary is included in the definition of ``CTS.''
                 G. ``CTS Management'' means all directors and officers of CTS, or
                any other Defendant employee with management or supervisory
                responsibilities for CTS's business or operations related to the sale
                of spot advertising on any Station.
                 H. ``Defendant'' means CBS Corporation, a Delaware corporation with
                its headquarters in New York, New York, its successors and assigns, and
                its subsidiaries, divisions, and Stations, and their directors,
                officers, and employees.
                 I. ``DMA'' means Designated Market Area as defined by A.C. Nielsen
                Company and used by the Investing in Television BIA Market Report 2018.
                 J. ``Management'' means all directors and executive officers of
                Defendant, or any other employee with management or supervisory
                responsibilities for Defendant's business or operations related to the
                sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 K. ``Non-Public Information'' means information that is not
                available from public sources or generally available to the public.
                Measurement or quantification of a Station's future holding capacity is
                Non-Public Information, but measurement or quantification of a
                Station's past holding capacity is not Non-Public Information. For the
                avoidance of doubt, the fact that information is available by paid
                subscription does not on its own render the information public.
                 L. ``Person'' means any natural person, corporation, company,
                partnership, joint venture, firm, association, proprietorship, agency,
                board, authority, commission, office, or other business or legal
                entity, whether private or governmental.
                 M. ``Sales Representative Firm'' means any organization, including
                without limitation Katz Media Group, Inc. and Cox Reps, Inc., and their
                respective subsidiaries and divisions, that represents a Station or its
                owner in the sale of spot advertising.
                 N. ``Sales Staff'' means Defendant's employees with responsibility
                for the sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 O. ``Station'' means any broadcast television station, its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, and
                its owner or operator and its directors, officers, managers, and
                employees, unless a Station owns, is owned by, or is under common
                ownership with a Sales Representative Firm, in which case that Sales
                Representative Firm will not be considered a Station.
                III. APPLICABILITY
                 This Final Judgment applies to Defendant, other Persons in active
                concert or participation with Defendant who receive actual notice of
                this Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise, and any Person
                that signs an Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2,
                to the extent set forth therein, as a condition of the purchase of a
                Station owned by Defendant as of February 1, 2019. This Final Judgment
                applies to Defendant's actions performed under any Cooperative
                Agreement, even if those actions are taken on behalf of a third party.
                This Final Judgment is fully enforceable, including by penalty of
                contempt, against all of the foregoing.
                IV. PROHIBITED CONDUCT
                 A. Defendant's Management and Sales Staff shall not, directly or
                indirectly:
                 1. Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information to any Station
                in the same DMA Defendant does not own or operate;
                 2. Knowingly use Competitively Sensitive Information from or
                regarding any Station in the same DMA Defendant does not own or
                operate;
                 3. Encourage or facilitate the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information to or from any Station in the same DMA Defendant
                does not own or operate; or
                 4. Attempt to enter into, enter into, maintain, or enforce any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information with any
                Station in the same DMA Defendant does not own or operate.
                 B. The prohibitions under Paragraph IV(A) apply to Defendant's
                Communicating or agreeing to Communicate through a Sales Representative
                Firm or a third-party agent at Defendant's instruction or request.
                 C. Defendant shall not sell any Station owned by the Defendant as
                of February 1, 2019 to any Person unless that Person has first executed
                the Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2. Defendant
                shall submit any Acknowledgement of Applicability to the United States
                within 15 days of consummating the sale of such Station. The United
                States, in its sole discretion, may waive the prohibition in this
                Paragraph IV(C) on a Station-by-Station basis. Alternatively, the
                United States and the Person signing the Acknowledgement of
                Applicability may agree to void the Acknowledgement of Applicability at
                any time. The first sentence of this paragraph shall not apply to the
                sale of any Station to a Person already bound to a final judgment
                entered by a court regarding the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                V. CONDUCT NOT PROHIBITED
                 A. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from
                Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the Communication
                of, Competitively Sensitive Information with an actual or prospective
                Advertiser, except that, if the Advertiser is another Station,
                Defendant's Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the
                Communication of, Competitively Sensitive Information is excluded from
                the prohibitions of Section IV only insofar as is reasonably necessary
                to negotiate the sale of spot advertising on broadcast television
                stations. For the avoidance of doubt, Defendant is not prohibited from
                internally using Competitively Sensitive Information received from an
                Advertiser that is a Station under the preceding sentence, but
                Defendant is prohibited from Communicating that Competitively
                [[Page 44128]]
                Sensitive Information to a Station in the same DMA that it does not own
                or operate.
                 B. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from, after
                securing advice of counsel and in consultation with the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer, Communicating, using, encouraging or facilitating
                the Communication of, or attempting to enter into, entering into,
                maintaining, or enforcing any agreement to Communicate Competitively
                Sensitive Information with any Station when such Communication or use
                is (a) for the purpose of evaluating or effectuating a bona fide
                acquisition, disposition, or exchange of Stations or related assets, or
                (b) reasonably necessary for achieving the efficiencies of any other
                legitimate competitor collaboration. With respect to any such
                agreement:
                 1. For all agreements under Part V(B)(a) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment, Defendant shall maintain documents sufficient to show:
                 i. the specific transaction or proposed transaction to which the
                sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information relates;
                 ii. the employees, identified with reasonable specificity, who are
                involved in the sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information; and
                 iii. the termination date or event of the sharing of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                 2. All agreements under Part V(B)(b) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment shall be in writing, and shall:
                 i. identify and describe, with specificity, the collaboration to
                which it is ancillary;
                 ii. be narrowly tailored to permit the Communication of
                Competitively Sensitive Information only when reasonably necessary and
                only to the employees reasonably necessary to effectuate the
                collaboration;
                 iii. identify with reasonable specificity the Competitively
                Sensitive Information Communicated pursuant to the agreement and
                identify the employees to receive the Competitively Sensitive
                Information;
                 iv. contain a specific termination date or event; and
                 v. be signed by all parties to the agreement, including any
                modifications to the agreement.
                 3. For Communications under Part V(B)(a) above, Defendant shall
                maintain copies of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(1) for
                five years or the duration of the Final Judgment, whichever is shorter,
                following entry into any agreement to Communicate or receive
                Competitively Sensitive Information, and Defendant shall make such
                documents available to the United States upon request, if such request
                is made during the preservation period.
                 4. For Communications under Part V(B)(b) above, Defendant shall
                furnish a copy of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(2) to the
                United States within thirty days of the entry, renewal, or extension of
                the agreement.
                 5. For purposes of this Section V(B) only, a joint sales agreement,
                local marketing agreement, or similar agreement pursuant to which
                Defendant Communicates, uses, encourages or facilitates the
                Communication of, or attempts to enter into, enters into, maintains, or
                enforces any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information related solely to the sale of spot advertising for which
                Defendant is responsible on a Station, shall be considered a
                ``legitimate competitor collaboration'' under Part V(B)(b).
                 C. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from engaging in
                conduct in accordance with the doctrine established in Eastern Railroad
                Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U.S. 127
                (1961), United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381 U.S. 657 (1965), and
                their progeny.
                 D. Nothing in Section IV prohibits Defendant from (1)
                Communicating, encouraging or facilitating the Communication of, or
                attempting to enter into, entering into, maintaining, or enforcing any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information for the
                purpose of aggregation if (a) Competitively Sensitive Information is
                sent to or received from, and the aggregation is managed by, a third
                party not owned or operated by any Station; (b) the information
                disseminated by the aggregator is limited to historical total broadcast
                television station revenue or other geographic or characteristic
                categorization (e.g., national, local, or political sales revenue); and
                (c) any information disseminated is sufficiently aggregated such that
                it would not allow a recipient to identify, deduce, or estimate the
                prices or pacing of any individual broadcast television station not
                owned or operated by that recipient; or (2) using information that
                meets the requirements of Parts V(D)(1)(a)-(c).
                VI. REQUIRED CONDUCT
                 A. Within ten days of entry of this Final Judgment, Defendant shall
                appoint an Antitrust Compliance Officer who is an internal employee or
                officer of Defendant, and identify to the United States the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone number, and
                email address. Within forty-five days of a vacancy in the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer position, Defendant shall appoint a replacement, and
                shall identify to the United States the Antitrust Compliance Officer's
                name, business address, telephone number, and email address.
                Defendant's initial or replacement appointment of an Antitrust
                Compliance Officer is subject to the approval of the United States, in
                its sole discretion.
                 B. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall have, or shall retain
                outside counsel who has, the following minimum qualifications:
                 1. be an active member in good standing of the bar in any U.S.
                jurisdiction; and
                 2. have at least five years' experience in legal practice,
                including experience with antitrust matters, unless finding an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or outside counsel meeting this experience
                requirement is a hardship on or is not reasonably available to
                Defendant, under which circumstances Defendant may select an Antitrust
                Compliance Officer or shall retain outside counsel who has at least
                five years' experience in legal practice, including experience with
                regulatory or compliance matters.
                 C. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall, directly or through the
                employees or counsel working at the Antitrust Compliance Officer's
                responsibility and direction:
                 1. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, furnish to
                all of Defendant's Management and Sales Staff a copy of this Final
                Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement filed by the United States
                with the Court, and a cover letter in a form attached as Exhibit 1;
                 2. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, in a manner
                to be devised by Defendant and approved by the United States, provide
                Defendant's Management and Sales Staff reasonable notice of the meaning
                and requirements of this Final Judgment;
                 3. annually brief CTS Management and Sales Staff on the meaning and
                requirements of this Final Judgment and the U.S. antitrust laws;
                 4. brief any Person who succeeds a Person in any position
                identified in Paragraph VI(C)(3), within sixty days of such succession;
                [[Page 44129]]
                 5. obtain from each Person designated in Paragraph VI(C)(3) or
                VI(C)(4), within thirty days of that Person's receipt of the Final
                Judgment, a certification that the Person (i) has read and understands
                and agrees to abide by the terms of this Final Judgment; (ii) is not
                aware of any violation of the Final Judgment that has not been reported
                to Defendant; and (iii) understands that failure to comply with this
                Final Judgment may result in an enforcement action for civil or
                criminal contempt of court;
                 6. annually communicate to Defendant's Management and Sales Staff
                that they may disclose to the Antitrust Compliance Officer, without
                reprisal for such disclosure, information concerning any violation or
                potential violation of this Final Judgment or the U.S. antitrust laws
                by Defendant;
                 7. within thirty days of the latest filing of the Second Amended
                Complaint, Proposed Final Judgment, or Competitive Impact Statement in
                this action, Defendant shall provide notice, in each DMA in which
                Defendant owns or operates a Station, to every full power Station in
                that DMA that sells broadcast television spot advertising that
                Defendant does not own or operate of the Second Amended Complaint,
                Proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact Statement in a form and
                manner to be proposed by Defendant and approved by the United States in
                its sole discretion. Defendant shall provide the United States with its
                proposal, including the list of recipients, within ten days of the
                filing of the Second Amended Complaint; and
                 8. maintain for five years or until expiration of the Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, a copy of all materials required to be
                issued under Paragraph VI(C), and furnish them to the United States
                within ten days if requested to do so, except documents protected under
                the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-product doctrine.
                For all materials required to be furnished under Paragraph VI(C) which
                Defendant claims are protected under the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log.
                 D. Defendant shall:
                 1. upon Management (including CTS Management) or the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer learning of any violation or potential violation of
                any of the terms and conditions contained in this Final Judgment, (i)
                promptly take appropriate action to investigate, and in the event of a
                violation, terminate or modify the activity so as to comply with this
                Final Judgment,
                 (ii) maintain all documents related to any violation or potential
                violation of this Final Judgment for a period of five years or the
                duration of this Final Judgment, whichever is shorter, and (iii)
                maintain, and furnish to the United States at the United States'
                request, a log of (a) all such documents and documents for which
                Defendant claims protection under the attorney- client privilege or the
                attorney work product doctrine, and (b) all potential and actual
                violations, even if no documentary evidence regarding the violations
                exist;
                 2. within thirty days of Management or the Antitrust Compliance
                Officer learning of any such violation or potential violation of any of
                the terms and conditions contained in this Final Judgment, file with
                the United States a statement describing any violation or potential
                violation of any of the terms and conditions contained in this Final
                Judgment, which shall include a description of any Communications
                constituting the violation or potential violation, including the date
                and place of the Communication, the Persons involved, and the subject
                matter of the Communication;
                 3. establish a whistleblower protection policy, which provides that
                any employee may disclose, without reprisal for such disclosure, to the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer information concerning any violation or
                potential violation by the Defendant of this Final Judgment or U.S.
                antitrust laws;
                 4. have Defendant's CEO, President, or Executive Vice President,
                General Counsel certify in writing to the United States annually on the
                anniversary date of the entry of this Final Judgment that CTS has
                complied with the provisions of this Final Judgment;
                 5. maintain and produce to the United States upon request: (i) a
                list identifying all employees having received the annual antitrust
                briefing required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4); and (ii)
                copies of all materials distributed as part of the annual antitrust
                briefing required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4). For all
                materials requested to be produced under this Paragraph VI(D)(5) for
                which Defendant claims is protected under the attorney-client privilege
                or the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log; and
                 E. For the avoidance of doubt, the term ``potential violation'' as
                used in Paragraph VI(D) does not include the discussion of future
                conduct.
                 F. If Defendant acquires a Station after entry of this Final
                Judgment, this Section VI will not apply to that acquired Station or
                the employees of that acquired Station until 120 days after closing of
                the acquisition of that acquired Station.
                VII. DEFENDANT'S COOPERATION
                 A. Defendant shall cooperate fully and truthfully with the United
                States in any investigation or litigation concerning whether or
                alleging that Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or
                operate, or any Sales Representative Firm Communicated Competitively
                Sensitive Information with or among Defendant or any other Station or
                any Sales Representative Firm in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman
                Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. Defendant shall use its best
                efforts to ensure that all current and former officers, directors,
                employees, and agents also fully and promptly cooperate with the United
                States, as described herein. The full, truthful, and continuing
                cooperation of Defendant shall include, but not be limited to:
                 1. providing sworn testimony, that is not protected by the
                attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine, to the
                United States regarding the Communicating of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement with any other Station Defendant does not
                own or such other Station's Sales Representative Firm to Communicate
                Competitively Sensitive Information while an employee of the Defendant;
                 2. producing, upon request of the United States, all documents,
                data, and other materials, wherever located, to the extent not
                protected under the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-
                product doctrine, in the possession, custody, or control of Defendant,
                that relate to the Communication of Competitively Sensitive Information
                or any agreement with any other Station or such other Station's Sales
                Representative Firm to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information,
                and a log of documents protected by the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work product doctrine;
                 3. making available for interview any officers, directors, and
                employees of Defendant if so requested on reasonable notice by the
                United States; and
                 4. testifying at trial and other judicial proceedings fully,
                truthfully, and under oath, when called upon to do so by the United
                States;
                 5. provided however, that the obligations of Defendant to cooperate
                fully with the United States as described in this Section VII shall
                cease upon the conclusion of all of the United States' investigations
                and the United States' litigations examining whether or alleging that
                Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or operate or
                [[Page 44130]]
                such other Station's Sales Representative Firm Communicated
                Competitively Sensitive Information with or among Defendant or any
                other Station or any Sales Representative Firm in violation of Section
                1 of the Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, including
                exhaustion of all appeals or expiration of time for all appeals of any
                Court ruling in each such matter, at which point the United States will
                provide written notice to Defendant that its obligations under this
                Section VII have expired.
                 B. Defendant is obligated to impose a litigation hold until the
                United States provides written notice to the Defendant that its
                obligations under this Section VII have expired. This Paragraph VII(B)
                does not apply to documents created after entry of this Final Judgment.
                 C. Subject to the full, truthful, and continuing cooperation of
                Defendant, as defined in Paragraph VII(A), the United States will not
                bring any further civil action or any criminal charges against
                Defendant related to any Communication of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information with any other Station it does not own or operate or such
                other Station's Sales Representative Firm when that Communication or
                agreement:
                 1. was Communicated, entered into and terminated on or before the
                date of the filing of the Second Amended Complaint in this action (or
                in the case of a Station that is acquired by Defendant after entry of
                this Final Judgment, was Communicated or entered into before the
                acquisition and terminated within 120 days after the closing of the
                acquisition); and
                 2. does not constitute or include an agreement to fix prices or
                divide markets.
                 D. The United States' agreement set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does
                not apply to any acts of perjury or subornation of perjury (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1621-22), making a false statement or declaration (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1001, 1623), contempt (18 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 401-402), or
                obstruction of justice (18 U.S.C. Sec. 1503, et seq.) by the Defendant
                or its officers, directors, and employees. The United States' agreement
                set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does not release any claims against any
                Sales Representative Firm.
                VIII. COMPLIANCE INSPECTION
                 A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
                Final Judgment or of any related orders, or of determining whether the
                Final Judgment should be modified, and subject to any legally
                recognized privilege, from time to time authorized representatives of
                the United States Department of Justice, including consultants and
                other persons retained by the United States, shall, upon written
                request of an authorized representative of the Assistant Attorney
                General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice
                to Defendant, be permitted:
                 1. to access during Defendant's office hours to inspect and copy,
                or at the option of the United States, to require Defendant to provide
                electronic or hard copies of all books, ledgers, accounts, records,
                data, and documents in the possession, custody, or control of
                Defendant, relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final
                Judgment, not protected by the attorney- client privilege or the
                attorney work product doctrine; and
                 2. to interview, either informally or on the record, Defendant's
                officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual counsel
                present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be subject to the
                reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without restraint or
                interference by Defendant; and
                 3. to obtain from Defendant written reports or responses to written
                interrogatories, of information not protected by the attorney-client
                privilege or attorney work product doctrine, under oath if requested,
                relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final Judgment as
                may be requested.
                 B. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
                this Section VIII shall be divulged by the United States to any Person
                other than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the
                United States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the
                United States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the
                purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or for law
                enforcement purposes, or as otherwise required by law.
                 C. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
                Defendant to the United States, Defendant represents and identifies in
                writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
                claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(1)(G) of the
                Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and Defendant marks each pertinent
                page of such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule
                26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United
                States shall give Defendant ten calendar days' notice prior to
                divulging such material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand
                jury proceeding).
                IX. RETENTION OF JURISDICTION
                 This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
                Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
                directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe
                this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
                compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
                X. ENFORCEMENT OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 A. The United States retains and reserves all rights to enforce the
                provisions of this Final Judgment, including its right to seek an order
                of contempt from this Court. Defendant agrees that in any civil
                contempt action, any motion to show cause, or any similar civil action
                brought by the United States regarding an alleged violation of this
                Final Judgment, the United States may establish a violation of the
                Final Judgment and the appropriateness of any remedy therefor by a
                preponderance of the evidence, and Defendant waives any argument that a
                different standard of proof should apply.
                 B. The Final Judgment should be interpreted to give full effect to
                the procompetitive purposes of the antitrust laws and to restore all
                competition the United States alleged was harmed by the challenged
                conduct. Defendant agrees that it may be held in contempt of, and that
                the Court may enforce, any provision of this Final Judgment that, as
                interpreted by the Court in light of these procompetitive principles
                and applying ordinary tools of interpretation, is stated specifically
                and in reasonable detail, whether or not it is clear and unambiguous on
                its face. In any such interpretation, the terms of this Final Judgment
                should not be construed against either party as the drafter.
                 C. In any enforcement proceeding in which the Court finds that
                Defendant has violated this Final Judgment, the United States may apply
                to the Court for a one-time extension of this Final Judgment, together
                with such other relief as may be appropriate. In connection with any
                successful effort by the United States to enforce this Final Judgment
                against Defendant, whether litigated or resolved prior to litigation,
                Defendant agrees to reimburse the United States for the fees and
                expenses of its attorneys, as well as any other costs including
                experts' fees, incurred in connection with that enforcement effort,
                including in the investigation of the potential violation.
                [[Page 44131]]
                XI. EXPIRATION OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
                expire seven years from the date of its entry, except that after five
                years from the date of its entry, this Final Judgment may be terminated
                upon notice by the United States to the Court and Defendant that the
                continuation of the Final Judgment no longer is necessary or in the
                public interest.
                XII. NOTICE
                 For purposes of this Final Judgment, any notice or other
                communication required to be provided to the United States shall be
                sent to the person at the address set forth below (or such other
                addresses as the United States may specify in writing to Defendant):
                Chief, Media, Entertainment, and Professional Services Section, U.S.
                Department of Justice Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW, Suite
                4000, Washington, DC 20530.
                 For purposes of this Final Judgment, any notice or other
                communication required to be provided to Defendant shall be sent to the
                person at the address set forth below (or such other addresses as
                Defendant may specify in writing to the United States): Andrew J.
                Siegel, Senior Vice President, Law CBS Law Department, CBS Television
                Stations, 51 West 52nd Street, New York, NY 10019.
                 With a courtesy copy sent to: Yehudah L. Buchweitz, Partner, Weil,
                Gotshal & Manges LLP, 767 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10153. Counsel for
                Defendant.
                XIII. PUBLIC INTEREST DETERMINATION
                 Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
                have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16, including making copies available to
                the public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement,
                and any comments thereon and the United States' responses to comments.
                Based upon the record before the Court, which includes the Competitive
                Impact Statement and any comments and response to comments filed with
                the Court, entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
                 IT IS SO ORDERED by the Court, this__ day of___, 201_.
                Court approval subject to procedures of Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                United States District Judge
                EXHIBIT 1
                [Company Letterhead]
                Andrew J. Siegel
                Senior Vice President, Law
                CBS Law Department
                CBS Television Stations
                51 West 52nd Street
                New York, NY 10019 T: 212-975-4480
                Re: Prohibitions Against Sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information
                Dear [XX]:
                 I provide you this notice regarding a judgment recently entered by
                a federal judge in Washington, D.C. prohibiting the sharing of certain
                information with other broadcast television station(s).
