AU Optronics Hit with $500 Million Criminal Fine

AU Optronics Corporation, a Taiwan-based liquid crystal display (LCD) producer, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in San Francisco to pay a $500 million criminal fine for its participation in a five-year conspiracy to fix the prices of thin-film transistor LCD panels sold worldwide.

AU’s American subsidiary and two former top executives were also sentenced.

The two executives were sentenced to serve prison time and to pay criminal fines for their roles in the conspiracy.

The $500 million fine matches the largest fine imposed against a company for violating the U.S. antitrust laws.

The sentencing took place before Judge Susan Illston.

AU Optronics Corporation was also sentenced to print advertisements in three major trade publications in the United States and Taiwan acknowledging its convictions and punishments and the remedial steps it has taken as a result of its conviction.

The company and its American subsidiary, AU Optronics Corporation America, were also placed on probation for five years, required to adopt an antitrust compliance program and to appoint an independent corporate compliance monitor.

“This long-running price-fixing conspiracy resulted in every family, school, business, charity and government agency who bought notebook computers, computer monitors and LCD televisions during the conspiracy to pay more for these products,” said Scott D. Hammond, Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division’s criminal enforcement program. “The Antitrust Division will continue to pursue vigorously international cartels that target American consumers and rob them of their hard earned money.”
Former AU Optronics Corporation president Hsuan Bin Chen was sentenced to serve three years in prison and to pay a $200,000 criminal fine.

Former AU Optronics Corporation executive vice president Hui Hsiung was also sentenced to serve three years in prison and to pay a $200,000 criminal fine.

The companies and former executives were found guilty on March 13, 2012, following an eight-week trial.

The indictment charged that AU Optronics Corporation participated in the worldwide price-fixing conspiracy from September 14, 2001, to December 1, 2006, and that its subsidiary joined the conspiracy as early as spring 2003.

The jury found that the convicted companies and former executives fixed the prices of LCD panels sold into the United States.

The prices were fixed during monthly meetings with their competitors secretly held in hotel conference rooms, karaoke bars and tea rooms around Taiwan. LCD panels are used in computer monitors and notebooks, televisions and other electronic devices.

By the end of the conspiracy, the worldwide market for LCD panels was valued at $70 billion annually.

The LCD price-fixing conspiracy affected some of the largest computer manufacturers in the world, including Hewlett Packard, Dell and Apple.

Eight companies have been convicted of charges arising out of the department’s ongoing investigation and have been sentenced to pay criminal fines totaling $1.39 billion.

All together, 22 executives have been charged.

Twelve executives have been convicted and have been sentenced to serve a combined total of 4,871 days in prison.

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