                 The judgment applies to our company and all of its employees,
                including you, so it is important that you understand the obligations
                it imposes on us. CEO or President of CBS Corp. has asked me to let
                each of you know that he expects you to take these obligations
                seriously and abide by them.
                 The judgment prohibits us from sharing or receiving, directly or
                indirectly (including through a national sales representative firm),
                competitively sensitive information with or from any employee, agent,
                or representative of another broadcast television station in the same
                DMA it does not own or operate. Competitively sensitive information
                means any non-public information regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations, including information relating to any
                pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or
                market shares. There are limited exceptions to this restriction, which
                are listed in the judgment. We will provide briefing on the legitimate
                or illegitimate exchange of information. You must consult with me if
                you have any questions on whether a particular circumstance is subject
                to an exception under the judgment.
                 A copy of the judgment is attached. Please read it carefully and
                familiarize yourself with its terms. The judgment, rather than the
                above description, is controlling. If you have any questions about the
                judgment or how it affects your sale of spot advertising, please
                contact me as soon as possible.
                 Please sign and return the attached Employee Certification to
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer] within thirty days of your
                receipt of this letter. Thank you for your cooperation.
                Sincerely,
                Andrew J. Siegel
                Senior Vice President, Law
                CBS Law Department
                CBS Television Stations
                Employee Certification
                 I,____[name], ____[position] at ____[station or location] do hereby
                certify that I (i) have read and understand, and agree to abide by, the
                terms of the Final Judgment; (ii) am not aware of any violation of the
                Final Judgment that has not been reported to CBS Corporation; and (iii)
                understand that my failure to comply with this Final Judgment may
                result in an enforcement action for civil or criminal contempt of
                court.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                Name:
                Date:
                EXHIBIT 2
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF APPLICABILITY
                 The undersigned acknowledges that [Full Buyer Name], including its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and broadcast
                television stations, and their directors, officers, and employees
                (``Acquirer''), following consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of
                [insert names of station or stations acquired] (each, an ``Acquired
                Station''), is bound by the Final Judgment entered by this Court in the
                above-captioned action (``Final Judgment''), as if the Acquirer were a
                Defendant under the Final Judgment, as follows:
                 1. The Acquirer shall be bound in full by all Sections of the
                Consent Decree not specifically discussed below.
                 2. As to Sections IV, V, and VII of the Final Judgment, the
                Acquirer is bound to the Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired
                Station, each Acquired Station's successors and assigns, and each
                Acquired Station's subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired
                Station's directors, officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers
                and directors only with respect to any responsibilities or actions
                regarding any Acquired Stations, and (iii) employees with management or
                supervisory responsibilities for Acquirer's business or operations
                related to the sale of spot advertising on any Acquired Station, only
                with respect to those responsibilities.
                 3. As to Section VI(C)(3), VI(C)(4), VI(C)(6), VI(C)(8), VI(D),
                VI(E), and VIII of the Final Judgment, the Acquirer is bound to the
                Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired Station, each
                [[Page 44132]]
                Acquired Station's successors and assigns, and each Acquired Station's
                subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired Station's directors,
                officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers and directors, and
                (iii) employees with management or supervisory responsibilities for
                Acquirer's business or operations related to the sale of spot
                advertising on any Acquired Station.
                 4. The release contained in Sections VII(C) and (D) applies to the
                Acquirer, but only to civil actions or criminal charges arising from
                actions taken by any Acquired Station.
                 5. The Acquirer shall not be bound by Sections VI(C)(1),
                VI(C)(2),VI(C)(5), VI(C)(7), and VI(F) of the Final Judgment at all,
                unless the Acquirer acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days
                after entry of the Final Judgment.
                 6. Section VI(A) applies to the Acquirer, but, unless the Acquirer
                acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days after entry of the
                Final Judgment, Section VI(A) is modified to make the initial period
                for appointing an Antitrust Compliance Officer in the first sentence
                120 days from consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of the
                Acquired Station or Acquired Stations.
                 This Acknowledgement of Applicability may be voided by a joint
                written agreement between the United States and the Acquirer.
                Dated: [ ]
                Respectfully submitted,
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                [Counsel for Acquirer]
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                [PROPOSED] FINAL JUDGMENT
                 WHEREAS, Plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Second
                Amended Complaint on
                 ___, 2019, alleging that Defendant Cox Enterprises, Inc., among
                others, violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, the
                United States and Defendant, by their respective attorneys, have
                consented to the entry of this Final Judgment without trial or
                adjudication of any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, this Final Judgment does not constitute any evidence
                against or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, the United States and Defendant agree to be bound by
                the provisions of this Final Judgment pending its approval by this
                Court;
                 AND WHEREAS, the Defendant agrees to undertake certain actions and
                to refrain from engaging in certain forms of information sharing with
                its competitors and with its clients' competitors referenced herein;
                 NOW THEREFORE, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
                adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
                parties, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
                I. JURISDICTION
                 This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and each of the
                parties to this action. The allegations in the Second Amended Complaint
                arise under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec.
                1. See 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1331.
                II. DEFINITIONS
                 As used in this Final Judgment:
                 A. ``Advertiser'' means an advertiser, an advertiser's buying
                agent, or an advertiser's representative.
                 B. ``Agreement'' means any agreement, understanding, pact,
                contract, or arrangement, formal or informal, oral or written, between
                two or more Persons.
                 C. ``Client Station'' means a Station for which Defendant,
                including through Cox Reps, acts as a Sales Representative Firm. If
                Defendant, including through Cox Reps, represents a Cox Station, the
                Cox Station is a Client Station, notwithstanding any corporate
                relationship between Defendant and the Cox Station.
                 D. ``Client Station Group'' means a broadcast station group that
                owns or operates one or more Client Stations, including all, each and
                any of the stations the broadcast station group owns.
                 E. ``Communicate,'' ``Communicating,'' and ``Communication(s)''
                means to provide, send, discuss, circulate, exchange, request, or
                solicit information, whether directly or indirectly, and regardless of
                the means by which it is accomplished, including orally or by written
                means of any kind, such as electronic communications, e-mails,
                facsimiles, telephone communications, voicemails, text messages, audio
                recordings, meetings, interviews, correspondence, exchange of written
                or recorded information, or face-to-face meetings.
                 F. ``Competitively Sensitive Information'' means any of the
                following information, less than eighteen months old, of Defendant, a
                Client Station, a Client Station Group, or any broadcast television
                station regarding the sale of spot advertising on broadcast television
                stations: Non-Public Information relating to pricing or pricing
                strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or market shares.
                Reports containing only aggregated market-level or national data are
                not Competitively Sensitive Information, but reports (including by paid
                subscription) that are customized or confidential to a particular
                Station or broadcast television station group are Competitively
                Sensitive Information. For the avoidance of doubt, spot advertising
                does not include network television advertising sold by the Defendant
                or television advertising sold by the Defendant in its capacity as an
                agent of the owners of syndicated programming.
                 G. ``Cooperative Agreement'' means (1) joint sales agreements,
                joint operating agreements, local marketing agreements, news share
                agreements, or shared services agreements, or (2) any agreement through
                which a Person exercises control over any broadcast television station
                not owned by the Person.
                 H. ``Cox Media Group'' means Defendant's subsidiary Cox Media
                Group, LLC, a Delaware corporation with its headquarters in Atlanta,
                Georgia, its successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions,
                and groups, and their directors, officers, and employees, including
                without limitation each Cox Station.
                 I. ``Cox Station'' means any Station owned or operated by
                Defendant.
                 J. ``Cox Reps'' means Defendant's indirect subsidiary Cox Reps,
                Inc., a Delaware corporation with its headquarters in New York, its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and groups,
                and their directors, officers, and employees, including Harrington
                Richter & Parsons LLC, MMT Sales, LLC, and Telerep, LLC.
                 K. ``Defendant'' means Cox Enterprises, Inc., a Delaware
                corporation with its headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, its successors
                and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and Stations, and their
                directors, officers, and employees, including without limitation Cox
                Media Group, each Cox Station, and Cox Reps.
                 L. ``DMA'' means Designated Market Area as defined by A.C. Nielsen
                Company and used by the Investing in Television BIA Market Report 2018.
                 M. ``Management'' means all directors and executive officers of
                Defendant, or any other employee with management or supervisory
                responsibilities for Defendant's business or operations related to the
                sale of spot advertising on any Cox Station or Client Station.
                [[Page 44133]]
                 N. ``Non-Public Information'' means information that is not
                available from public sources or generally available to the public.
                Measurement or quantification of a Station's future holding capacity is
                Non-Public Information, but measurement or quantification of a
                Station's past holding capacity is not Non-Public Information. For the
                avoidance of doubt, the fact that information is available by paid
                subscription does not on its own render the information public.
                 O. ``Person'' means any natural person, corporation, company,
                partnership, joint venture, firm, association, proprietorship, agency,
                board, authority, commission, office, or other business or legal
                entity, whether private or governmental.
                 P. ``Sales Representative Firm'' means any organization, including
                without limitation Katz Media Group, Inc. and Cox Reps, Inc., and their
                respective subsidiaries and divisions, that represents or assists a
                Station or its owner in the sale of spot advertising.
                 Q. ``Sales Staff'' means Defendant's employees or contractors with
                responsibility for
                 (1) the sale of spot advertising on any Station, or (2)
                representation of a Client Station or Client Station Group in the sale
                of spot advertising on any Station.
                 R. ``Station'' means any broadcast television station, its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, and
                its owner or operator and its directors, officers, managers, and
                employees.
                 S. ``Station Group'' means a broadcast station group that owns one
                or more Stations, including all, each and any of the Stations the
                broadcast station group owns.
                III. APPLICABILITY
                 This Final Judgment applies to Defendant, other Persons in active
                concert or participation with Defendant who receive actual notice of
                this Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise, and any Person
                that signs an Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2,
                to the extent set forth therein, as a condition of the purchase of
                either Cox Reps or a Station owned by Defendant as of February 1, 2019.
                This Final Judgment applies to Defendant's actions performed under any
                Cooperative Agreement of Defendant, a Client Station, or a Client
                Station Group, even if those actions are taken on behalf of a third
                party or a party that is not a Client Station or Client Station Group.
                This Final Judgment is fully enforceable, including by penalty of
                contempt, against all of the foregoing.
                IV. PROHIBITED CONDUCT
                 A. As to any Cox Station, Defendant's Management and Sales Staff
                shall not, directly or indirectly:
                 1. Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information to any Station
                in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 2. Knowingly use Competitively Sensitive Information from or
                regarding any Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 3. Encourage or facilitate the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information to or from any Station in the same DMA it does
                not own or operate; or
                 4. Attempt to enter into, enter into, maintain, or enforce any
                Agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information with any
                Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate.
                 B. As to Cox Reps, Defendant's Management and Sales Staff shall
                not, directly or indirectly:
                 1. Communicate to any Station, or to any Sales Staff or other Sales
                Representative Firm representing that Station, Competitively Sensitive
                Information from or regarding another Station in the same DMA that is
                not part of the same Station Group;
                 2. Communicate to any Station Group, or to any Sales Staff or other
                Sales Representative Firm representing that Station Group,
                Competitively Sensitive Information from or regarding any Station, not
                part of that Station Group, that operates in the same DMA as one or
                more of that Station Group's Stations;
                 3. Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information to any other
                Sales Representative Firm;
                 4. Knowingly use Competitively Sensitive Information on behalf of
                any Station operating in a given DMA from or regarding any other
                Station in that same DMA that is not within the same Client Station
                Group;
                 5. Encourage or facilitate the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information between two or more Stations in the same DMA that
                are not part of the same Client Station Group; or
                 6. Attempt to enter into, enter into, maintain, or enforce any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information between
                two or more Stations in the same DMA that are not part of the same
                Client Station Group.
                 C. The prohibitions under Paragraph IV(A) apply to Cox Media
                Group's Communicating or agreeing to Communicate through a Sales
                Representative Firm or a third- party agent at Cox Media Group's
                instruction or request. The prohibitions of Paragraph IV(A) do not
                apply to Cox Reps' Management and Sales Staff to the extent Cox Reps'
                Management or Sales Staff acts in their capacity as representatives of
                a Client Station other than a Cox Station.
                 D. Defendant shall not sell Cox Reps or any Station owned by
                Defendant as of February 1, 2019 to any Person unless that Person has
                first executed the Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit
                2. Defendant shall submit any Acknowledgement of Applicability to the
                United States within 15 days of consummating the sale of such Station.
                The United States, in its sole discretion, may waive the prohibition in
                this Paragraph IV(D) as to Cox Reps or as to any Cox Station on a
                Station-by-Station basis. Alternatively, the United States and the
                Person signing the Acknowledgement of Applicability may agree to void
                the Acknowledgement of Applicability at any time. The first sentence of
                this paragraph shall not apply to the sale of Cox Reps or any Station
                to a Person already bound to a final judgment entered by a court
                regarding the Communication of Competitively Sensitive Information.
                V. CONDUCT NOT PROHIBITED
                 A. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from
                Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the Communication
                of, Competitively Sensitive Information with an actual or prospective
                Advertiser, except that, if the Advertiser is a Station, Defendant's
                Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the Communication
                of, Competitively Sensitive Information is excluded from the
                prohibitions of Section IV only insofar as is reasonably necessary to
                negotiate the sale of spot advertising on broadcast television
                stations. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit a Cox Station's
                Management and Sales Staff from internally using Competitively
                Sensitive Information received from an Advertiser, but Defendant is
                prohibited from Communicating that Competitively Sensitive Information
                to a Station in the same DMA that, with respect to Cox Media, it does
                not own or operate or, with respect to Cox Reps, is not part of the
                same Client Station Group. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Cox
                Reps' Management and Sales Staff from internally using Competitively
                Sensitive Information received from an Advertiser for purposes of the
                Client Station or Client Station Group they represented when receiving
                that Competitively Sensitive Information, but Defendant is prohibited
                from Communicating that
                [[Page 44134]]
                Competitively Sensitive Information to any other Station that is not
                part of the same Client Station Group Cox Reps represented when
                receiving that Competitively Sensitive Information and that operates in
                the same DMA(s) as the Client Station or Client Station Group that Cox
                Reps represented when receiving the Competitively Sensitive
                Information.
                 B. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from, after
                securing advice of counsel and in consultation with the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer, Communicating, using, encouraging or facilitating
                the Communication of, or attempting to enter into, entering into,
                maintaining, or enforcing any Agreement to Communicate Competitively
                Sensitive Information with any Station when such Communication or use
                is (a) for the purpose of evaluating or effectuating a bona fide
                acquisition, disposition, or exchange of Stations or related assets, or
                (b) reasonably necessary for achieving the efficiencies of any other
                legitimate competitor collaboration. With respect to any such
                agreement:
                 1. For all Agreements under Part V(B)(a) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment, Defendant shall maintain documents sufficient to show:
                 i. the specific transaction or proposed transaction to which the
                sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information relates;
                 ii. the employees, identified with reasonable specificity, who are
                involved in the sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information; and
                 iii. the termination date or event of the sharing of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                 2. All Agreements under Part V(B)(b) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment shall be in writing, and shall:
                 i. identify and describe, with specificity, the collaboration to
                which it is ancillary;
                 ii. be narrowly tailored to permit the Communication of
                Competitively Sensitive Information only when reasonably necessary and
                only to the employees reasonably necessary to effectuate the
                collaboration;
                 iii. identify with reasonable specificity the Competitively
                Sensitive Information Communicated pursuant to the agreement and
                identify the employees to receive the Competitively Sensitive
                Information;
                 iv. contain a specific termination date or event; and
                 v. be signed by all parties to the agreement, including any
                modifications to the agreement.
                 3. For Communications under Part V(B)(a) above, Defendant shall
                maintain copies of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(1) for
                five years or the duration of the Final Judgment, whichever is shorter,
                following entry into any agreement to Communicate or receive
                Competitively Sensitive Information, and Defendant shall make such
                documents available to the United States upon request, if such request
                is made during the preservation period.
                 4. For Communications under Part V(B)(b) above, Defendant shall
                furnish a copy of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(2) to the
                United States within thirty days of the entry, renewal, or extension of
                the agreement.
                 5. For purposes of this Section V(B) only, a Joint Sales Agreement,
                Local Marketing Agreement, or similar Agreement pursuant to which the
                Defendant Communicates, uses, encourages or facilitates the
                Communication of, or attempts to enter into, enters into, maintains, or
                enforces any Agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information related solely to the sale of spot advertising for which
                Defendant is responsible on a Station, shall be considered a
                ``legitimate competitor collaboration'' under Part V(B)(b).
                 C. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from engaging in
                conduct in accordance with the doctrine established in Eastern Railroad
                Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U.S. 127
                (1961), United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381 U.S. 657 (1965), and
                their progeny.
                 D. Nothing in Section IV prohibits Defendant from (1)
                Communicating, encouraging or facilitating the Communication of, or
                attempting to enter into, entering into, maintaining, or enforcing any
                Agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information for the
                purpose of aggregation if (a) Competitively Sensitive Information is
                sent to or received from, and the aggregation is managed by, a third
                party not owned or operated by any Station; (b) the information
                disseminated by the aggregator is limited to historical total broadcast
                television station revenue or other geographic or characteristic
                categorization (e.g., national, local, or political sales revenue); and
                (c) any information disseminated is sufficiently aggregated such that
                it would not allow a recipient to identify, deduce, or estimate the
                prices or pacing of any individual broadcast television station not
                owned or operated by that recipient; or (2) using information that
                meets the requirements of Parts V(D)(1)(a)-(c).
                VI. REQUIRED CONDUCT
                 A. Within ten days of entry of this Final Judgment, Defendant shall
                appoint an Antitrust Compliance Officer who is an internal employee or
                Officer of Defendant, and identify to the United States the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone number, and
                email address. Within forty-five days of a vacancy in the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer position, Defendant shall appoint a replacement, and
                shall identify to the United States the Antitrust Compliance Officer's
                name, business address, telephone number, and email address.
                Defendant's initial or replacement appointment of an Antitrust
                Compliance Officer is subject to the approval of the United States, in
                its sole discretion.
                 B. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall have, or shall retain
                outside counsel who has, the following minimum qualifications:
                 1. be an active member in good standing of the bar in any U.S.
                jurisdiction; and
                 2. have at least five years' experience in legal practice,
                including experience with antitrust matters, unless finding an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or outside counsel meeting this experience
                requirement is a hardship on or is not reasonably available to
                Defendant, under which circumstances Defendant may select an Antitrust
                Compliance Officer or shall retain outside counsel who has at least
                five years' experience in legal practice, including experience with
                regulatory or compliance matters.
                 C. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall, directly or through the
                employees or counsel working at the Antitrust Compliance Officer's
                responsibility and direction:
                 1. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, furnish to
                all of Defendant's Management and Sales Staff a copy of this Final
                Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement filed by the United States
                with the Court, and a cover letter in a form attached as Exhibit 1(A),
                and to Defendant's Client Stations and Client Station Groups a copy of
                this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement filed by the
                United States with the Court, and a cover letter in a form attached as
                Exhibit 1(B);
                 2. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, in a manner
                to be devised by Defendant and approved by the United States, provide
                Defendant's
                [[Page 44135]]
                Management and Sales Staff reasonable notice of the meaning and
                requirements of this Final Judgment;
                 3. annually brief (i) Management of Cox Media Group, (ii)
                Management of Cox Reps, and (iii) Sales Staff on the meaning and
                requirements of this Final Judgment and the U.S. antitrust laws;
                 4. brief any Person who succeeds a Person in any position
                identified in Paragraph VI(C)(3), within sixty days of such succession;
                 5. obtain from each Person designated in Paragraph VI(C)(3) or
                VI(C)(4), within thirty days of that Person's receipt of the Final
                Judgment, a certification that the Person (i) has read and understands
                and agrees to abide by the terms of this Final Judgment; (ii) is not
                aware of any violation of the Final Judgment that has not been reported
                to Defendant; and (iii) understands that failure to comply with this
                Final Judgment may result in an enforcement action for civil or
                criminal contempt of court;
                 6. annually communicate to Defendant's Management and Sales Staff
                that they may disclose to the Antitrust Compliance Officer, without
                reprisal for such disclosure, information concerning any violation or
                potential violation of this Final Judgment or the U.S. antitrust laws
                by Defendant;
                 7. within thirty days of the latest filing of the Second Amended
                Complaint, Proposed Final Judgment, or Competitive Impact Statement in
                this action, Defendant shall provide notice of the Second Amended
                Complaint, Proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact Statement,
                in each DMA in which Defendant owns or operates a Station or in which
                Defendant's Client Station operates, to every full power Station in
                that DMA that sells broadcast television spot advertising. Excluded
                from the preceding sentence is any Cox Station or Client Station. Such
                notice shall be in a form and manner to be proposed by Defendant and
                approved by the United States in its sole discretion. Defendant shall
                provide the United States with its proposal, including the list of
                recipients, within ten days of the filing of the Second Amended
                Complaint; and
                 8. maintain for five years or until expiration of the Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, a copy of all materials required to be
                issued under Paragraph VI(C), and furnish them to the United States
                within ten days if requested to do so, except documents protected under
                the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-product doctrine.
                For all materials required to be furnished under Paragraph VI(C) which
                Defendant claims are protected under the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log.
                 D. Defendant shall:
                 1. upon Management or the Antitrust Compliance Officer learning of
                any violation or potential violation of any of the terms and conditions
                contained in this Final Judgment involving a Station or Sales
                Representative Firm in which Defendant has a controlling interest at
                the time of the violation or potential violation, (i) promptly take
                appropriate action to investigate, and in the event of a violation,
                terminate or modify the activity so as to comply with this Final
                Judgment, (ii) maintain all documents related to any violation or
                potential violation of this Final Judgment for a period of five years
                or the duration of this Final Judgment, whichever is shorter, and (iii)
                maintain, and furnish to the United States at the United States'
                request, a log of (a) all such documents and documents for which
                Defendant claims protection under the attorney-client privilege or the
                attorney work product doctrine, and (b) all potential and actual
                violations, even if no documentary evidence regarding the violations
                exist;
                 2. within thirty days of Management or the Antitrust Compliance
                Officer learning of any such violation or potential violation of any of
                the terms and conditions contained in this Final Judgment, file with
                the United States a statement describing any violation or potential
                violation of any of the terms and conditions contained in this Final
                Judgment, which shall include a description of any Communications
                constituting the violation or potential violation, including the date
                and place of the Communication, the Persons involved, and the subject
                matter of the Communication;
                 3. establish a whistleblower protection policy, which provides that
                any employee may disclose, without reprisal for such disclosure, to the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer information concerning any violation or
                potential violation by the Defendant of this Final Judgment or U.S.
                antitrust laws;
                 4. put into place, maintain, and monitor policies and procedures at
                Cox Reps that ensure that Management and Sales Staff representing a
                Client Station do not have access to the Competitively Sensitive
                Information of any other Client Station Group operating in the same DMA
                as the Client Station, including without limitation database access
                restrictions;
                 5. have its CEO, General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer certify in
                writing to the United States annually on the anniversary date of the
                entry of this Final Judgment that Defendant has complied with the
                provisions of this Final Judgment;
                 6. maintain and produce to the United States upon request: (i) a
                list identifying all employees having received the annual antitrust
                briefing required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4); (ii) copies
                of all materials distributed as part of the annual antitrust briefing
                required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4); and (iii) copies of
                policies and procedures, or descriptions of policies and procedures not
                documented in writing, required under Paragraph VI(D)(4). For all
                materials requested to be produced under this Paragraph VI(D)(6) for
                which Defendant claims is protected under the attorney-client privilege
                or the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log; and
                 7. in a form and manner to be proposed by Defendant and approved by
                the United States in its sole discretion, maintained and produced to
                the United States upon request, notify each Client Station and Client
                Station Group that the Defendant will refuse any explicit or implicit
                instruction or request to Communicate any of the Client Station's or
                Client Station Group's Competitively Sensitive Information or
                Communicate another Station's Competitively Sensitive Information in a
                way that would violate Sections IV and V of this Final Judgment, within
                14 days of entry of the Final Judgment.
                 E. For the avoidance of doubt, the term ``potential violation'' as
                used in Paragraph VI(D) does not include the discussion of future
                conduct.
                 F. If Defendant acquires a Station after entry of this Final
                Judgment, this Section VI will not apply to that acquired Station or
                the employees of that acquired Station until 120 days after closing of
                the acquisition of that acquired Station.
                 G. Subsections (i), (ii) and (iii) of Paragraph VI(C)(3), and the
                provisions of Paragraphs VI(C)(4), VI(C)(5), and VI(D)(4) shall not
                apply if (1) Defendant no longer has a controlling interest in Cox
                Reps, Cox Media Group, or a Cox Station, as specified in those
                subsections or paragraphs, and (2) the Person acquiring the controlling
                interest in Cox Reps, Cox Media Group, or a Cox Station, as specified
                in those subsections or paragraphs, has executed the Acknowledgement of
                Applicability as to those entities.
                VII. DEFENDANT'S COOPERATION
                 A. Defendant shall cooperate fully and truthfully with the United
                States in any investigation or litigation
                [[Page 44136]]
                concerning whether or alleging that Defendant, any Station that
                Defendant does not own or operate, or any Sales Representative Firm
                Communicated Competitively Sensitive Information or agreed to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information, in a manner that
                violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1.
                Defendant shall use its best efforts to ensure that all current and
                former officers, directors, employees, and agents also fully and
                promptly cooperate with the United States. The full, truthful, and
                continuing cooperation of Defendant shall include, but not be limited
                to:
                 1. providing sworn testimony, excluding testimony that is protected
                by the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine,
                to the United States regarding the Communicating of Competitively
                Sensitive Information or any Agreement to Communicate Competitively
                Sensitive Information;
                 2. producing, upon request of the United States, all documents,
                data, and other materials, wherever located, to the extent not
                protected under the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-
                product doctrine, in the possession, custody, or control of Defendant,
                that relate to the Communication of Competitively Sensitive Information
                or any Agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information,
                and a log of any such documents protected by the attorney-client
                privilege or the attorney work product doctrine;
                 3. making available for interview any officers, directors,
                employees, and agents of Defendant if so requested on reasonable notice
                by the United States; and
                 4. testifying at trial and other judicial proceedings fully,
                truthfully, and under oath, when called upon to do so by the United
                States;
                 5. provided however, that the obligations of Defendant to cooperate
                fully with the United States as described in this Section VII shall
                cease upon the conclusion of all of the United States' investigations
                and the United States' litigations examining whether or alleging that
                Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or operate, or any
                Sales Representative Firm Communicated Competitively Sensitive
                Information or agreed to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information, in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, as amended,
                15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, including exhaustion of all appeals or expiration of
                time for all appeals of any Court ruling in each such matter, at which
                point the United States will provide written notice to Defendant that
                its obligations under this Section VII have expired.
                 B. Defendant is obligated to impose a litigation hold until the
                United States provides written notice to the Defendant that its
                obligations under this Section VII have expired. This Paragraph VII(B)
                does not apply to documents created after entry of this Final Judgment.
                 C. Subject to the full, truthful, and continuing cooperation of
                Defendant, as defined in Paragraph VII(A), the United States will not
                bring any further civil action or any criminal charges against
                Defendant related to any Communication of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any Agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information provided such Communication or Agreement:
                 1. occurred before the date of the filing of the Second Amended
                Complaint in this action (or in the case of a Station that is acquired
                by Defendant after entry of this Final Judgment, was Communicated or
                entered into before the acquisition and terminated within 120 days
                after the closing of the acquisition);
                 2. does not involve the Defendant acting as a joint sales agent for
                Stations from different Station Groups competing in the same DMA; and
                 3. does not constitute or include an agreement to fix prices or
                divide markets.
                 D. The United States' agreement set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does
                not apply to any acts of perjury or subornation of perjury (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1621-22), making a false statement or declaration (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1001, 1623), contempt (18 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 401-402), or
                obstruction of justice (18 U.S.C. Sec. 1503, et seq.) by the Defendant
                or its officers, directors, and employees. The United States' agreement
                set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does not release any claims against any
                Client Station (except any Cox Station), Client Station Group (except
                Cox Media Group), any Station that is not a Cox Station, or any Sales
                Representative Firm (except Cox Reps).
                VIII. COMPLIANCE INSPECTION
                 A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
                Final Judgment or of any related orders, or of determining whether the
                Final Judgment should be modified, and subject to any legally
                recognized privilege, from time to time authorized representatives of
                the United States Department of Justice, including consultants and
                other persons retained by the United States, shall, upon written
                request of an authorized representative of the Assistant Attorney
                General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice
                to Defendant, be permitted:
                 1. to access during Defendant's office hours to inspect and copy,
                or at the option of the United States, to require Defendant to provide
                electronic or hard copies of all books, ledgers, accounts, records,
                data, and documents in the possession, custody, or control of
                Defendant, relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final
                Judgment, not protected by the attorney- client privilege or the
                attorney work product doctrine; and
                 2. to interview, either informally or on the record, Defendant's
                officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual counsel
                present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be subject to the
                reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without restraint or
                interference by Defendant; and
                 3. to obtain from Defendant written reports or responses to written
                interrogatories, of information not protected by the attorney-client
                privilege or attorney work product doctrine, under oath if requested,
                relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final Judgment as
                may be requested.
                 B. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
                this Section VIII shall be divulged by the United States to any Person
                other than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the
                United States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the
                United States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the
                purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or for law
                enforcement purposes, or as otherwise required by law.
                 C. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
                Defendant to the United States, Defendant represents and identifies in
                writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
                claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(1)(G) of the
                Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and Defendant marks each pertinent
                page of such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule
                26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United
                States shall give Defendant ten calendar days' notice prior to
                divulging such material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand
                jury proceeding).
                IX. RETENTION OF JURISDICTION
                 This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
                Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
                directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or
                [[Page 44137]]
                construe this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to
                enforce compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
                X. ENFORCEMENT OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 A. The United States retains and reserves all rights to enforce the
                provisions of this Final Judgment, including its right to seek an order
                of contempt from this Court. Defendant agrees that in any civil
                contempt action, any motion to show cause, or any similar civil action
                brought by the United States regarding an alleged violation of this
                Final Judgment, the United States may establish a violation of the
                Final Judgment and the appropriateness of any remedy therefor by a
                preponderance of the evidence, and Defendant waives any argument that a
                different standard of proof should apply.
                 B. The Final Judgment should be interpreted to give full effect to
                the procompetitive purposes of the antitrust laws and to restore all
                competition the United States alleged was harmed by the challenged
                conduct. Defendant agrees that it may be held in contempt of, and that
                the Court may enforce, any provision of this Final Judgment that, as
                interpreted by the Court in light of these procompetitive principles
                and applying ordinary tools of interpretation, is stated specifically
                and in reasonable detail, whether or not it is clear and unambiguous on
                its face. In any such interpretation, the terms of this Final Judgment
                should not be construed against either party as the drafter.
                 C. In any enforcement proceeding in which the Court finds that
                Defendant has violated this Final Judgment, the United States may apply
                to the Court for a one-time extension of this Final Judgment, together
                with such other relief as may be appropriate. In connection with any
                successful effort by the United States to enforce this Final Judgment
                against Defendant, whether litigated or resolved prior to litigation,
                Defendant agrees to reimburse the United States for the fees and
                expenses of its attorneys, as well as any other costs including
                experts' fees, incurred in connection with that enforcement effort,
                including in the investigation of the potential violation.
                XI. EXPIRATION OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
                expire seven years from the date of its entry, except that after five
                years from the date of its entry, this Final Judgment may be terminated
                upon notice by the United States to the Court and Defendant that the
                continuation of the Final Judgment no longer is necessary or in the
                public interest.
                XII. NOTICE
                 For purposes of this Final Judgment, any notice or other
                communication required to be provided to the United States shall be
                sent to the person at the address set forth below (or such other
                addresses as the United States may specify in writing to Defendant):
                Chief, Media, Entertainment, and Professional Services Section, U.S.
                Department of Justice Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW, Suite
                4000, Washington, DC 20530.
                XIII. PUBLIC INTEREST DETERMINATION
                 Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
                have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16, including making copies available to
                the public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement,
                and any comments thereon and the United States' responses to comments.
                Based upon the record before the Court, which includes the Competitive
                Impact Statement and any comments and response to comments filed with
                the Court, entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
                 IT IS SO ORDERED by the Court, this __ day of __, 201_.
                Court approval subject to procedures of Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                United States District Judge
                EXHIBIT 1(A)
                [Company Letterhead]
                [Name and Address of Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Re: Prohibitions Against Sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information
                Dear [XX]:
                 I provide you this notice regarding a judgment recently entered by
                a federal judge in Washington, D.C. prohibiting the sharing of certain
                information with or among stations competing in the same DMA, other
                national sales representative firms, or Cox Reps' sales staff
                representing client stations in the same DMA that are not part of the
                same station group.
                 The judgment applies to our company and all of its employees,
                including you, so it is important that you understand the obligations
                it imposes on us. [CEO Name] has asked me to let each of you know that
                [s/he] expects you to take these obligations seriously and abide by
                them.
                 The judgment prohibits us from sharing or receiving, directly or
                indirectly, including through another national sales representative
                firm, competitively sensitive information with or from any employee,
                agent, or representative of another broadcast television station in the
                same DMA we do not own or operate or that Cox Reps does not represent.
                In addition, while the judgment does not prevent Cox Reps from
                obtaining competitively sensitive information from our client stations,
                we cannot share client's competitively sensitive information with
                another station in the same DMA that is not part of the same station
                group, even if that other station is also a client of Cox Reps.
                Competitively sensitive information means any non-public information
                regarding the sale of spot advertising on broadcast television
                stations, including information relating to any pricing or pricing
                strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or market shares. There
                are limited exceptions to this restriction, which are listed in the
                judgment. The company will provide further training on what exchanges
                of information are appropriate. You must consult with me if you have
                any questions on whether a particular circumstance is subject to an
                exception under the judgment.
                 A copy of the judgment is attached. Please read it carefully and
                familiarize yourself with its terms. The judgment, rather than the
                above description, is controlling. If you have any questions about the
                judgment or how it affects your sale of spot advertising or
                representation of our client broadcast stations, please contact me as
                soon as possible.
                 Please sign and return the attached Employee Certification to
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer] within thirty days of your
                receipt of this letter. Thank you for your cooperation.
                Sincerely,
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Employee Certification
                 I, ____ [name], ____ [position] at ____ [station or location] do
                hereby certify that I (i) have read and understand, and agree to abide
                by, the terms of the Final Judgment; (ii) am not aware of any violation
                of the Final Judgment that has not been reported to [Defendant]; and
                (iii) understand that my failure to comply with this Final Judgment may
                result in an enforcement action for civil or criminal contempt of
                court.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                [[Page 44138]]
                Name:
                Date:
                EXHIBIT 1(B)
                [Company Letterhead]
                [Name and Address of Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Re: Prohibitions Against Sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information
                Dear [XX]:
                 I provide you this notice regarding a judgment recently entered by
                a federal judge in Washington, D.C. prohibiting the sharing of certain
                information with or among stations competing in the same DMA, other
                national sales representative firms, or Cox Reps' sales staff
                representing client stations in the same DMA that are not part of the
                same station group.
                 The judgment prohibits Cox Reps from sharing with or receiving from
                any employee, agent, or representative of a broadcast television
                station--whether directly or indirectly, including through another
                national sales representative firm--competitively sensitive information
                from or regarding another station in the same DMA that is not part of
                the same broadcast station group. In addition, while the judgment does
                not prevent Cox Reps from obtaining competitively sensitive information
                from its client stations, Cox Reps cannot share a client's
                competitively sensitive information with another station in the same
                DMA that is not part of the same station group, even if that other
                station is also a client of Cox Reps. Competitively sensitive
                information means any non-public information regarding the sale of spot
                advertising on broadcast television stations, including information
                relating to any pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding
                capacity, revenues, or market shares. There are limited exceptions to
                this restriction, which are listed in the judgment.
                 A copy of the judgment is attached. The judgment, rather than the
                above description, is controlling. If you have any questions about this
                letter, please feel free to contact me.
                Sincerely,
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                EXHIBIT 2
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF APPLICABILITY
                 The undersigned acknowledges that [Full Buyer Name], including its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and broadcast
                television stations, and their directors, officers, and employees
                (``Acquirer''), following consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of
                [insert names of Cox Reps or station or stations acquired] (each, an
                ``Acquired Station'' \1\), is bound by the Final Judgment entered by
                this Court in the above-captioned action against Cox Enterprises, Inc.
                (``Final Judgment''), as if the Acquirer were a Defendant under the
                Final Judgment, as follows:
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \1\ The term ``Cox Reps'' can be substituted for ``Acquired
                Station'' throughout this Acknowledgement if the acquired asset is
                Cox Reps. If both Cox Reps and a Cox Station are acquired, use both
                terms.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 1. The Acquirer shall be bound in full by all Sections of the
                Consent Decree not specifically discussed below.
                 2. As to Sections IV, V, and VII of the Final Judgment, the
                Acquirer is bound to the Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired
                Station, each Acquired Station's successors and assigns, and each
                Acquired Station's subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired
                Station's directors, officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers
                and directors only with respect to any responsibilities or actions
                regarding any Acquired Stations, and (iii) employees with management or
                supervisory responsibilities for Acquirer's business or operations
                related to the sale of spot advertising on any Acquired Station, only
                with respect to those responsibilities.
                 3. As to Sections VI(C)(3), VI(C)(4), VI(C)(6), VI(C)(8), VI(D),
                VI(E), and VIII of the Final Judgment, the Acquirer is bound to the
                Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired Station, each Acquired
                Station's successors and assigns, and each Acquired Station's
                subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired Station's directors,
                officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers and directors, and
                (iii) employees with management or supervisory responsibilities for
                Acquirer's business or operations related to the sale of spot
                advertising on any Acquired Station.
                 4. The release contained in Sections VII(C) and (D) applies to the
                Acquirer, but only to civil actions or criminal charges arising from
                actions taken by any Acquired Station.
                 5. The Acquirer shall not be bound by Sections VI(C)(1), VI(C)(2),
                VI(C)(5), VI(C)(7), and VI(F) of the Final Judgment at all, unless the
                Acquirer acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days after
                entry of the Final Judgment.
                 6. Section VI(A) applies to the Acquirer, but, unless the Acquirer
                acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days after entry of the
                Final Judgment, Section VI(A) is modified to make the initial period
                for appointing an Antitrust Compliance Officer in the first sentence
                120 days from consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of the
                Acquired Station or Acquired Stations.
                 This Acknowledgement of Applicability may be voided by a joint
                written agreement between the United States and the Acquirer.
                Dated: [ ]
                Respectfully submitted,
                /s/--------------------------------------------------------------------
                [Counsel for Acquirer]
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States Of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                [PROPOSED] FINAL JUDGMENT
                 WHEREAS, Plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Amended
                Complaint on ___, 2019, alleging that Defendant Fox Corporation, among
                others, violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, the
                United States and Defendant, by their respective attorneys, have
                consented to the entry of this Final Judgment without trial or
                adjudication of any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, this Final Judgment does not constitute any evidence
                against or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, the United States and Defendant agree to be bound by
                the provisions of this Final Judgment pending its approval by this
                Court;
                 AND WHEREAS, the Defendant agrees to undertake certain actions and
                to refrain from engaging in certain forms of information sharing with
                its competitors;
                 NOW THEREFORE, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
                adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
                parties, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
                I. JURISDICTION
                 This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and each of the
                parties to this action.
                 The allegations in the Complaint arise under Section 1 of the
                Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. See 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1331.
                [[Page 44139]]
                II. DEFINITIONS
                 As used in this Final Judgment:
                 A. ``Advertiser'' means an advertiser, an advertiser's buying
                agent, or an advertiser's representative.
                 B. ``Agreement'' means any agreement, understanding, pact,
                contract, or arrangement, formal or informal, oral or written, between
                two or more Persons.
                 C. ``Communicate,'' ``Communicating,'' and ``Communication(s)''
                means to provide, send, discuss, circulate, exchange, request, or
                solicit information, whether directly or indirectly, and regardless of
                the means by which it is accomplished, including orally or by written
                means of any kind, such as electronic communications, e-mails,
                facsimiles, telephone communications, voicemails, text messages, audio
                recordings, meetings, interviews, correspondence, exchange of written
                or recorded information, or face-to-face meetings.
                 D. ``Competitively Sensitive Information'' means any of the
                following information, less than eighteen months old, of Defendant or
                any broadcast television station regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations: Non-Public Information relating to
                pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or
                market shares. Reports containing only aggregated market-level or
                national data are not Competitively Sensitive Information, but reports
                (including by paid subscription) that are customized or confidential to
                a particular Station or broadcast television station group are
                Competitively Sensitive Information. For the avoidance of doubt, spot
                advertising does not include network television advertising sold by the
                Defendant or television advertising sold by the Defendant in its
                capacity as an agent of the owners of syndicated programming.
                 E. ``Cooperative Agreement'' means (1) joint sales agreements,
                joint operating agreements, local marketing agreements, news share
                agreements, or shared services agreements, or (2) any agreement through
                which a Person exercises control over any broadcast television station
                not owned by the Person.
                 F. ``Defendant'' means Fox Corporation, a Delaware corporation with
                its headquarters in New York, New York, its successors and assigns, and
                its subsidiaries, divisions, and Stations, and their directors,
                officers, and employees.
                 G. ``DMA'' means Designated Market Area as defined by A.C. Nielsen
                Company and used by the Investing in Television BIA Market Report 2018.
                 H. ``Management'' means all directors and executive officers of
                Defendant, or any other employee with management or supervisory
                responsibilities for Defendant's business or operations related to the
                sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 I. ``Non-Public Information'' means information that is not
                available from public sources or generally available to the public.
                Measurement or quantification of a Station's future holding capacity is
                Non-Public Information, but measurement or quantification of a
                Station's past holding capacity is not Non-Public Information. For the
                avoidance of doubt, the fact that information is available by paid
                subscription does not on its own render the information public.
                 J. ``Person'' means any natural person, corporation, company,
                partnership, joint venture, firm, association, proprietorship, agency,
                board, authority, commission, office, or other business or legal
                entity, whether private or governmental.
                 K. ``Sales Representative Firm'' means any organization, including
                without limitation Katz Media Group, Inc. and Cox Reps, Inc., and their
                respective subsidiaries and divisions, that represents a Station or its
                owner in the sale of spot advertising.
                 L. ``Sales Staff'' means Defendant's employees with responsibility
                for the sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 M. ``Station'' means any broadcast television station, its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, and
                its owner or operator and its directors, officers, managers, and
                employees, unless a Station owns, is owned by, or is under common
                ownership with a Sales Representative Firm, in which case that Sales
                Representative Firm will not be considered a Station.
                III. APPLICABILITY
                 This Final Judgment applies to Defendant, other Persons in active
                concert or participation with Defendant who receive actual notice of
                this Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise, and any Person
                that signs an Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2,
                to the extent set forth therein, as a condition of the purchase of a
                Station owned by Defendant as of February 1, 2019. This Final Judgment
                applies to Defendant's actions performed under any Cooperative
                Agreement, even if those actions are taken on behalf of a third party.
                This Final Judgment is fully enforceable, including by penalty of
                contempt, against all of the foregoing.
                IV. PROHIBITED CONDUCT
                 A. Defendant's Management and Sales Staff shall not, directly or
                indirectly: Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information to any
                Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 1. Knowingly use Competitively Sensitive Information from or
                regarding any Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 2. Encourage or facilitate the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information to or from any Station in the same DMA it does
                not own or operate; or
                 3. Attempt to enter into, enter into, maintain, or enforce any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information with any
                Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate.
                 B. The prohibitions under Paragraph IV(A) apply to Defendant's
                Communicating or agreeing to Communicate through a Sales Representative
                Firm or a third-party agent at Defendant's instruction or request.
                 C. Defendant shall not sell any Station owned by the Defendant as
                of February 1, 2019 to any Person unless that Person has first executed
                the Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2. Defendant
                shall submit any Acknowledgement of Applicability to the United States
                within 15 days of consummating the sale of such Station. The United
                States, in its sole discretion, may waive the prohibition in this
                Paragraph IV(C) on a Station-by-Station basis. Alternatively, the
                United States and the Person signing the Acknowledgement of
                Applicability may agree to void the Acknowledgement of Applicability at
                any time. The first sentence of this paragraph shall not apply to the
                sale of any Station to a Person already bound to a final judgment
                entered by a court regarding the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                V. CONDUCT NOT PROHIBITED
                 A. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from
                Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the Communication
                of, Competitively Sensitive Information with an actual or prospective
                Advertiser, except that, if the Advertiser is another Station,
                Defendant's Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the
                Communication of, Competitively Sensitive Information is excluded from
                the prohibitions of Section IV only insofar as is reasonably necessary
                to negotiate the sale of spot
                [[Page 44140]]
                advertising on broadcast television stations. For the avoidance of
                doubt, Defendant is not prohibited from internally using Competitively
                Sensitive Information received from an Advertiser that is a Station
                under the preceding sentence, but Defendant is prohibited from
                Communicating that Competitively Sensitive Information to a Station in
                the same DMA that it does not own or operate.
                 B. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from, after
                securing advice of counsel and in consultation with the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer, Communicating, using, encouraging or facilitating
                the Communication of, or attempting to enter into, entering into,
                maintaining, or enforcing any agreement to Communicate Competitively
                Sensitive Information with any Station when such Communication or use
                is (a) for the purpose of evaluating or effectuating a bona fide
                acquisition, disposition, or exchange of Stations or related assets, or
                (b) reasonably necessary for achieving the efficiencies of any other
                legitimate competitor collaboration. With respect to any such
                agreement:
                 1. For all agreements under Part V(B)(a) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment, Defendant shall maintain documents sufficient to show:
                 i. the specific transaction or proposed transaction to which the
                sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information relates;
                 ii. the employees, identified with reasonable specificity, who are
                involved in the sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information; and
                 iii. the termination date or event of the sharing of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                 2. All agreements under Part V(B)(b) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment shall be in writing, and shall:
                 i. identify and describe, with specificity, the collaboration to
                which it is ancillary;
                 ii. be narrowly tailored to permit the Communication of
                Competitively Sensitive Information only when reasonably necessary and
                only to the employees reasonably necessary to effectuate the
                collaboration;
                 iii. identify with reasonable specificity the Competitively
                Sensitive Information Communicated pursuant to the agreement and
                identify the employees to receive the Competitively Sensitive
                Information;
                 iv. contain a specific termination date or event; and
                 v. be signed by all parties to the agreement, including any
                modifications to the agreement.
                 3. For Communications under Part V(B)(a) above, Defendant shall
                maintain copies of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(1) for
                five years or the duration of the Final Judgment, whichever is shorter,
                following entry into any agreement to Communicate or receive
                Competitively Sensitive Information, and Defendant shall make such
                documents available to the United States upon request, if such request
                is made during the preservation period.
                 4. For Communications under Part V(B)(b) above, Defendant shall
                furnish a copy of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(2) to the
                United States within thirty days of the entry, renewal, or extension of
                the agreement.
                 5. For purposes of this Section V(B) only, a Joint Sales Agreement,
                Local Marketing Agreement, or similar agreement pursuant to which the
                Defendant Communicates, uses, encourages or facilitates the
                Communication of, or attempts to enter into, enters into, maintains, or
                enforces any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information related solely to the sale of spot advertising for which
                Defendant is responsible on a Station, shall be considered a
                ``legitimate competitor collaboration'' under Part V(B)(b).
                 C. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from engaging in
                conduct in accordance with the doctrine established in Eastern Railroad
                Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U.S. 127
                (1961), United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381 U.S. 657 (1965), and
                their progeny.
                 D. Nothing in Section IV prohibits Defendant from (1)
                Communicating, encouraging or facilitating the Communication of, or
                attempting to enter into, entering into, maintaining, or enforcing any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information for the
                purpose of aggregation if (a) Competitively Sensitive Information is
                sent to or received from, and the aggregation is managed by, a third
                party not owned or operated by any Station; (b) the information
                disseminated by the aggregator is limited to historical total broadcast
                television station revenue or other geographic or characteristic
                categorization (e.g., national, local, or political sales revenue); and
                (c) any information disseminated is sufficiently aggregated such that
                it would not allow a recipient to identify, deduce, or estimate the
                prices or pacing of any individual broadcast television station not
                owned or operated by that recipient; or (2) using information that
                meets the requirements of Parts V(D)(1)(a)-(c).
                VI. REQUIRED CONDUCT
                 A. Within ten days of entry of this Final Judgment, Defendant shall
                appoint an Antitrust Compliance Officer who is an internal employee or
                Officer of the Defendant, and identify to the United States the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone
                number, and email address. Within forty-five days of a vacancy in the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer position, Defendant shall appoint a
                replacement, and shall identify to the United States the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone number, and
                email address. Defendant's initial or replacement appointment of an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer is subject to the approval of the United
                States, in its sole discretion.
                 B. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall have, or shall retain
                outside counsel who has, the following minimum qualifications:
                 1. be an active member in good standing of the bar in any U.S.
                jurisdiction; and
                 2. have at least five years' experience in legal practice,
                including experience with antitrust matters, unless finding an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or outside counsel meeting this experience
                requirement is a hardship on or is not reasonably available to the
                Defendant, under which circumstances the Defendant may select an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or shall retain outside counsel who has at
                least five years' experience in legal practice, including experience
                with regulatory or compliance matters.
                 C. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall, directly or through the
                employees or counsel working at the Antitrust Compliance Officer's
                responsibility and direction:
                 1. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, furnish to
                all of Defendant's Management and Sales Staff a copy of this Final
                Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement filed by the United States
                with the Court, and a cover letter in a form attached as Exhibit 1;
                 2. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, in a manner
                to be devised by Defendant and approved by the United States, provide
                Defendant's Management and Sales Staff reasonable notice of the meaning
                and requirements of this Final Judgment;
                [[Page 44141]]
                 3. annually brief Defendant's Management and Sales Staff on the
                meaning and requirements of this Final Judgment and the U.S. antitrust
                laws;
                 4. brief any Person who succeeds a Person in any position
                identified in Paragraph VI(C)(3), within sixty days of such succession;
                 5. obtain from each Person designated in Paragraph VI(C)(3) or
                VI(C)(4), within thirty days of that Person's receipt of the Final
                Judgment, a certification that the Person (i) has read and understands
                and agrees to abide by the terms of this Final Judgment; (ii) is not
                aware of any violation of the Final Judgment that has not been reported
                to Defendant; and (iii) understands that failure to comply with this
                Final Judgment may result in an enforcement action for civil or
                criminal contempt of court;
                 6. annually communicate to Defendant's Management and Sales Staff
                that they may disclose to the Antitrust Compliance Officer, without
                reprisal for such disclosure, information concerning any violation or
                potential violation of this Final Judgment or the U.S. antitrust laws
                by Defendant;
                 7. within thirty days of the latest filing of the Complaint,
                Proposed Final Judgment, or Competitive Impact Statement in this
                action, Defendant shall provide notice, in each DMA in which Defendant
                owns or operates a Station, to every full power Station in that DMA
                that sells broadcast television spot advertising that Defendant does
                not own or operate, of the Complaint, Proposed Final Judgment, and
                Competitive Impact Statement in a form and manner to be proposed by
                Defendant and approved by the United States in its sole discretion.
                Defendant shall provide the United States with its proposal, including
                the list of recipients, within ten days of the filing of the Complaint;
                and
                 8. maintain for five years or until expiration of the Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, a copy of all materials required to be
                issued under Paragraph VI(C), and furnish them to the United States
                within ten days if requested to do so, except documents protected under
                the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-product doctrine.
                For all materials required to be furnished under Paragraph VI(C) which
                Defendant claims are protected under the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log.
                 D. Defendant shall:
                 1. upon Management or the Antitrust Compliance Officer learning of
                any violation or potential violation of any of the terms and conditions
                contained in this Final Judgment, (i) promptly take appropriate action
                to investigate, and in the event of a violation, terminate or modify
                the activity so as to comply with this Final Judgment, (ii) maintain
                all documents related to any violation or potential violation of this
                Final Judgment for a period of five years or the duration of this Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, and (iii) maintain, and furnish to the
                United States at the United States' request, a log of (a) all such
                documents and documents for which Defendant claims protection under the
                attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine, and
                (b) all potential and actual violations, even if no documentary
                evidence regarding the violations exist;
                 2. within thirty days of Management or the Antitrust Compliance
                Officer learning of any such violation or potential violation of any of
                the terms and conditions contained in this Final Judgment, file with
                the United States a statement describing any violation or potential
                violation of any of the terms and conditions contained in this Final
                Judgment, which shall include a description of any Communications
                constituting the violation or potential violation, including the date
                and place of the Communication, the Persons involved, and the subject
                matter of the Communication;
                 3. establish a whistleblower protection policy, which provides that
                any employee may disclose, without reprisal for such disclosure, to the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer information concerning any violation or
                potential violation by the Defendant of this Final Judgment or U.S.
                antitrust laws;
                 4. have its CEO, General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer certify in
                writing to the United States annually on the anniversary date of the
                entry of this Final Judgment that Defendant has complied with the
                provisions of this Final Judgment; and
                 5. maintain and produce to the United States upon request: (i) a
                list identifying all employees having received the annual antitrust
                briefing required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4); and (ii)
                copies of all materials distributed as part of the annual antitrust
                briefing required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4). For all
                materials requested to be produced under this Paragraph VI(D)(5) for
                which Defendant claims is protected under the attorney-client privilege
                or the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log.
                 E. For the avoidance of doubt, the term ``potential violation'' as
                used in Paragraph VI(D) does not include the discussion of future
                conduct.
                 F. If Defendant acquires a Station after entry of this Final
                Judgment, this Section VI will not apply to that acquired Station or
                the employees of that acquired Station until 120 days after closing of
                the acquisition of that acquired Station.
                VII. DEFENDANT'S COOPERATION
                 A. Defendant shall cooperate fully and truthfully with the United
                States in any investigation or litigation concerning whether or
                alleging that Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or
                operate, or any Sales Representative Firm Communicated Competitively
                Sensitive Information with or among Defendant or any other Station or
                any Sales Representative Firm in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman
                Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. Defendant shall use its best
                efforts to ensure that all current and former officers, directors,
                employees, and agents also fully and promptly cooperate with the United
                States. The full, truthful, and continuing cooperation of Defendant
                shall include, but not be limited to:
                 1. providing sworn testimony, that is not protected by the
                attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine, to the
                United States regarding the Communicating of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement with any other Station it does not own or
                such other Station's Sales Representative Firm to Communicate
                Competitively Sensitive Information while an employee of the Defendant;
                 2. producing, upon request of the United States, all documents,
                data, and other materials, wherever located, to the extent not
                protected under the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-
                product doctrine, in the possession, custody, or control of Defendant,
                that relate to the Communication of Competitively Sensitive Information
                or any agreement with any other Station or such other Station's Sales
                Representative Firm to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information,
                and a log of documents protected by the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work product doctrine;
                 3. making available for interview any officers, directors,
                employees, and agents of Defendant if so requested on reasonable notice
                by the United States; and
                 4. testifying at trial and other judicial proceedings fully,
                truthfully, and under oath, when called upon to do so by the United
                States;
                 5. provided however, that the obligations of Defendant to cooperate
                [[Page 44142]]
                fully with the United States as described in this Section VII shall
                cease upon the conclusion of all of the United States' investigations
                and the United States' litigations examining whether or alleging that
                Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or operate or such
                other Station's Sales Representative Firm Communicated Competitively
                Sensitive Information or with or among Defendant or any other Station
                or any Sales Representative Firm in violation of Section 1 of the
                Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, including exhaustion of all
                appeals or expiration of time for all appeals of any Court ruling in
                each such matter, at which point the United States will provide written
                notice to Defendant that its obligations under this Section VII have
                expired.
                 B. Defendant is obligated to impose a litigation hold until the
                United States provides written notice to the Defendant that its
                obligations under this Section VII have expired. This Paragraph VII(B)
                does not apply to documents created after entry of this Final Judgment.
                 C. Subject to the full, truthful, and continuing cooperation of
                Defendant, as defined in Paragraph VII(A), the United States will not
                bring any further civil action or any criminal charges against
                Defendant related to any Communication of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information with any other Station it does not own or operate or such
                other Station's Sales Representative Firm when that agreement:
                 1. was Communicated, entered into and terminated on or before the
                date of the filing of the Complaint in this action (or in the case of a
                Station that is acquired by Defendant after entry of this Final
                Judgment, was Communicated or entered into before the acquisition and
                terminated within 120 days after the closing of the acquisition); and
                 2. does not constitute or include an agreement to fix prices or
                divide markets.
                 D. The United States' agreement set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does
                not apply to any acts of perjury or subornation of perjury (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1621-22), making a false statement or declaration (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1001, 1623), contempt (18 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 401-402), or
                obstruction of justice (18 U.S.C. Sec. 1503, et seq.) by the Defendant
                or its officers, directors, and employees. The United States' agreement
                set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does not release any claims against any
                Sales Representative Firm.
                VIII. COMPLIANCE INSPECTION
                 A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
                Final Judgment or of any related orders, or of determining whether the
                Final Judgment should be modified, and subject to any legally
                recognized privilege, from time to time authorized representatives of
                the United States Department of Justice, including consultants and
                other persons retained by the United States, shall, upon written
                request of an authorized representative of the Assistant Attorney
                General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice
                to Defendant, be permitted:
                 1. to access during Defendant's office hours to inspect and copy,
                or at the option of the United States, to require Defendant to provide
                electronic or hard copies of all books, ledgers, accounts, records,
                data, and documents in the possession, custody, or control of
                Defendant, relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final
                Judgment, not protected by the attorney- client privilege or the
                attorney work product doctrine; and
                 2. to interview, either informally or on the record, Defendant's
                officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual counsel
                present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be subject to the
                reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without restraint or
                interference by Defendant; and
                 3. to obtain from Defendant written reports or responses to written
                interrogatories, of information not protected by the attorney-client
                privilege or attorney work product doctrine, under oath if requested,
                relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final Judgment as
                may be requested.
                 B. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
                this Section VIII shall be divulged by the United States to any Person
                other than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the
                United States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the
                United States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the
                purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or for law
                enforcement purposes, or as otherwise required by law.
                 C. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
                Defendant to the United States, Defendant represents and identifies in
                writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
                claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(1)(G) of the
                Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and Defendant marks each pertinent
                page of such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule
                26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United
                States shall give Defendant ten calendar days' notice prior to
                divulging such material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand
                jury proceeding).
                IX. RETENTION OF JURISDICTION
                 This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
                Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
                directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe
                this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
                compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
                X. ENFORCEMENT OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 A. The United States retains and reserves all rights to enforce the
                provisions of this Final Judgment, including its right to seek an order
                of contempt from this Court. Defendant agrees that in any civil
                contempt action, any motion to show cause, or any similar civil action
                brought by the United States regarding an alleged violation of this
                Final Judgment, the United States may establish a violation of the
                Final Judgment and the appropriateness of any remedy therefor by a
                preponderance of the evidence, and Defendant waives any argument that a
                different standard of proof should apply.
                 B. The Final Judgment should be interpreted to give full effect to
                the procompetitive purposes of the antitrust laws and to restore all
                competition the United States alleged was harmed by the challenged
                conduct. Defendant agrees that it may be held in contempt of, and that
                the Court may enforce, any provision of this Final Judgment that, as
                interpreted by the Court in light of these procompetitive principles
                and applying ordinary tools of interpretation, is stated specifically
                and in reasonable detail, whether or not it is clear and unambiguous on
                its face. In any such interpretation, the terms of this Final Judgment
                should not be construed against either party as the drafter.
                 C. In any enforcement proceeding in which the Court finds that
                Defendant has violated this Final Judgment, the United States may apply
                to the Court for a one-time extension of this Final Judgment, together
                with such other relief as may be appropriate. In connection with any
                successful effort by the United States to enforce this Final Judgment
                against Defendant, whether litigated or resolved prior to litigation,
                [[Page 44143]]
                Defendant agrees to reimburse the United States for the fees and
                expenses of its attorneys, as well as any other costs including
                experts' fees, incurred in connection with that enforcement effort,
                including in the investigation of the potential violation.
                XI. EXPIRATION OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
                expire seven years from the date of its entry, except that after five
                years from the date of its entry, this Final Judgment may be terminated
                upon notice by the United States to the Court and Defendant that the
                continuation of the Final Judgment no longer is necessary or in the
                public interest.
                XII. NOTICE
                 For purposes of this Final Judgment, any notice or other
                communication required to be provided to the United States shall be
                sent to the person at the address set forth below (or such other
                addresses as the United States may specify in writing to Defendant):
                Chief, Media, Entertainment, and Professional Services Section, U.S.
                Department of Justice Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW, Suite
                4000, Washington, DC 20530.
                XIII. PUBLIC INTEREST DETERMINATION
                 Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
                have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16, including making copies available to
                the public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement,
                and any comments thereon and the United States' responses to comments.
                Based upon the record before the Court, which includes the Competitive
                Impact Statement and any comments and response to comments filed with
                the Court, entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
                 IT IS SO ORDERED by the Court, this __ day of ___, 201_.
                Court approval subject to procedures of Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                United States District Judge
                EXHIBIT 1
                [Company Letterhead]
                [Name and Address of Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Re: Prohibitions Against Sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information
                Dear [XX]:
                 I provide you this notice regarding a judgment recently entered by
                a federal judge in Washington, D.C. prohibiting the sharing of certain
                information with other broadcast television station(s).
                 The judgment applies to our company and all of its employees,
                including you, so it is important that you understand the obligations
                it imposes on us. [CEO Name] has asked me to let each of you know that
                [s/he] expects you to take these obligations seriously and abide by
                them.
                 The judgment prohibits us from sharing or receiving, directly or
                indirectly (including through a national sales representative firm),
                competitively sensitive information with or from any employee, agent,
                or representative of another broadcast television station in the same
                DMA it does not own or operate. Competitively sensitive information
                means any non-public information regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations, including information relating to any
                pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or
                market shares. There are limited exceptions to this restriction, which
                are listed in the judgment. The company will provide briefing on the
                legitimate or illegitimate exchange of information.
                 You must consult with me if you have any questions on whether a
                particular circumstance is subject to an exception under the judgment.
                 A copy of the judgment is attached. Please read it carefully and
                familiarize yourself with its terms. The judgment, rather than the
                above description, is controlling. If you have any questions about the
                judgment or how it affects your sale of spot advertising, please
                contact me as soon as possible.
                 Please sign and return the attached Employee Certification to
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer] within thirty days of your
                receipt of this letter. Thank you for your cooperation.
                Sincerely,
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Employee Certification
                 I, ____ [name], ____ [position] at ____ [station or location] do
                hereby certify that I (i) have read and understand, and agree to abide
                by, the terms of the Final Judgment; (ii) am not aware of any violation
                of the Final Judgment that has not been reported to [Defendant]; and
                (iii) understand that my failure to comply with this Final Judgment may
                result in an enforcement action for civil or criminal contempt of
                court.
                Name:
                Date:
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                EXHIBIT 2
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF APPLICABILITY
                 The undersigned acknowledges that [Full Buyer Name], including its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and broadcast
                television stations, and their directors, officers, and employees
                (``Acquirer''), following consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of
                [insert names of station or stations acquired] (each, an ``Acquired
                Station''), is bound by the Final Judgment entered by this Court in the
                above-captioned action (``Final Judgment''), as if the Acquirer were a
                Defendant under the Final Judgment, as follows:
                 1. The Acquirer shall be bound in full by all Sections of the
                Consent Decree not specifically discussed below.
                 2. As to Sections IV, V, and VII of the Final Judgment, the
                Acquirer is bound to the Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired
                Station, each Acquired Station's successors and assigns, and each
                Acquired Station's subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired
                Station's directors, officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers
                and directors only with respect to any responsibilities or actions
                regarding any Acquired Stations, and (iii) employees with management or
                supervisory responsibilities for Acquirer's business or operations
                related to the sale of spot advertising on any Acquired Station, only
                with respect to those responsibilities.
                 3. As to Section VI(C)(3), VI(C)(4), VI(C)(6), VI(C)(8), VI(D),
                VI(E), and VIII of the Final Judgment, the Acquirer is bound to the
                Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired Station, each Acquired
                Station's successors and assigns, and each Acquired Station's
                subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired Station's directors,
                officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers and directors, and
                (iii) employees with management or supervisory responsibilities for
                Acquirer's business or operations related to the sale of spot
                advertising on any Acquired Station.
                 4. The release contained in Sections VII(C) and (D) applies to the
                Acquirer, but only to civil actions or criminal charges arising from
                actions taken by any Acquired Station.
                [[Page 44144]]
                 5. The Acquirer shall not be bound by Sections VI(C)(1),
                VI(C)(2),VI(C)(5), VI(C)(7), and VI(F) of the Final Judgment at all,
                unless the Acquirer acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days
                after entry of the Final Judgment.
                 6. Section VI(A) applies to the Acquirer, but, unless the Acquirer
                acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days after entry of the
                Final Judgment, Section VI(A) is modified to make the initial period
                for appointing an Antitrust Compliance Officer in the first sentence
                120 days from consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of the
                Acquired Station or Acquired Stations.
                 This Acknowledgement of Applicability may be voided by a joint
                written agreement between the United States and the Acquirer.
                Dated: [ ]
                Respectfully submitted,
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                [Counsel for Acquirer]
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                [PROPOSED] FINAL JUDGMENT
                 WHEREAS, Plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Amended
                Complaint on___, 2019, alleging that Defendant The E.W. Scripps
                Company, among others, violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C.
                Sec. 1, the United States and Defendant, by their respective
                attorneys, have consented to the entry of this Final Judgment without
                trial or adjudication of any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, this Final Judgment does not constitute any evidence
                against or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, the United States and Defendant agree to be bound by
                the provisions of this Final Judgment pending its approval by this
                Court;
                 AND WHEREAS, the Defendant agrees to undertake certain actions and
                to refrain from engaging in certain forms of information sharing with
                its competitors;
                 NOW THEREFORE, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
                adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
                parties, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
                I. JURISDICTION
                 This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and each of the
                parties to this action. The allegations in the Complaint arise under
                Section 1 of the Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. See 28
                U.S.C. Sec. 1331.
                II. DEFINITIONS
                 As used in this Final Judgment:
                 A. ``Advertiser'' means an advertiser, an advertiser's buying
                agent, or an advertiser's representative.
                 B. ``Agreement'' means any agreement, understanding, pact,
                contract, or arrangement, formal or informal, oral or written, between
                two or more Persons.
                 C. ``Communicate,'' ``Communicating,'' and ``Communication(s)''
                means to provide, send, discuss, circulate, exchange, request, or
                solicit information, whether directly or indirectly, and regardless of
                the means by which it is accomplished, including orally or by written
                means of any kind, such as electronic communications, e-mails,
                facsimiles, telephone communications, voicemails, text messages, audio
                recordings, meetings, interviews, correspondence, exchange of written
                or recorded information, or face-to-face meetings.
                 D. ``Competitively Sensitive Information'' means any of the
                following information, less than eighteen months old, of Defendant or
                any broadcast television station regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations: Non-Public Information relating to
                pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or
                market shares. Reports containing only aggregated market-level or
                national data are not Competitively Sensitive Information, but reports
                (including by paid subscription) that are customized or confidential to
                a particular Station or broadcast television station group are
                Competitively Sensitive Information. For the avoidance of doubt, spot
                advertising does not include network television advertising sold by the
                Defendant or television advertising sold by the Defendant in its
                capacity as an agent of the owners of syndicated programming.
                 E. ``Cooperative Agreement'' means (1) joint sales agreements,
                joint operating agreements, local marketing agreements, news share
                agreements, or shared services agreements, or (2) any agreement through
                which a Person exercises control over any broadcast television station
                not owned by the Person.
                 F. ``Defendant'' means The E.W. Scripps Company, an Ohio
                corporation with its headquarters in Cincinnati, Ohio, its successors
                and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and Stations, and their
                directors, officers, and employees.
                 G. ``DMA'' means Designated Market Area as defined by A.C. Nielsen
                Company and used by the Investing in Television BIA Market Report 2018.
                 H. ``Management'' means all directors and executive officers of
                Defendant, or any other employee with management or supervisory
                responsibilities for Defendant's business or operations related to the
                sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 I. ``Non-Public Information'' means information that is not
                available from public sources or generally available to the public.
                Measurement or quantification of a Station's future holding capacity is
                Non-Public Information, but measurement or quantification of a
                Station's past holding capacity is not Non-Public Information. For the
                avoidance of doubt, the fact that information is available by paid
                subscription does not on its own render the information public.
                 J. ``Person'' means any natural person, corporation, company,
                partnership, joint venture, firm, association, proprietorship, agency,
                board, authority, commission, office, or other business or legal
                entity, whether private or governmental.
                 K. ``Sales Representative Firm'' means any organization, including
                without limitation Katz Media Group, Inc. and Cox Reps, Inc., and their
                respective subsidiaries and divisions, that represents a Station or its
                owner in the sale of spot advertising.
                 L. ``Sales Representative Firm Manager'' means, for each of
                Defendant's Sales Representative Firms, the employee of the Sales
                Representative Firm with primary responsibility for the relationship
                with Defendant.
                 M. ``Sales Staff'' means Defendant's employees with responsibility
                for the sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 N. ``Station'' means any broadcast television station, its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, and
                its owner or operator and its directors, officers, managers, and
                employees, unless a Station owns, is owned by, or is under common
                ownership with a Sales Representative Firm, in which case that Sales
                Representative Firm will not be considered a Station.
                III. APPLICABILITY
                 This Final Judgment applies to Defendant, other Persons in active
                concert or participation with Defendant who receive actual notice of
                this Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise, and any Person
                that signs an
                [[Page 44145]]
                Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2, to the extent
                set forth therein, as a condition of the purchase of a Station owned by
                Defendant as of February 1, 2019. This Final Judgment applies to
                Defendant's actions performed under any Cooperative Agreement, even if
                those actions are taken on behalf of a third party. This Final Judgment
                is fully enforceable, including by penalty of contempt, against all of
                the foregoing.
                IV. PROHIBITED CONDUCT
                 A. Defendant's Management and Sales Staff shall not, directly or
                indirectly:
                 1. Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information to any Station
                in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 2. Knowingly use Competitively Sensitive Information from or
                regarding any Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 3. Encourage or facilitate the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information to or from any Station in the same DMA it does
                not own or operate; or
                 4. Attempt to enter into, enter into, maintain, or enforce any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information with any
                Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate.
                 B. The prohibitions under Paragraph IV(A) apply to Defendant's
                Communicating or agreeing to Communicate through a Sales Representative
                Firm or a third-party agent at Defendant's instruction or request.
                 C. Defendant shall not sell any Station owned by the Defendant as
                of February 1, 2019 to any Person unless that Person has first executed
                the Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2. Defendant
                shall submit any Acknowledgement of Applicability to the United States
                within 15 days of consummating the sale of such Station. The United
                States, in its sole discretion, may waive the prohibition in this
                Paragraph IV(C) on a Station-by-Station basis. Alternatively, the
                United States and the Person signing the Acknowledgement of
                Applicability may agree to void the Acknowledgement of Applicability at
                any time. The first sentence of this paragraph shall not apply to the
                sale of any Station to a Person already bound to a final judgment
                entered by a court regarding the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                V. CONDUCT NOT PROHIBITED
                 A. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from
                Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the Communication
                of, Competitively Sensitive Information with an actual or prospective
                Advertiser, except that, if the Advertiser is another Station,
                Defendant's Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the
                Communication of, Competitively Sensitive Information is excluded from
                the prohibitions of Section IV only insofar as is reasonably necessary
                to negotiate the sale of spot advertising on broadcast television
                stations. For the avoidance of doubt, Defendant is not prohibited from
                internally using Competitively Sensitive Information received from an
                Advertiser that is a Station under the preceding sentence, but
                Defendant is prohibited from Communicating that Competitively Sensitive
                Information to a Station in the same DMA that it does not own or
                operate.
                 B. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from, after
                securing advice of counsel and in consultation with the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer, Communicating, using, encouraging or facilitating
                the Communication of, or attempting to enter into, entering into,
                maintaining, or enforcing any agreement to Communicate Competitively
                Sensitive Information with any Station when such Communication or use
                is (a) for the purpose of evaluating or effectuating a bona fide
                acquisition, disposition, or exchange of Stations or related assets, or
                (b) reasonably necessary for achieving the efficiencies of any other
                legitimate competitor collaboration. With respect to any such
                agreement:
                 1. For all agreements under Part V(B)(a) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment, Defendant shall maintain documents sufficient to show:
                 i. the specific transaction or proposed transaction to which the
                sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information relates;
                 ii. the employees, identified with reasonable specificity, who are
                involved in the sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information; and
                 iii. the termination date or event of the sharing of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                 2. All agreements under Part V(B)(b) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment shall be in writing, and shall:
                 i. identify and describe, with specificity, the collaboration to
                which it is ancillary;
                 ii. be narrowly tailored to permit the Communication of
                Competitively Sensitive Information only when reasonably necessary and
                only to the employees reasonably necessary to effectuate the
                collaboration;
                 iii. identify with reasonable specificity the Competitively
                Sensitive Information Communicated pursuant to the agreement and
                identify the employees to receive the Competitively Sensitive
                Information;
                 iv. contain a specific termination date or event; and
                 v. be signed by all parties to the agreement, including any
                modifications to the agreement.
                 3. For Communications under Part V(B)(a) above, Defendant shall
                maintain copies of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(1) for
                five years or the duration of the Final Judgment, whichever is shorter,
                following entry into any agreement to Communicate or receive
                Competitively Sensitive Information, and Defendant shall make such
                documents available to the United States upon request, if such request
                is made during the preservation period.
                 4. For Communications under Part V(B)(b) above, Defendant shall
                furnish a copy of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(2) to the
                United States within thirty days of the entry, renewal, or extension of
                the agreement.
                 5. For purposes of this Section V(B) only, a Joint Sales Agreement,
                Local Marketing Agreement, or similar agreement pursuant to which the
                Defendant Communicates, uses, encourages or facilitates the
                Communication of, or attempts to enter into, enters into, maintains, or
                enforces any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information related solely to the sale of spot advertising for which
                Defendant is responsible on a Station, shall be considered a
                ``legitimate competitor collaboration'' under Part V(B)(b).
                 C. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from engaging in
                conduct in accordance with the doctrine established in Eastern Railroad
                Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U.S. 127
                (1961), United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381 U.S. 657 (1965), and
                their progeny.
                 D. Nothing in Section IV prohibits Defendant from (1)
                Communicating, encouraging or facilitating the Communication of, or
                attempting to enter into, entering into, maintaining, or enforcing any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information for the
                purpose of
                [[Page 44146]]
                aggregation if (a) Competitively Sensitive Information is sent to or
                received from, and the aggregation is managed by, a third party not
                owned or operated by any Station; (b) the information disseminated by
                the aggregator is limited to historical total broadcast television
                station revenue or other geographic or characteristic categorization
                (e.g., national, local, or political sales revenue); and (c) any
                information disseminated is sufficiently aggregated such that it would
                not allow a recipient to identify, deduce, or estimate the prices or
                pacing of any individual broadcast television station not owned or
                operated by that recipient; or (2) using information that meets the
                requirements of Parts V(D)(1)(a)-(c).
                VI. REQUIRED CONDUCT
                 A. Within ten days of entry of this Final Judgment, Defendant shall
                appoint an Antitrust Compliance Officer who is an internal employee or
                Officer of the Defendant, and identify to the United States the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone
                number, and email address. Within forty-five days of a vacancy in the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer position, Defendant shall appoint a
                replacement, and shall identify to the United States the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone number, and
                email address. Defendant's initial or replacement appointment of an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer is subject to the approval of the United
                States, in its sole discretion.
                 B. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall have, or shall retain
                outside counsel who has, the following minimum qualifications:
                 1. be an active member in good standing of the bar in any U.S.
                jurisdiction; and
                 2. have at least five years' experience in legal practice,
                including experience with antitrust matters, unless finding an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or outside counsel meeting this experience
                requirement is a hardship on or is not reasonably available to the
                Defendant, under which circumstances the Defendant may select an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or shall retain outside counsel who has at
                least five years' experience in legal practice, including experience
                with regulatory or compliance matters.
                 C. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall, directly or through the
                employees or counsel working at the Antitrust Compliance Officer's
                responsibility and direction:
                 1. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, furnish to
                all of Defendant's Management and Sales Staff and Sales Representative
                Firm Managers a copy of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact
                Statement filed by the United States with the Court, and a cover letter
                in a form attached as Exhibit 1;
                 2. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, in a manner
                to be devised by Defendant and approved by the United States, provide
                Defendant's Management and Sales Staff reasonable notice of the meaning
                and requirements of this Final Judgment;
                 3. annually brief Defendant's Management and Sales Staff on the
                meaning and requirements of this Final Judgment and the U.S. antitrust
                laws;
                 4. brief any Person who succeeds a Person in any position
                identified in Paragraph VI(C)(3), within sixty days of such succession;
                 5. obtain from each Person designated in Paragraph VI(C)(3) or
                VI(C)(4), within thirty days of that Person's receipt of the Final
                Judgment, a certification that the Person (i) has read and understands
                and agrees to abide by the terms of this Final Judgment; (ii) is not
                aware of any violation of the Final Judgment that has not been reported
                to Defendant; and (iii) understands that failure to comply with this
                Final Judgment may result in an enforcement action for civil or
                criminal contempt of court;
                 6. annually communicate to Defendant's Management and Sales Staff
                that they may disclose to the Antitrust Compliance Officer, without
                reprisal for such disclosure, information concerning any violation or
                potential violation of this Final Judgment or the U.S. antitrust laws
                by Defendant;
                 7. within thirty days of the latest filing of the Complaint,
                Proposed Final Judgment, or Competitive Impact Statement in this
                action, Defendant shall provide notice, in each DMA in which Defendant
                owns or operates a Station, to (i) every full power Station in that DMA
                that sells broadcast television spot advertising that Defendant does
                not own or operate and (ii) any Sales Representative Firm selling
                advertising in that DMA on behalf of Defendant, of the Complaint,
                Proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact Statement in a form and
                manner to be proposed by Defendant and approved by the United States in
                its sole discretion. Defendant shall provide the United States with its
                proposal, including the list of recipients, within ten days of the
                filing of the Complaint; and
                 8. maintain for five years or until expiration of the Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, a copy of all materials required to be
                issued under Paragraph VI(C), and furnish them to the United States
                within ten days if requested to do so, except documents protected under
                the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-product doctrine.
                For all materials required to be furnished under Paragraph VI(C) which
                Defendant claims are protected under the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log.
                 D. Defendant shall:
                 1. upon Management or the Antitrust Compliance Officer learning of
                any violation or potential violation of any of the terms and conditions
                contained in this Final Judgment, (i) promptly take appropriate action
                to investigate, and in the event of a violation, terminate or modify
                the activity so as to comply with this Final Judgment, (ii) maintain
                all documents related to any violation or potential violation of this
                Final Judgment for a period of five years or the duration of this Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, and (iii) maintain, and furnish to the
                United States at the United States' request, a log of (a) all such
                documents and documents for which Defendant claims protection under the
                attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine, and
                (b) all potential and actual violations, even if no documentary
                evidence regarding the violations exist;
                 2. within thirty days of Management or the Antitrust Compliance
                Officer learning of any such violation or potential violation of any of
                the terms and conditions contained in this Final Judgment, file with
                the United States a statement describing any violation or potential
                violation of any of the terms and conditions contained in this Final
                Judgment, which shall include a description of any Communications
                constituting the violation or potential violation, including the date
                and place of the Communication, the Persons involved, and the subject
                matter of the Communication;
                 3. establish a whistleblower protection policy, which provides that
                any employee may disclose, without reprisal for such disclosure, to the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer information concerning any violation or
                potential violation by the Defendant of this Final Judgment or U.S.
                antitrust laws;
                 4. have its CEO, General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer certify in
                writing to the United States annually on the anniversary date of the
                entry of this Final Judgment that Defendant has complied with the
                provisions of this Final Judgment;
                 5. maintain and produce to the United States upon request: (i) a
                list identifying
                [[Page 44147]]
                all employees having received the annual antitrust briefing required
                under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4); and (ii) copies of all
                materials distributed as part of the annual antitrust briefing required
                under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and V(C)(4). For all materials requested to
                be produced under this Paragraph VI(D)(5) for which Defendant claims is
                protected under the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-
                product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the United States a
                privilege log; and
                 6. within 14 days of entry of the Final Judgment, instruct each
                Sales Representative Firm Manager that the Sales Representative Firm
                shall not Communicate any of Defendant's Competitively Sensitive
                Information in a way that would violate Sections IV and V of this Final
                Judgment if the Sales Representative Firm were included in the
                definition of ``Defendant'' in Paragraph II(F), in a form and manner to
                be proposed by Defendant and approved by the United States in its sole
                discretion, maintained and produced to the United States upon request.
                 E. For the avoidance of doubt, the term ``potential violation'' as
                used in Paragraph VI(D) does not include the discussion of future
                conduct.
                 F. If Defendant acquires a Station after entry of this Final
                Judgment, this Section VI will not apply to that acquired Station or
                the employees of that acquired Station until 120 days after closing of
                the acquisition of that acquired Station.
                VII. DEFENDANT'S COOPERATION
                 A. Defendant shall cooperate fully and truthfully with the United
                States in any investigation or litigation concerning whether or
                alleging that Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or
                operate, or any Sales Representative Firm Communicated Competitively
                Sensitive Information with or among Defendant or any other Station or
                any Sales Representative Firm in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman
                Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1.
                 Defendant shall use its best efforts to ensure that all current and
                former officers, directors, employees, and agents also fully and
                promptly cooperate with the United States. The full, truthful, and
                continuing cooperation of Defendant shall include, but not be limited
                to:
                 1. providing sworn testimony, that is not protected by the
                attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine, to the
                United States regarding the Communicating of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement with any other Station it does not own or
                such other Station's Sales Representative Firm to Communicate
                Competitively Sensitive Information while an employee of the Defendant;
                 2. producing, upon request of the United States, all documents,
                data, and other materials, wherever located, to the extent not
                protected under the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-
                product doctrine, in the possession, custody, or control of Defendant,
                that relate to the Communication of Competitively Sensitive Information
                or any agreement with any other Station or such other Station's Sales
                Representative Firm to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information,
                and a log of documents protected by the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work product doctrine;
                 3. making available for interview any officers, directors,
                employees, and agents of Defendant if so requested on reasonable notice
                by the United States; and
                 4. testifying at trial and other judicial proceedings fully,
                truthfully, and under oath, when called upon to do so by the United
                States;
                 5. provided however, that the obligations of Defendant to cooperate
                fully with the United States as described in this Section VII shall
                cease upon the conclusion of all of the United States' investigations
                and the United States' litigations examining whether or alleging that
                Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or operate or such
                other Station's Sales Representative Firm Communicated Competitively
                Sensitive Information or with or among Defendant or any other Station
                or any Sales Representative Firm in violation of Section 1 of the
                Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, including exhaustion of all
                appeals or expiration of time for all appeals of any Court ruling in
                each such matter, at which point the United States will provide written
                notice to Defendant that its obligations under this Section VII have
                expired.
                 B. Defendant is obligated to impose a litigation hold until the
                United States provides written notice to the Defendant that its
                obligations under this Section VII have expired. This Paragraph VII(B)
                does not apply to documents created after entry of this Final Judgment.
                 C. Subject to the full, truthful, and continuing cooperation of
                Defendant, as defined in Paragraph VII(A), the United States will not
                bring any further civil action or any criminal charges against
                Defendant related to any Communication of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information with any other Station it does not own or operate or such
                other Station's Sales Representative Firm when that agreement:
                 1. was Communicated, entered into and terminated on or before the
                date of the filing of the Complaint in this action (or in the case of a
                Station that is acquired by Defendant after entry of this Final
                Judgment, was Communicated or entered into before the acquisition and
                terminated within 120 days after the closing of the acquisition); and
                 2. does not constitute or include an agreement to fix prices or
                divide markets.
                 D. The United States' agreement set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does
                not apply to any acts of perjury or subornation of perjury (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1621-22), making a false statement or declaration (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1001, 1623), contempt (18 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 401-402), or
                obstruction of justice (18 U.S.C. Sec. 1503, et seq.) by the Defendant
                or its officers, directors, and employees. The United States' agreement
                set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does not release any claims against any
                Sales Representative Firm.
                VIII. COMPLIANCE INSPECTION
                 A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
                Final Judgment or of any related orders, or of determining whether the
                Final Judgment should be modified, and subject to any legally
                recognized privilege, from time to time authorized representatives of
                the United States Department of Justice, including consultants and
                other persons retained by the United States, shall, upon written
                request of an authorized representative of the Assistant Attorney
                General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice
                to Defendant, be permitted:
                 1. to access during Defendant's office hours to inspect and copy,
                or at the option of the United States, to require Defendant to provide
                electronic or hard copies of all books, ledgers, accounts, records,
                data, and documents in the possession, custody, or control of
                Defendant, relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final
                Judgment, not protected by the attorney-client privilege or the
                attorney work product doctrine; and
                 2. to interview, either informally or on the record, Defendant's
                officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual counsel
                present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be subject to the
                reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without restraint or
                interference by Defendant; and
                 3. to obtain from Defendant written reports or responses to written
                [[Page 44148]]
                interrogatories, of information not protected by the attorney-client
                privilege or attorney work product doctrine, under oath if requested,
                relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final Judgment as
                may be requested.
                 B. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
                this Section VIII shall be divulged by the United States to any Person
                other than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the
                United States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the
                United States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the
                purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or for law
                enforcement purposes, or as otherwise required by law.
                 C. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
                Defendant to the United States, Defendant represents and identifies in
                writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
                claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(1)(G) of the
                Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and Defendant marks each pertinent
                page of such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule
                26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United
                States shall give Defendant ten calendar days' notice prior to
                divulging such material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand
                jury proceeding).
                IX. RETENTION OF JURISDICTION
                 This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
                Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
                directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe
                this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
                compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
                X. ENFORCEMENT OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 A. The United States retains and reserves all rights to enforce the
                provisions of this Final Judgment, including its right to seek an order
                of contempt from this Court. Defendant agrees that in any civil
                contempt action, any motion to show cause, or any similar civil action
                brought by the United States regarding an alleged violation of this
                Final Judgment, the United States may establish a violation of the
                Final Judgment and the appropriateness of any remedy therefor by a
                preponderance of the evidence, and Defendant waives any argument that a
                different standard of proof should apply.
                 B. The Final Judgment should be interpreted to give full effect to
                the procompetitive purposes of the antitrust laws and to restore all
                competition the United States alleged was harmed by the challenged
                conduct. Defendant agrees that it may be held in contempt of, and that
                the Court may enforce, any provision of this Final Judgment that, as
                interpreted by the Court in light of these procompetitive principles
                and applying ordinary tools of interpretation, is stated specifically
                and in reasonable detail, whether or not it is clear and unambiguous on
                its face. In any such interpretation, the terms of this Final Judgment
                should not be construed against either party as the drafter.
                 C. In any enforcement proceeding in which the Court finds that
                Defendant has violated this Final Judgment, the United States may apply
                to the Court for a one-time extension of this Final Judgment, together
                with such other relief as may be appropriate. In connection with any
                successful effort by the United States to enforce this Final Judgment
                against Defendant, whether litigated or resolved prior to litigation,
                Defendant agrees to reimburse the United States for the fees and
                expenses of its attorneys, as well as any other costs including
                experts' fees, incurred in connection with that enforcement effort,
                including in the investigation of the potential violation.
                XI. EXPIRATION OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
                expire seven years from the date of its entry, except that after five
                years from the date of its entry, this Final Judgment may be terminated
                upon notice by the United States to the Court and Defendant that the
                continuation of the Final Judgment no longer is necessary or in the
                public interest.
                XII. NOTICE
                 For purposes of this Final Judgment, any notice or other
                communication required to be provided to the United States shall be
                sent to the person at the address set forth below (or such other
                addresses as the United States may specify in writing to Defendant):
                Chief, Media, Entertainment, and Professional Services Section, U.S.
                Department of Justice Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW, Suite
                4000, Washington, DC 20530.
                XIII. PUBLIC INTEREST DETERMINATION
                 Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
                have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16, including making copies available to
                the public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement,
                and any comments thereon and the United States' responses to comments.
                Based upon the record before the Court, which includes the Competitive
                Impact Statement and any comments and response to comments filed with
                the Court, entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
                 IT IS SO ORDERED by the Court, this __ day of ___, 201_.
                Court approval subject to procedures of Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                United States District Judge
                EXHIBIT 1
                [Company Letterhead]
                [Name and Address of Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Re: Prohibitions Against Sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information
                Dear [XX]:
                 I provide you this notice regarding a judgment recently entered by
                a federal judge in Washington, D.C. prohibiting the sharing of certain
                information with other broadcast television station(s).
                 The judgment applies to our company and all of its employees,
                including you, so it is important that you understand the obligations
                it imposes on us. [CEO Name] has asked me to let each of you know that
                [s/he] expects you to take these obligations seriously and abide by
                them.
                 The judgment prohibits us from sharing or receiving, directly or
                indirectly (including through our national sales representative firm),
                competitively sensitive information with or from any employee, agent,
                or representative of another broadcast television station in the same
                DMA it does not own or operate. Competitively sensitive information
                means any non-public information regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations, including information relating to any
                pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or
                market shares. There are limited exceptions to this restriction, which
                are listed in the judgment. The company will provide briefing on the
                legitimate or illegitimate exchange of information.
                 You must consult with me if you have any questions on whether a
                particular circumstance is subject to an exception under the judgment.
                 A copy of the judgment is attached. Please read it carefully and
                familiarize yourself with its terms. The judgment,
                [[Page 44149]]
                rather than the above description, is controlling. If you have any
                questions about the judgment or how it affects your sale of spot
                advertising, please contact me as soon as possible.
                 Please sign and return the attached Employee Certification to
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer] within thirty days of your
                receipt of this letter. Thank you for your cooperation.
                Sincerely,
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Employee Certification
                 I, ____[name], ____[position] at ____ [station or location] do
                hereby certify that I (i) have read and understand, and agree to abide
                by, the terms of the Final Judgment; (ii) am not aware of any violation
                of the Final Judgment that has not been reported to [Defendant]; and
                (iii) understand that my failure to comply with this Final Judgment may
                result in an enforcement action for civil or criminal contempt of
                court.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                Name:
                Date:
                EXHIBIT 2
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF APPLICABILITY
                 The undersigned acknowledges that [Full Buyer Name], including its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and broadcast
                television stations, and their directors, officers, and employees
                (``Acquirer''), following consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of
                [insert names of station or stations acquired] (each, an ``Acquired
                Station''), is bound by the Final Judgment entered by this Court in the
                above-captioned action (``Final Judgment''), as if the Acquirer were a
                Defendant under the Final Judgment, as follows:
                 1. The Acquirer shall be bound in full by all Sections of the
                Consent Decree not specifically discussed below.
                 2. As to Sections IV, V, and VII of the Final Judgment, the
                Acquirer is bound to the Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired
                Station, each Acquired Station's successors and assigns, and each
                Acquired Station's subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired
                Station's directors, officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers
                and directors only with respect to any responsibilities or actions
                regarding any Acquired Stations, and (iii) employees with management or
                supervisory responsibilities for Acquirer's business or operations
                related to the sale of spot advertising on any Acquired Station, only
                with respect to those responsibilities.
                 3. As to Section VI(C)(3), VI(C)(4), VI(C)(6), VI(C)(8), VI(D),
                VI(E), and VIII of the Final Judgment, the Acquirer is bound to the
                Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired Station, each Acquired
                Station's successors and assigns, and each Acquired Station's
                subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired Station's directors,
                officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers and directors, and
                (iii) employees with management or supervisory responsibilities for
                Acquirer's business or operations related to the sale of spot
                advertising on any Acquired Station.
                 4. The release contained in Sections VII(C) and (D) applies to the
                Acquirer, but only to civil actions or criminal charges arising from
                actions taken by any Acquired Station.
                 5. The Acquirer shall not be bound by Sections VI(C)(1),
                VI(C)(2),VI(C)(5), VI(C)(7), and VI(F) of the Final Judgment at all,
                unless the Acquirer acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days
                after entry of the Final Judgment.
                 6. Section VI(A) applies to the Acquirer, but, unless the Acquirer
                acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days after entry of the
                Final Judgment, Section VI(A) is modified to make the initial period
                for appointing an Antitrust Compliance Officer in the first sentence
                120 days from consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of the
                Acquired Station or Acquired Stations.
                 This Acknowledgement of Applicability may be voided by a joint
                written agreement between the United States and the Acquirer.
                Dated: [ ]
                Respectfully submitted,
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                [Counsel for Acquirer]
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                [PROPOSED] FINAL JUDGMENT
                 WHEREAS, Plaintiff, United States of America, filed its Amended
                Complaint on__, 2019, alleging that Defendant TEGNA Inc., among others,
                violated Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, the United
                States and Defendant, by their respective attorneys, have consented to
                the entry of this Final Judgment without trial or adjudication of any
                issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, this Final Judgment does not constitute any evidence
                against or admission by any party regarding any issue of fact or law;
                 AND WHEREAS, the United States and Defendant agree to be bound by
                the provisions of this Final Judgment pending its approval by this
                Court;
                 AND WHEREAS, the Defendant agrees to undertake certain actions and
                to refrain from engaging in certain forms of information sharing with
                its competitors;
                 NOW THEREFORE, before any testimony is taken, without trial or
                adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon consent of the
                parties, it is ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED:
                I. JURISDICTION
                 This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter and each of the
                parties to this action. The allegations in the Complaint arise under
                Section 1 of the Sherman Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. See 28
                U.S.C. Sec. 1331.
                II. DEFINITIONS
                 As used in this Final Judgment:
                 A. ``Advertiser'' means an advertiser, an advertiser's buying
                agent, or an advertiser's representative.
                 B. ``Agreement'' means any agreement, understanding, pact,
                contract, or arrangement, formal or informal, oral or written, between
                two or more Persons.
                 C. ``Communicate,'' ``Communicating,'' and ``Communication(s)''
                means to provide, send, discuss, circulate, exchange, request, or
                solicit information, whether directly or indirectly, and regardless of
                the means by which it is accomplished, including orally or by written
                means of any kind, such as electronic communications, e-mails,
                facsimiles, telephone communications, voicemails, text messages, audio
                recordings, meetings, interviews, correspondence, exchange of written
                or recorded information, or face-to-face meetings.
                 D. ``Competitively Sensitive Information'' means any of the
                following information, less than eighteen months old, of Defendant or
                any broadcast television station regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations: Non-Public Information relating to
                pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or
                market shares. Reports containing only aggregated market-level or
                national data are not
                [[Page 44150]]
                Competitively Sensitive Information, but reports (including by paid
                subscription) that are customized or confidential to a particular
                Station or broadcast television station group are Competitively
                Sensitive Information. For the avoidance of doubt, spot advertising
                does not include network television advertising sold by the Defendant
                or television advertising sold by the Defendant in its capacity as an
                agent of the owners of syndicated programming.
                 E. ``Cooperative Agreement'' means (1) joint sales agreements,
                joint operating agreements, local marketing agreements, news share
                agreements, or shared services agreements, or (2) any agreement through
                which a Person exercises control over any broadcast television station
                not owned by the Person.
                 F. ``Defendant'' means TEGNA Inc., a Delaware corporation with its
                headquarters in McLean, Virginia, its successors and assigns, and its
                subsidiaries, divisions, and Stations, and their directors, officers,
                and employees.
                 G. ``DMA'' means Designated Market Area as defined by A.C. Nielsen
                Company and used by the Investing in Television BIA Market Report 2018.
                 H. ``Management'' means all directors and executive officers of
                Defendant, or any other employee with management or supervisory
                responsibilities for Defendant's business or operations related to the
                sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 I. ``Non-Public Information'' means information that is not
                available from public sources or generally available to the public.
                Measurement or quantification of a Station's future holding capacity is
                Non-Public Information, but measurement or quantification of a
                Station's past holding capacity is not Non-Public Information. For the
                avoidance of doubt, the fact that information is available by paid
                subscription does not on its own render the information public.
                 J. ``Person'' means any natural person, corporation, company,
                partnership, joint venture, firm, association, proprietorship, agency,
                board, authority, commission, office, or other business or legal
                entity, whether private or governmental.
                 K. ``Sales Representative Firm'' means any organization, including
                without limitation Katz Media Group, Inc. and Cox Reps, Inc., and their
                respective subsidiaries and divisions, that represents a Station or its
                owner in the sale of spot advertising.
                 L. ``Sales Representative Firm Manager'' means, for each of
                Defendant's Sales Representative Firms, the employee of the Sales
                Representative Firm with primary responsibility for the relationship
                with Defendant.
                 M. ``Sales Staff'' means Defendant's employees with responsibility
                for the sale of spot advertising on any Station.
                 N. ``Station'' means any broadcast television station, its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, groups, and
                its owner or operator and its directors, officers, managers, and
                employees, unless a Station owns, is owned by, or is under common
                ownership with a Sales Representative Firm, in which case that Sales
                Representative Firm will not be considered a Station.
                III. APPLICABILITY
                 This Final Judgment applies to Defendant, other Persons in active
                concert or participation with Defendant who receive actual notice of
                this Final Judgment by personal service or otherwise, and any Person
                that signs an Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2,
                to the extent set forth therein, as a condition of the purchase of a
                Station owned by Defendant as of February 1, 2019. This Final Judgment
                applies to Defendant's actions performed under any Cooperative
                Agreement, even if those actions are taken on behalf of a third party.
                This Final Judgment is fully enforceable, including by penalty of
                contempt, against all of the foregoing.
                IV. PROHIBITED CONDUCT
                 A. Defendant's Management and Sales Staff shall not, directly or
                indirectly:
                 1. Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information to any Station
                in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 2. Knowingly use Competitively Sensitive Information from or
                regarding any Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate;
                 3. Encourage or facilitate the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information to or from any Station in the same DMA it does
                not own or operate; or
                 4. Attempt to enter into, enter into, maintain, or enforce any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information with any
                Station in the same DMA it does not own or operate.
                 B. The prohibitions under Paragraph IV(A) apply to Defendant's
                Communicating or agreeing to Communicate through a Sales Representative
                Firm or a third-party agent at Defendant's instruction or request.
                 C. Defendant shall not sell any Station owned by the Defendant as
                of February 1, 2019 to any Person unless that Person has first executed
                the Acknowledgment of Applicability, attached as Exhibit 2. Defendant
                shall submit any Acknowledgement of Applicability to the United States
                within 15 days of consummating the sale of such Station. The United
                States, in its sole discretion, may waive the prohibition in this
                Paragraph IV(C) on a Station-by-Station basis. Alternatively, the
                United States and the Person signing the Acknowledgement of
                Applicability may agree to void the Acknowledgement of Applicability at
                any time. The first sentence of this paragraph shall not apply to the
                sale of any Station to a Person already bound to a final judgment
                entered by a court regarding the Communication of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                V. CONDUCT NOT PROHIBITED
                 A. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from
                Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the Communication
                of, Competitively Sensitive Information with an actual or prospective
                Advertiser, except that, if the Advertiser is another Station,
                Defendant's Communicating, using, or encouraging or facilitating the
                Communication of, Competitively Sensitive Information is excluded from
                the prohibitions of Section IV only insofar as is reasonably necessary
                to negotiate the sale of spot advertising on broadcast television
                stations. For the avoidance of doubt, Defendant is not prohibited from
                internally using Competitively Sensitive Information received from an
                Advertiser that is a Station under the preceding sentence, but
                Defendant is prohibited from Communicating that Competitively Sensitive
                Information to a Station in the same DMA that it does not own or
                operate.
                 B. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from, after
                securing advice of counsel and in consultation with the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer, Communicating, using, encouraging or facilitating
                the Communication of, or attempting to enter into, entering into,
                maintaining, or enforcing any agreement to Communicate Competitively
                Sensitive Information with any Station when such Communication or use
                is (a) for the purpose of evaluating or effectuating a bona fide
                acquisition, disposition, or exchange of Stations or related assets, or
                (b) reasonably necessary for achieving the efficiencies of any other
                legitimate competitor collaboration. With respect to any such
                agreement:
                [[Page 44151]]
                 1. For all agreements under Part V(B)(a) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment, Defendant shall maintain documents sufficient to show:
                 i. the specific transaction or proposed transaction to which the
                sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information relates;
                 ii. the employees, identified with reasonable specificity, who are
                involved in the sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information; and
                 iii. the termination date or event of the sharing of Competitively
                Sensitive Information.
                 2. All agreements under Part V(B)(b) with any other Station to
                Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information that Defendant enters
                into, renews, or affirmatively extends after the date of entry of this
                Final Judgment shall be in writing, and shall:
                 i. identify and describe, with specificity, the collaboration to
                which it is ancillary;
                 ii. be narrowly tailored to permit the Communication of
                Competitively Sensitive Information only when reasonably necessary and
                only to the employees reasonably necessary to effectuate the
                collaboration;
                 iii. identify with reasonable specificity the Competitively
                Sensitive Information Communicated pursuant to the agreement and
                identify the employees to receive the Competitively Sensitive
                Information;
                 iv. contain a specific termination date or event; and
                 v. be signed by all parties to the agreement, including any
                modifications to the agreement.
                 3. For Communications under Part V(B)(a) above, Defendant shall
                maintain copies of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(1) for
                five years or the duration of the Final Judgment, whichever is shorter,
                following entry into any agreement to Communicate or receive
                Competitively Sensitive Information, and Defendant shall make such
                documents available to the United States upon request, if such request
                is made during the preservation period.
                 4. For Communications under Part V(B)(b) above, Defendant shall
                furnish a copy of all materials required under Paragraph V(B)(2) to the
                United States within thirty days of the entry, renewal, or extension of
                the agreement.
                 5. For purposes of this Section V(B) only, a Joint Sales Agreement,
                Local Marketing Agreement, or similar agreement pursuant to which the
                Defendant Communicates, uses, encourages or facilitates the
                Communication of, or attempts to enter into, enters into, maintains, or
                enforces any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information related solely to the sale of spot advertising for which
                Defendant is responsible on a Station, shall be considered a
                ``legitimate competitor collaboration'' under Part V(B)(b).
                 C. Nothing in Section IV shall prohibit Defendant from engaging in
                conduct in accordance with the doctrine established in Eastern Railroad
                Presidents Conference v. Noerr Motor Freight, Inc., 365 U.S. 127
                (1961), United Mine Workers v. Pennington, 381 U.S. 657 (1965), and
                their progeny.
                 D. Nothing in Section IV prohibits Defendant from (1)
                Communicating, encouraging or facilitating the Communication of, or
                attempting to enter into, entering into, maintaining, or enforcing any
                agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information for the
                purpose of aggregation if (a) Competitively Sensitive Information is
                sent to or received from, and the aggregation is managed by, a third
                party not owned or operated by any Station; (b) the information
                disseminated by the aggregator is limited to historical total broadcast
                television station revenue or other geographic or characteristic
                categorization (e.g., national, local, or political sales revenue); and
                (c) any information disseminated is sufficiently aggregated such that
                it would not allow a recipient to identify, deduce, or estimate the
                prices or pacing of any individual broadcast television station not
                owned or operated by that recipient; or (2) using information that
                meets the requirements of Parts V(D)(1)(a)-(c).
                VI. REQUIRED CONDUCT
                 A. Within ten days of entry of this Final Judgment, Defendant shall
                appoint an Antitrust Compliance Officer who is an internal employee or
                Officer of the Defendant, and identify to the United States the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone
                number, and email address. Within forty-five days of a vacancy in the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer position, Defendant shall appoint a
                replacement, and shall identify to the United States the Antitrust
                Compliance Officer's name, business address, telephone number, and
                email address. Defendant's initial or replacement appointment of an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer is subject to the approval of the United
                States, in its sole discretion.
                 B. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall have, or shall retain
                outside counsel who has, the following minimum qualifications:
                 1. be an active member in good standing of the bar in any U.S.
                jurisdiction; and
                 2. have at least five years' experience in legal practice,
                including experience with antitrust matters, unless finding an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or outside counsel meeting this experience
                requirement is a hardship on or is not reasonably available to the
                Defendant, under which circumstances the Defendant may select an
                Antitrust Compliance Officer or shall retain outside counsel who has at
                least five years' experience in legal practice, including experience
                with regulatory or compliance matters.
                 C. The Antitrust Compliance Officer shall, directly or through the
                employees or counsel working at the Antitrust Compliance Officer's
                responsibility and direction:
                 1. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, furnish to
                all of Defendant's Management and Sales Staff and Sales Representative
                Firm Managers a copy of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact
                Statement filed by the United States with the Court, and a cover letter
                in a form attached as Exhibit 1;
                 2. within fourteen days of entry of the Final Judgment, in a manner
                to be devised by Defendant and approved by the United States, provide
                Defendant's Management and Sales Staff reasonable notice of the meaning
                and requirements of this Final Judgment;
                 3. annually brief Defendant's Management and Sales Staff on the
                meaning and requirements of this Final Judgment and the U.S. antitrust
                laws;
                 4. brief any Person who succeeds a Person in any position
                identified in Paragraph VI(C)(3), within sixty days of such succession;
                 5. obtain from each Person designated in Paragraph VI(C)(3) or
                VI(C)(4), within thirty days of that Person's receipt of the Final
                Judgment, a certification that the Person (i) has read and understands
                and agrees to abide by the terms of this Final Judgment; (ii) is not
                aware of any violation of the Final Judgment that has not been reported
                to Defendant; and (iii) understands that failure to comply with this
                Final Judgment may result in an enforcement action for civil or
                criminal contempt of court;
                 6. annually communicate to Defendant's Management and Sales Staff
                that they may disclose to the Antitrust Compliance Officer, without
                reprisal for such disclosure, information concerning any violation or
                potential violation of this Final Judgment or the U.S. antitrust laws
                by Defendant;
                [[Page 44152]]
                 7. within thirty days of the latest filing of the Complaint,
                Proposed Final Judgment, or Competitive Impact Statement in this
                action, Defendant shall provide notice, in each DMA in which Defendant
                owns or operates a Station, to (i) every full power Station in that DMA
                that sells broadcast television spot advertising that Defendant does
                not own or operate and (ii) any Sales Representative Firm selling
                advertising in that DMA on behalf of Defendant, of the Complaint,
                Proposed Final Judgment, and Competitive Impact Statement in a form and
                manner to be proposed by Defendant and approved by the United States in
                its sole discretion. Defendant shall provide the United States with its
                proposal, including the list of recipients, within ten days of the
                filing of the Complaint; and
                 8. maintain for five years or until expiration of the Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, a copy of all materials required to be
                issued under Paragraph VI(C), and furnish them to the United States
                within ten days if requested to do so, except documents protected under
                the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-product doctrine.
                For all materials required to be furnished under Paragraph VI(C) which
                Defendant claims are protected under the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log.
                 D. Defendant shall:
                 1. upon Management or the Antitrust Compliance Officer learning of
                any violation or potential violation of any of the terms and conditions
                contained in this Final Judgment, (i) promptly take appropriate action
                to investigate, and in the event of a violation, terminate or modify
                the activity so as to comply with this Final Judgment, (ii) maintain
                all documents related to any violation or potential violation of this
                Final Judgment for a period of five years or the duration of this Final
                Judgment, whichever is shorter, and (iii) maintain, and furnish to the
                United States at the United States' request, a log of (a) all such
                documents and documents for which Defendant claims protection under the
                attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine, and
                (b) all potential and actual violations, even if no documentary
                evidence regarding the violations exist;
                 2. within thirty days of Management or the Antitrust Compliance
                Officer learning of any such violation or potential violation of any of
                the terms and conditions contained in this Final Judgment, file with
                the United States a statement describing any violation or potential
                violation of any of the terms and conditions contained in this Final
                Judgment, which shall include a description of any Communications
                constituting the violation or potential violation, including the date
                and place of the Communication, the Persons involved, and the subject
                matter of the Communication;
                 3. establish a whistleblower protection policy, which provides that
                any employee may disclose, without reprisal for such disclosure, to the
                Antitrust Compliance Officer information concerning any violation or
                potential violation by the Defendant of this Final Judgment or U.S.
                antitrust laws;
                 4. have its CEO, General Counsel or Chief Legal Officer certify in
                writing to the United States annually on the anniversary date of the
                entry of this Final Judgment that Defendant has complied with the
                provisions of this Final Judgment;
                 5. maintain and produce to the United States upon request: (i) a
                list identifying all employees having received the annual antitrust
                briefing required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and VI(C)(4); and (ii)
                copies of all materials distributed as part of the annual antitrust
                briefing required under Paragraphs VI(C)(3) and V(C)(4). For all
                materials requested to be produced under this Paragraph VI(D)(5) for
                which Defendant claims is protected under the attorney-client privilege
                or the attorney work-product doctrine, Defendant shall furnish to the
                United States a privilege log; and
                 6. within 14 days of entry of the Final Judgment, instruct each
                Sales Representative Firm Manager that the Sales Representative Firm
                shall not Communicate any of Defendant's Competitively Sensitive
                Information in a way that would violate Sections IV and V of this Final
                Judgment if the Sales Representative Firm were included in the
                definition of ``Defendant'' in Paragraph II(F), in a form and manner to
                be proposed by Defendant and approved by the United States in its sole
                discretion, maintained and produced to the United States upon request.
                 E. For the avoidance of doubt, the term ``potential violation'' as
                used in Paragraph VI(D) does not include the discussion of future
                conduct.
                 F. If Defendant acquires a Station after entry of this Final
                Judgment, this Section VI will not apply to that acquired Station or
                the employees of that acquired Station until 120 days after closing of
                the acquisition of that acquired Station.
                VII. DEFENDANT'S COOPERATION
                 A. Defendant shall cooperate fully and truthfully with the United
                States in any investigation or litigation concerning whether or
                alleging that Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or
                operate, or any Sales Representative Firm Communicated Competitively
                Sensitive Information with or among Defendant or any other Station or
                any Sales Representative Firm in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman
                Act, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. Defendant shall use its best
                efforts to ensure that all current and former officers, directors,
                employees, and agents also fully and promptly cooperate with the United
                States. The full, truthful, and continuing cooperation of Defendant
                shall include, but not be limited to:
                 1. providing sworn testimony, that is not protected by the
                attorney-client privilege or the attorney work product doctrine, to the
                United States regarding the Communicating of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement with any other Station it does not own or
                such other Station's Sales Representative Firm to Communicate
                Competitively Sensitive Information while an employee of the Defendant;
                 2. producing, upon request of the United States, all documents,
                data, and other materials, wherever located, to the extent not
                protected under the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-
                product doctrine, in the possession, custody, or control of Defendant,
                that relate to the Communication of Competitively Sensitive Information
                or any agreement with any other Station or such other Station's Sales
                Representative Firm to Communicate Competitively Sensitive Information,
                and a log of documents protected by the attorney-client privilege or
                the attorney work product doctrine;
                 3. making available for interview any officers, directors,
                employees, and agents of Defendant if so requested on reasonable notice
                by the United States; and
                 4. testifying at trial and other judicial proceedings fully,
                truthfully, and under oath, when called upon to do so by the United
                States; provided however, that the obligations of Defendant to
                cooperate fully with the United States as described in this Section VII
                shall cease upon the conclusion of all of the United States'
                investigations and the United States' litigations examining whether or
                alleging that Defendant, any Station that Defendant does not own or
                operate or such other Station's Sales Representative Firm Communicated
                Competitively Sensitive Information or
                [[Page 44153]]
                with or among Defendant or any other Station or any Sales
                Representative Firm in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act, as
                amended, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1, including exhaustion of all appeals or
                expiration of time for all appeals of any Court ruling in each such
                matter, at which point the United States will provide written notice to
                Defendant that its obligations under this Section VII have expired.
                 B. Defendant is obligated to impose a litigation hold until the
                United States provides written notice to the Defendant that its
                obligations under this Section VII have expired. This Paragraph VII(B)
                does not apply to documents created after entry of this Final Judgment.
                 C. Subject to the full, truthful, and continuing cooperation of
                Defendant, as defined in Paragraph VII(A), the United States will not
                bring any further civil action or any criminal charges against
                Defendant related to any Communication of Competitively Sensitive
                Information or any agreement to Communicate Competitively Sensitive
                Information with any other Station it does not own or operate or such
                other Station's Sales Representative Firm when that agreement:
                 1. was Communicated, entered into and terminated on or before the
                date of the filing of the Complaint in this action (or in the case of a
                Station that is acquired by Defendant after entry of this Final
                Judgment, was Communicated or entered into before the acquisition and
                terminated within 120 days after the closing of the acquisition); and
                 2. does not constitute or include an agreement to fix prices or
                divide markets.
                 D. The United States' agreement set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does
                not apply to any acts of perjury or subornation of perjury (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1621-22), making a false statement or declaration (18 U.S.C.
                Sec. Sec. 1001, 1623), contempt (18 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 401-402), or
                obstruction of justice (18 U.S.C. Sec. 1503, et seq.) by the Defendant
                or its officers, directors, and employees. The United States' agreement
                set forth in Paragraph VII(C) does not release any claims against any
                Sales Representative Firm.
                VIII. COMPLIANCE INSPECTION
                 A. For the purposes of determining or securing compliance with this
                Final Judgment or of any related orders, or of determining whether the
                Final Judgment should be modified, and subject to any legally
                recognized privilege, from time to time authorized representatives of
                the United States Department of Justice, including consultants and
                other persons retained by the United States, shall, upon written
                request of an authorized representative of the Assistant Attorney
                General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on reasonable notice
                to Defendant, be permitted:
                 1. to access during Defendant's office hours to inspect and copy,
                or at the option of the United States, to require Defendant to provide
                electronic or hard copies of all books, ledgers, accounts, records,
                data, and documents in the possession, custody, or control of
                Defendant, relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final
                Judgment, not protected by the attorney- client privilege or the
                attorney work product doctrine; and
                 2. to interview, either informally or on the record, Defendant's
                officers, employees, or agents, who may have their individual counsel
                present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be subject to the
                reasonable convenience of the interviewee and without restraint or
                interference by Defendant; and
                 3. to obtain from Defendant written reports or responses to written
                interrogatories, of information not protected by the attorney-client
                privilege or attorney work product doctrine, under oath if requested,
                relating to any matters that are the subject of this Final Judgment as
                may be requested.
                 B. No information or documents obtained by the means provided in
                this Section VIII shall be divulged by the United States to any Person
                other than an authorized representative of the executive branch of the
                United States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the
                United States is a party (including grand jury proceedings), or for the
                purpose of securing compliance with this Final Judgment, or for law
                enforcement purposes, or as otherwise required by law.
                 C. If at the time information or documents are furnished by
                Defendant to the United States, Defendant represents and identifies in
                writing the material in any such information or documents to which a
                claim of protection may be asserted under Rule 26(c)(1)(G) of the
                Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and Defendant marks each pertinent
                page of such material, ``Subject to claim of protection under Rule
                26(c)(1)(G) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,'' then the United
                States shall give Defendant ten calendar days' notice prior to
                divulging such material in any legal proceeding (other than a grand
                jury proceeding).
                IX. RETENTION OF JURISDICTION
                 This Court retains jurisdiction to enable any party to this Final
                Judgment to apply to this Court at any time for further orders and
                directions as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out or construe
                this Final Judgment, to modify any of its provisions, to enforce
                compliance, and to punish violations of its provisions.
                X. ENFORCEMENT OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 A. The United States retains and reserves all rights to enforce the
                provisions of this Final Judgment, including its right to seek an order
                of contempt from this Court. Defendant agrees that in any civil
                contempt action, any motion to show cause, or any similar civil action
                brought by the United States regarding an alleged violation of this
                Final Judgment, the United States may establish a violation of the
                Final Judgment and the appropriateness of any remedy therefor by a
                preponderance of the evidence, and Defendant waives any argument that a
                different standard of proof should apply.
                 B. The Final Judgment should be interpreted to give full effect to
                the procompetitive purposes of the antitrust laws and to restore all
                competition the United States alleged was harmed by the challenged
                conduct. Defendant agrees that it may be held in contempt of, and that
                the Court may enforce, any provision of this Final Judgment that, as
                interpreted by the Court in light of these procompetitive principles
                and applying ordinary tools of interpretation, is stated specifically
                and in reasonable detail, whether or not it is clear and unambiguous on
                its face. In any such interpretation, the terms of this Final Judgment
                should not be construed against either party as the drafter.
                 C. In any enforcement proceeding in which the Court finds that
                Defendant has violated this Final Judgment, the United States may apply
                to the Court for a one-time extension of this Final Judgment, together
                with such other relief as may be appropriate. In connection with any
                successful effort by the United States to enforce this Final Judgment
                against Defendant, whether litigated or resolved prior to litigation,
                Defendant agrees to reimburse the United States for the fees and
                expenses of its attorneys, as well as any other costs including
                experts' fees, incurred in connection with that enforcement effort,
                including in the investigation of the potential violation.
                [[Page 44154]]
                XI. EXPIRATION OF FINAL JUDGMENT
                 Unless this Court grants an extension, this Final Judgment shall
                expire seven years from the date of its entry, except that after five
                years from the date of its entry, this Final Judgment may be terminated
                upon notice by the United States to the Court and Defendant that the
                continuation of the Final Judgment no longer is necessary or in the
                public interest.
                XII. NOTICE
                 For purposes of this Final Judgment, any notice or other
                communication required to be provided to the United States shall be
                sent to the person at the address set forth below (or such other
                addresses as the United States may specify in writing to Defendant):
                Chief, Media, Entertainment, and Professional Services Section, U.S.
                Department of Justice Antitrust Division, 450 Fifth Street NW, Suite
                4000, Washington, DC 20530.
                XIII. PUBLIC INTEREST DETERMINATION
                 Entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest. The parties
                have complied with the requirements of the Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16, including making copies available to
                the public of this Final Judgment, the Competitive Impact Statement,
                and any comments thereon and the United States' responses to comments.
                Based upon the record before the Court, which includes the Competitive
                Impact Statement and any comments and response to comments filed with
                the Court, entry of this Final Judgment is in the public interest.
                 IT IS SO ORDERED by the Court, this __ day of ___, 201_.
                Court approval subject to procedures of Antitrust Procedures and
                Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                United States District Judge
                EXHIBIT 1
                [Company Letterhead]
                [Name and Address of Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Re: Prohibitions Against Sharing of Competitively Sensitive Information
                Dear [XX]:
                 I provide you this notice regarding a judgment recently entered by
                a federal judge in Washington, D.C. prohibiting the sharing of certain
                information with other broadcast television station(s).
                 The judgment applies to our company and all of its employees,
                including you, so it is important that you understand the obligations
                it imposes on us. [CEO Name] has asked me to let each of you know that
                [s/he] expects you to take these obligations seriously and abide by
                them.
                 The judgment prohibits us from sharing or receiving, directly or
                indirectly (including through our national sales representative firm),
                competitively sensitive information with or from any employee, agent,
                or representative of another broadcast television station in the same
                DMA it does not own or operate. Competitively sensitive information
                means any non-public information regarding the sale of spot advertising
                on broadcast television stations, including information relating to any
                pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding capacity, revenues, or
                market shares. There are limited exceptions to this restriction, which
                are listed in the judgment. The company will provide briefing on the
                legitimate or illegitimate exchange of information.
                 You must consult with me if you have any questions on whether a
                particular circumstance is subject to an exception under the judgment.
                 A copy of the judgment is attached. Please read it carefully and
                familiarize yourself with its terms. The judgment, rather than the
                above description, is controlling. If you have any questions about the
                judgment or how it affects your sale of spot advertising, please
                contact me as soon as possible.
                 Please sign and return the attached Employee Certification to
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer] within thirty days of your
                receipt of this letter. Thank you for your cooperation.
                Sincerely,
                [Defendant's Antitrust Compliance Officer]
                Employee Certification
                 I, ____ [name], ____ [position] at ____ [station or location] do
                hereby certify that I (i) have read and understand, and agree to abide
                by, the terms of the Final Judgment; (ii) am not aware of any violation
                of the Final Judgment that has not been reported to [Defendant]; and
                (iii) understand that my failure to comply with this Final Judgment may
                result in an enforcement action for civil or criminal contempt of
                court.
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                Name:
                Date:
                EXHIBIT 2
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc., et al., Defendants.
                Case No.
                ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF APPLICABILITY
                 The undersigned acknowledges that [Full Buyer Name], including its
                successors and assigns, and its subsidiaries, divisions, and broadcast
                television stations, and their directors, officers, and employees
                (``Acquirer''), following consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of
                [insert names of station or stations acquired] (each, an ``Acquired
                Station''), is bound by the Final Judgment entered by this Court in the
                above-captioned action (``Final Judgment''), as if the Acquirer were a
                Defendant under the Final Judgment, as follows:
                 1. The Acquirer shall be bound in full by all Sections of the
                Consent Decree not specifically discussed below.
                 2. As to Sections IV, V, and VII of the Final Judgment, the
                Acquirer is bound to the Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired
                Station, each Acquired Station's successors and assigns, and each
                Acquired Station's subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired
                Station's directors, officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers
                and directors only with respect to any responsibilities or actions
                regarding any Acquired Stations, and (iii) employees with management or
                supervisory responsibilities for Acquirer's business or operations
                related to the sale of spot advertising on any Acquired Station, only
                with respect to those responsibilities.
                 3. As to Section VI(C)(3), VI(C)(4), VI(C)(6), VI(C)(8), VI(D),
                VI(E), and VIII of the Final Judgment, the Acquirer is bound to the
                Final Judgment only as to (i) each Acquired Station, each Acquired
                Station's successors and assigns, and each Acquired Station's
                subsidiaries and divisions, and each Acquired Station's directors,
                officers, and employees, (ii) Acquirer's officers and directors, and
                (iii) employees with management or supervisory responsibilities for
                Acquirer's business or operations related to the sale of spot
                advertising on any Acquired Station.
                 4. The release contained in Sections VII(C) and (D) applies to the
                Acquirer, but only to civil actions or criminal charges arising from
                actions taken by any Acquired Station.
                 5. The Acquirer shall not be bound by Sections VI(C)(1),
                VI(C)(2),VI(C)(5), VI(C)(7), and VI(F) of the Final Judgment at all,
                unless the Acquirer acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days
                after entry of the Final Judgment.
                 6. Section VI(A) applies to the Acquirer, but, unless the Acquirer
                [[Page 44155]]
                acquires the Acquired Stations earlier than 45 days after entry of the
                Final Judgment, Section VI(A) is modified to make the initial period
                for appointing an Antitrust Compliance Officer in the first sentence
                120 days from consummation of the Acquirer's acquisition of the
                Acquired Station or Acquired Stations.
                 This Acknowledgement of Applicability may be voided by a joint
                written agreement between the United States and the Acquirer.
                Dated: [ ]
                Respectfully submitted,
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                [Counsel for Acquirer]
                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
                 United States of America; Plaintiff, v. Sinclair Broadcast
                Group, Inc.; Raycom Media, Inc.; Tribune Media Company; Meredith
                Corporation; Griffin Communications, LLC; Dreamcatcher Broadcasting,
                LLC, Nexstar Media Group, Inc.; CBS Corporation; Cox Enterprises,
                Inc.; The E.W. Scripps Company; Fox Corporation; and TEGNA Inc.,
                Defendants.
                Case No. 1:18-cv-2609-TSC
                COMPETITIVE IMPACT STATEMENT
                 Plaintiff United States of America (``United States''), pursuant to
                Section 2(b) of the Antitrust Procedures and Penalties Act, 15 U.S.C.
                Sec. 16(b)-(h) (``APPA'' or ``Tunney Act''), files this Competitive
                Impact Statement relating to the proposed Final Judgments against
                Defendants CBS Corporation (``CBS''), Cox Enterprises, Inc. (``Cox''),
                The E.W. Scripps Company (``Scripps''), Fox Corporation (``Fox''), and
                TEGNA Inc. (``TEGNA'') submitted for entry in this civil antitrust
                proceeding.
                I. Nature and Purpose of the Proceeding
                 On November 13, 2018, the United States filed a civil antitrust
                complaint alleging that six Defendants agreed among themselves and
                other broadcast television stations in many local markets to
                reciprocally exchange station-specific, competitively sensitive
                information regarding spot advertising revenues. The Complaint alleges
                those Defendants' agreements are unreasonable restraints of trade that
                are unlawful under Section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1. The
                Complaint seeks injunctive relief to prevent those Defendants from
                exchanging competitively sensitive information with and among competing
                broadcast television stations. On December 13, 2018, the United States
                filed an Amended Complaint, adding a seventh defendant. On June 17,
                2019, the United States filed a Second Amended Complaint, adding CBS,
                Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA as defendants. Besides these additions and
                some additional allegations regarding agreements with certain national
                sales representation firms, the Second Amended Complaint is the same as
                the Amended Complaint in all material respects.
                 Along with the Second Amended Complaint, the United States filed
                proposed Final Judgments for CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA.\2\ The
                proposed Final Judgments prohibit sharing of competitively sensitive
                information, require CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA to implement
                antitrust compliance training programs, and impose cooperation and
                reporting requirements.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \2\ On May 22, 2019, the Court issued orders granting Final
                Judgment with respect to the seven other defendants. See U.S. v.
                Sinclair, No. 1:18-cv-02609-TSC, Dkt. Nos. 34-40 (May 22, 2019).
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The United States and each of CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA
                have stipulated that the proposed Final Judgments may be entered after
                compliance with the APPA, unless the United States withdraws its
                consent. Entry of the proposed Final Judgments would terminate this
                action, except that the Court would retain jurisdiction to construe,
                modify, or enforce the provisions of the proposed Final Judgments and
                to punish violations thereof.
                II. Description of the Events Giving Rise to the Alleged Violation
                A. Industry Background
                 Broadcast television stations sell advertising time to businesses
                that want to advertise their products to television viewers. Broadcast
                television ``spot'' advertising,\3\ which typically comprises the
                majority of a station's revenues, is sold directly by the station
                itself or through its sales representatives to advertisers who want to
                target viewers in specific geographic areas called Designated Market
                Areas (``DMAs'').\4\
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \3\ Spot advertising differs from other types of television
                advertising, such as network and syndicated television advertising,
                which are sold by television networks and producers of syndicated
                programs on a nationwide basis and broadcast in every market where
                the network or syndicated program is aired.
                 \4\ A DMA is a geographical unit designated by the A.C. Nielsen
                Company, a company that surveys television viewers and furnishes
                data to aid in evaluating television audiences. There are 210 DMAs
                in the United States. DMAs are widely accepted by television
                stations, advertisers, and advertising agencies as the standard
                geographic area to use in evaluating television audience size and
                demographic composition.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Broadcast stations typically make their spot advertising sales
                through two channels: (1) local sales, which are sales made by the
                station's own local sales staff to advertisers who are usually located
                within the DMA; and (2) national sales, which are sales made either by
                the broadcast group's national sales staff or by a national sales
                representative firm (``Sales Rep Firm'') to regional or national
                advertisers.
                 CBS is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business
                in New York, New York. CBS owns or operates 28 television stations in
                18 DMAs, and had over $14.5 billion in revenues in 2018.
                 Cox is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business
                in Atlanta, Georgia. Cox owns or operates 14 television stations in 10
                DMAs, owns Cox Reps, and had an estimated $20 billion in revenues in
                2018.
                 Scripps is an Ohio corporation with its principal place of business
                in Cincinnati, Ohio. Scripps owns or operates 60 television stations in
                42 DMAs, and had over $917 million in revenues in 2018.
                 Fox is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business
                in New York, New York. Fox owns or operates 17 television stations in
                17 DMAs. Fox is a corporate entity recently created from certain former
                21st Century Fox assets, including its broadcast station assets, after
                The Walt Disney Company acquired 21st Century Fox and spun-out Fox.
                21st Century Fox's television segment earned over $5 billion in 2017.
                 Defendant TEGNA is a Delaware corporation with its principal place
                of business in McLean, Virginia. TEGNA owns or operates 49 television
                stations in 41 DMAs, and had $2.2 billion in revenues in 2018.
                 CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA, along with certain other
                television broadcast station groups, compete in various configurations
                in multiple DMAs across the United States. CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and
                TEGNA sell spot advertising time to advertisers that seek to target
                viewers in the DMAs in which they operate. Prices are individually
                negotiated with advertisers, and advertisers are able to ``play off''
                the stations against each other to obtain competitive rates.
                 There are two primary Sales Rep Firms in the United States today,
                including Cox's subsidiary Cox Reps, Inc. (``Cox Reps''), and each
                represents hundreds of television stations throughout the country in
                the sale of national advertising time. It is common for one Sales Rep
                Firm to represent multiple competing stations in the same DMA. In such
                cases, the stations and the Sales Rep Firms purportedly create
                firewalls to prevent coordination and
                [[Page 44156]]
                information sharing between the sales teams representing competing
                stations.
                B. The Exchanges of Competitively Sensitive Information
                 The Second Amended Complaint alleges that CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox,
                and TEGNA and other broadcasters and Sales Rep Firms have agreed in
                many DMAs to reciprocally exchange station-specific revenue pacing
                data. Revenue pacing data compares a station's revenues booked for a
                certain time period to the revenues booked for the same point in time
                in the previous year, indicating how each station is performing versus
                the rest of the market and providing insight into each station's
                remaining spot advertising inventory for the current period or future
                periods. The exchanges were systematic and typically included non-
                public pacing data on national revenues, local revenues, or both,
                depending on the DMA. The Second Amended Complaint further alleges that
                CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA engaged in the exchange of other
                forms of competitively sensitive information relating to spot
                advertising in certain DMAs.
                 The Second Amended Complaint alleges that CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox,
                and TEGNA exchanged pacing information in at least two ways. First,
                CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA and other television broadcast
                stations exchanged information through the Sales Rep Firms, exchanges
                which the Sales Rep Firms agreed to facilitate or knowingly
                facilitated. The information was passed both within and between Sales
                Rep Firms representing competing stations, and was done with CBS's,
                Cox's, Scripps', Fox's, and TEGNA's knowledge and frequently at those
                Defendants' instruction. Second, in some DMAs, CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox,
                and TEGNA and other broadcasters exchanged pacing information directly
                between local station employees.
                 The Second Amended Complaint alleges that these exchanges of pacing
                information allowed stations to better understand, in real time, the
                availability of inventory on competitors' stations, which is often a
                key factor affecting negotiations with buyers over spot advertising
                prices. The exchanges also helped stations to anticipate whether
                competitors were likely to raise, maintain, or lower spot advertising
                prices. Understanding competitors' pacing can help stations gauge
                competitors' and advertisers' negotiation strategies, inform their own
                pricing strategies, and help them resist more effectively advertisers'
                attempts to obtain lower prices by playing stations off of one another.
                CBS's, Cox's, Scripps', Fox's, and TEGNA's information exchanges
                therefore distorted the normal price-setting mechanism in the spot
                advertising market and harmed the competitive process within the
                affected DMAs.
                III. Explanation of the Proposed Final Judgments
                 The provisions of the proposed Final Judgments closely track the
                relief sought in the Second Amended Complaint and are intended to
                provide prompt, certain, and effective remedies that will ensure that
                CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA and their employees and Sales Rep
                Firms will not impede competition by sharing competitively sensitive
                information, directly or indirectly, including through Sales Rep Firms,
                with its rival broadcast television stations. The requirements and
                prohibitions in the proposed Final Judgments will terminate CBS's,
                Cox's, Scripps', Fox's, and TEGNA's illegal conduct, prevent recurrence
                of the same or similar conduct, ensure that CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and
                TEGNA establish antitrust compliance programs, and provide the United
                States with cooperation in its ongoing investigation. The proposed
                Final Judgments protect competition and consumers by putting a stop to
                the anticompetitive information sharing alleged in the Second Amended
                Complaint.
                A. Prohibited Conduct
                 The proposed Final Judgments broadly prohibit CBS, Cox, Scripps,
                Fox, and TEGNA from sharing competitively sensitive information with
                rival broadcast television stations in the same DMA. Specifically,
                Section IV ensures that CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA will not,
                directly or indirectly, communicate competitively sensitive
                information, including pricing or pricing strategies, pacing, holding
                capacity, revenues, or market shares, to broadcast television stations
                in the same DMA or to those stations' sales representatives and agents.
                Regarding Cox, Section IV of the proposed Final Judgment also ensures
                that Cox will not facilitate the communication of competitively
                sensitive information between rival broadcast television stations
                through Cox Reps.
                 The proposed Final Judgments provide that their provisions will
                apply to stations owned by CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA even if
                they sell those stations to new buyers. In particular, Paragraph IV(C)
                provides that each of CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA may not sell
                any stations it owns as of October 1, 2018, unless the buyer has
                executed an Acknowledgement that each station will continue to be bound
                by the terms of the proposed Final Judgment. The United States, in its
                discretion, may waive this requirement on a station-by-station basis,
                or alternatively the buyer and the United States may agree to void the
                Acknowledgement after the sale has been consummated.
                B. Conduct Not Prohibited
                 Section V makes clear that the proposed Final Judgments do not
                prohibit CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA from sharing or receiving
                competitively sensitive information in certain specified circumstances
                where the information sharing appears unlikely to cause harm to
                competition. Paragraph V(A) allows CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA to
                communicate competitively sensitive information to advertising
                customers or prospective customers. Paragraph V(B) allows for the
                communication of competitively sensitive information with other
                broadcasters (i) for purposes of evaluating or effectuating a
                transaction, such as the purchase or sale of a station; or (ii) when
                reasonably necessary for achieving the efficiencies of a legitimate
                collaboration among competitors, such as a lawful joint venture.\5\
                Paragraph V(C) confirms that the proposed Final Judgments do not
                prohibit petitioning conduct protected by the Noerr-Pennington
                doctrine. Paragraph V(D) permits the exchange of competitively
                sensitive information through certain third-party aggregation services
                under the conditions listed in that paragraph, including that the
                aggregated data does not permit individual stations to identify,
                deduce, or estimate the prices or pacing of their competitors.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \5\ Paragraph V(B)(5) states that, for purposes of Paragraph
                V(B) only, certain types of Joint Sales Agreements, Local Marketing
                Agreements, and similar agreements qualify as a ``legitimate
                competitor collaboration'' under Paragraph V(B)(b). Paragraph
                V(B)(5) was included in recognition of the fact that some
                broadcasters have entered into a number of these agreements in
                various DMAs. The question of whether these agreements have any
                effect on competition was outside the scope of the United States'
                investigation in this matter. Accordingly, Paragraph V(B)(5) should
                not be read as an admission that such agreements otherwise comply
                with the antitrust laws, and the United States takes no position on
                that question for purposes of this proceeding.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                C. Antitrust Compliance Obligations
                 Under Section VI of the proposed Final Judgments, CBS, Cox,
                Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA each must designate an Antitrust Compliance
                Officer who is responsible for implementing training and antitrust
                compliance programs and ensuring compliance with the Final
                [[Page 44157]]
                Judgments. Among other duties, each Antitrust Compliance Officer will
                be required to distribute copies of that Defendant's Final Judgment and
                ensure that training on the Final Judgment and the antitrust laws is
                provided to each of CBS's, Cox's, Scripps', Fox's, and TEGNA's
                respective management and sales staff. Section VI also requires CBS,
                Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA each to establish an antitrust
                whistleblower policy and remedy and report violations of the Final
                Judgment. Under Paragraph VI(D)(5) of Cox's proposed Final Judgment,
                Cox is required to establish policies and procedures at Cox Reps that
                ensure employees representing one station do not have access to the
                competitively sensitive information of any other client station
                operating in the same DMA, including database access restrictions.
                Under Section VI, CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA, through their
                respective CEO, General Counsel, or Chief Legal Officer, must certify
                annual compliance with the Final Judgments. This compliance program is
                necessary in light of the extensive history of communications among
                rival stations that facilitated CBS's, Cox's, Scripps', Fox's, and
                TEGNA's agreements.
                D. Defendants' Cooperation
                 As outlined in Section VII, CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA must
                cooperate fully and truthfully with the United States in any
                investigation or litigation relating to the sharing of competitively
                sensitive information in the broadcast television industry. The
                required cooperation may include providing sworn testimony, employee
                interviews, and/or documents and data.
                 Paragraph VII(C) provides that, subject to each of CBS's, Cox's,
                Scripps', Fox's, and TEGNA's truthful and continuing cooperation as
                defined in Paragraphs VII(A) and (B), the United States will not bring
                further civil actions or criminal charges against that Defendant for
                any agreement to share competitively sensitive information with any
                other station or Sales Rep Firm when the agreement: (1) was entered
                into and terminated before the date of the filing of the Complaint and
                (2) does not constitute or include an agreement to fix prices or divide
                markets. As to Cox, an additional requirement for application of this
                release is that the agreement not involve Cox, including through Cox
                Reps, acting as a joint sales agent for Stations from different
                broadcast station groups competing in the same DMA.
                E. Enforcement of Final Judgments
                 The proposed Final Judgments contain provisions designed to promote
                compliance and make the enforcement of Division consent decrees as
                effective as possible. Paragraph X(A) provides that the United States
                retains and reserves all rights to enforce the provisions of the
                proposed Final Judgments, including its rights to seek an order of
                contempt from the Court. CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA have agreed
                that in any civil contempt action, any motion to show cause, or any
                similar action brought by the United States regarding an alleged
                violation of the Final Judgment, the United States may establish the
                violation and the appropriateness of any remedy by a preponderance of
                the evidence and that CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA have waived any
                argument that a different standard of proof should apply. This
                provision aligns the standard for compliance obligations with the
                standard of proof that applies to the underlying offense that the
                compliance commitments address.
                 Paragraph X(B) provides additional clarification regarding the
                interpretation of the provisions of the proposed Final Judgments. The
                proposed Final Judgments were drafted to restore all competition the
                United States alleged was harmed by CBS's, Cox's, Scripps', Fox's, and
                TEGNA's challenged conduct. CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA agree
                that they will abide by the proposed Final Judgments, and that they may
                be held in contempt of this Court for failing to comply with any
                provision of the proposed Final Judgments that is stated specifically
                and in reasonable detail, whether or not it is clear and unambiguous on
                its face, and as interpreted in light of this procompetitive purpose.
                 Paragraph X(C) further provides that, should the Court find in an
                enforcement proceeding that CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, or TEGNA has
                violated the Final Judgment, the United States may apply to the Court
                for a one-time extension of the respective Final Judgment, together
                with such other relief as may be appropriate. In addition, in order to
                compensate American taxpayers for any costs associated with the
                investigation and enforcement of violations of a proposed Final
                Judgment, Paragraph X(C) provides that in any successful effort by the
                United States to enforce a Final Judgment against CBS, Cox, Scripps,
                Fox, or TEGNA whether litigated or resolved before litigation, each
                respective Defendant agrees to reimburse the United States for any
                attorneys' fees, experts' fees, or costs incurred in connection with
                any enforcement effort against that particular Defendant, including the
                investigation of the potential violation.
                 Finally, Section XI of the proposed Final Judgments provides that
                each Final Judgment shall expire seven years from the date of its
                entry, except that after five years from the date of its entry, the
                Final Judgment may be terminated upon notice by the United States to
                the Court and CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, or TEGNA, respectively, that the
                continuation of the Final Judgments is no longer necessary or in the
                public interest.
                IV. Remedies Available to Potential Private Litigants
                 Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 15, provides that any
                person who has been injured as a result of conduct prohibited by the
                antitrust laws may bring suit in federal court to recover three times
                the damages the person has suffered, as well as costs and reasonable
                attorneys' fees. Entry of the proposed Final Judgments will neither
                impair nor assist the bringing of any private antitrust damage action.
                Under the provisions of Section 5(a) of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C.
                Sec. 16(a), the proposed Final Judgments have no prima facie effect in
                any subsequent private lawsuit that may be brought against CBS, Cox,
                Scripps, Fox, or TEGNA.
                V. Procedures Available for Modification of the Proposed Final
                Judgments
                 The United States and CBS, Cox, Scripps, Fox, and TEGNA have
                stipulated that the Court may enter the proposed Final Judgments after
                compliance with the provisions of the APPA, provided that the United
                States has not withdrawn its consent. The APPA conditions entry upon
                the Court's determination that the proposed Final Judgments are in the
                public interest.
                 The APPA provides a period of at least sixty days preceding the
                effective date of the proposed Final Judgments within which any person
                may submit to the United States written comments regarding the proposed
                Final Judgments. Any person who wishes to comment should do so within
                sixty days of the date of publication of this Competitive Impact
                Statement in the Federal Register, or the last date of publication in a
                newspaper of the summary of this Competitive Impact Statement,
                whichever is later. All comments received during this period will be
                considered by the United States Department of Justice, which remains
                free to withdraw its consent to the
                [[Page 44158]]
                proposed Final Judgments at any time before the Court's entry of
                judgment. The comments and the response of the United States will be
                filed with the Court. In addition, comments will be posted on the U.S.
                Department of Justice, Antitrust Division's website and, under certain
                circumstances, published in the Federal Register.
                 Written comments should be submitted to: Owen M. Kendler, Chief,
                Media, Entertainment, & Professional Services Section, Antitrust
                Division, United States Department of Justice, 450 5th Street NW, Suite
                4000, Washington, DC 20530.
                 Under Section IX, the proposed Final Judgments provide that the
                Court retains jurisdiction over this action, and the parties may apply
                to the Court for any order necessary or appropriate for the
                modification, interpretation, or enforcement of the Final Judgments.
                VI. Alternatives to the Proposed Final Judgments
                 The United States considered, as an alternative to the proposed
                Final Judgments, seeking injunctive relief against CBS's, Cox's,
                Scripps', Fox's, and TEGNA's conduct through a full trial on the
                merits. The United States is satisfied, however, that the relief sought
                in the proposed Final Judgments will terminate the anticompetitive
                conduct alleged in the Second Amended Complaint and more quickly
                restore the benefits of competition to advertisers. Thus, the proposed
                Final Judgments would achieve the relief the United States might have
                obtained through litigation, but avoid the time, expense, and
                uncertainty of a full trial on the merits.
                VII. Standard of Review Under the APPA for the Proposed Final Judgments
                 The Clayton Act, as amended by the APPA, requires that proposed
                consent judgments in antitrust cases brought by the United States be
                subject to a 60-day comment period, after which the court shall
                determine whether entry of the proposed Final Judgments ``is in the
                public interest.'' 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(1). In making that
                determination, the court, in accordance with the statute as amended in
                2004, is required to consider:
                (A) the competitive impact of such judgment, including termination
                of alleged violations, provisions for enforcement and modification,
                duration of relief sought, anticipated effects of alternative
                remedies actually considered, whether its terms are ambiguous, and
                any other competitive considerations bearing upon the adequacy of
                such judgment that the court deems necessary to a determination of
                whether the consent judgment is in the public interest; and
                (B) the impact of entry of such judgment upon competition in the
                relevant market or markets, upon the public generally and
                individuals alleging specific injury from the violations set forth
                in the complaint including consideration of the public benefit, if
                any, to be derived from a determination of the issues at trial.
                15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(1)(A) & (B). In considering these statutory
                factors, the court's inquiry is necessarily a limited one as the
                government is entitled to ``broad discretion to settle with the
                defendant within the reaches of the public interest.'' United States v.
                Microsoft Corp., 56 F.3d 1448, 1461 (D.C. Cir. 1995); United States v.
                U.S. Airways Grp., Inc., 38 F. Supp. 3d 69, 75 (D.D.C. 2014)
                (explaining that the ``court's inquiry is limited'' in Tunney Act
                settlements); United States v. InBev N.V./S.A., No. 08-1965 (JR), 2009
                U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *3 (D.D.C. Aug. 11, 2009) (noting that the
                court's review of a consent judgment is limited and only inquires
                ``into whether the government's determination that the proposed
                remedies will cure the antitrust violations alleged in the complaint
                was reasonable, and whether the mechanism to enforce the final judgment
                are clear and manageable'').
                 As the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
                Circuit has held, under the APPA a court considers, among other things,
                the relationship between the remedy secured and the specific
                allegations in the government's complaint, whether the decree is
                sufficiently clear, whether its enforcement mechanisms are sufficient,
                and whether the decree may positively harm third parties. See
                Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1458-62. With respect to the adequacy of the
                relief secured by the decree, a court may not ``engage in an
                unrestricted evaluation of what relief would best serve the public.''
                United States v. BNS, Inc., 858 F.2d 456, 462 (9th Cir. 1988) (quoting
                United States v. Bechtel Corp., 648 F.2d 660, 666 (9th Cir. 1981)); see
                also Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1460-62; United States v. Alcoa, Inc., 152
                F. Supp. 2d 37, 40 (D.D.C. 2001); InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787,
                at *3. Instead:
                [t]he balancing of competing social and political interests affected
                by a proposed antitrust consent decree must be left, in the first
                instance, to the discretion of the Attorney General. The court's
                role in protecting the public interest is one of insuring that the
                government has not breached its duty to the public in consenting to
                the decree. The court is required to determine not whether a
                particular decree is the one that will best serve society, but
                whether the settlement is ``within the reaches of the public
                interest.'' More elaborate requirements might undermine the
                effectiveness of antitrust enforcement by consent decree.
                Bechtel, 648 F.2d at 666 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).\6\
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \6\ See also BNS, 858 F.2d at 464 (holding that the court's
                ``ultimate authority under the [APPA] is limited to approving or
                disapproving the consent decree''); United States v. Gillette Co.,
                406 F. Supp. 713, 716 (D. Mass. 1975) (noting that, in this way, the
                court is constrained to ``look at the overall picture not
                hypercritically, nor with a microscope, but with an artist's
                reducing glass'').
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 The United States' predictions with respect to the efficacy of the
                remedy are to be afforded deference by the Court. See, e.g., Microsoft,
                56 F.3d at 1461 (recognizing courts should give ``due respect to the
                Justice Department's . . . view of the nature of its case'''); United
                States v. Iron Mountain, Inc., 217 F. Supp. 3d 146, 152-53 (D.D.C.
                2016) (``In evaluating objections to settlement agreements under the
                Tunney Act, a court must be mindful that [t]he government need not
                prove that the settlements will perfectly remedy the alleged antitrust
                harms[;] it need only provide a factual basis for concluding that the
                settlements are reasonably adequate remedies for the alleged harms.''
                (internal citations omitted)); United States v. Republic Servs., Inc.,
                723 F. Supp. 2d 157, 160 (D.D.C. 2010) (noting ``the deferential review
                to which the government's proposed remedy is accorded''); United States
                v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., 272 F. Supp. 2d 1, 6 (D.D.C. 2003) (``A
                district court must accord due respect to the government's prediction
                as to the effect of proposed remedies, its perception of the market
                structure, and its view of the nature of the case.''). The ultimate
                question is whether ``the remedies [obtained in the decree are] so
                inconsonant with the allegations charged as to fall outside of the
                `reaches of the public interest.''' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1461 (quoting
                United States v. Western Elec. Co., 900 F.2d 283, 309 (D.C. Cir.
                1990)).
                 Moreover, the court's role under the APPA is limited to reviewing
                the remedy in relationship to the violations that the United States has
                alleged in its complaint, and does not authorize the court to
                ``construct [its] own hypothetical case and then evaluate the decree
                against that case.'' Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1459; see also U.S. Airways,
                38 F. Supp. 3d at 75 (noting that the court must simply determine
                whether there is a factual foundation for the government's decisions
                such that its conclusions regarding the proposed settlements are
                reasonable); InBev, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84787, at *20 (``the `public
                interest' is not to be measured by comparing the violations alleged in
                the complaint against those the court
                [[Page 44159]]
                believes could have, or even should have, been alleged''). Because the
                ``court's authority to review the decree depends entirely on the
                government's exercising its prosecutorial discretion by bringing a case
                in the first place,'' it follows that ``the court is only authorized to
                review the decree itself,'' and not to ``effectively redraft the
                complaint'' to inquire into other matters that the United States did
                not pursue. Microsoft, 56 F.3d at 1459-60.
                 In its 2004 amendments to the APPA,\7\ Congress made clear its
                intent to preserve the practical benefits of utilizing consent decrees
                in antitrust enforcement, adding the unambiguous instruction that
                ``[n]othing in this section shall be construed to require the court to
                conduct an evidentiary hearing or to require the court to permit anyone
                to intervene.'' 15 U.S.C. Sec. 16(e)(2); see also U.S. Airways, 38 F.
                Supp. 3d at 76 (indicating that a court is not required to hold an
                evidentiary hearing or to permit intervenors as part of its review
                under the Tunney Act). This language explicitly wrote into the statute
                what Congress intended when it first enacted the Tunney Act in 1974. As
                Senator Tunney explained: ``[t]he court is nowhere compelled to go to
                trial or to engage in extended proceedings which might have the effect
                of vitiating the benefits of prompt and less costly settlement through
                the consent decree process.'' 119 Cong. Rec. 24,598 (1973) (statement
                of Sen. Tunney). ``A court can make its public interest determination
                based on the competitive impact statement and response to public
                comments alone.'' U.S. Airways, 38 F. Supp. 3d at 76 (citing United
                States v. Enova Corp., 107 F. Supp. 2d 10, 17 (D.D.C. 2000)).
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 \7\ Pub. L. 108-237, Sec. 221.
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
                VIII. Determinative Documents
                 There are no determinative materials or documents within the
                meaning of the APPA that were considered by the United States in
                formulating the proposed Final Judgments.
                Dated: June 17, 2019
                Respectfully submitted,
                -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                Lee F. Berger * (D.C. Bar #482435),
                Trial Attorney.
                U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Media,
                Entertainment, and Professional Services Section, 450 Fifth Street
                NW, Suite 4000, Washington, DC 20530, Phone: 202-598-2698,
                Facsimile: 202-514-7308, Email: [email protected].
                * Attorney of Record
                [FR Doc. 2019-17987 Filed 8-21-19; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 4410-11-P
                

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