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Norton Rose admits backdating signature on filing, says court OK’d it
Norton Rose has admitted claims by ex-partner Thomas Patrick Martin that a lawyer for the firm retroactively signed and backdated a sealed court document, but says the court told the lawyer to do it.
Judge puts temporary block on Maxigesic ads
The judge overseeing a case brought by Reckitt Benckiser against Aft Pharmaceuticals over its allegedly deceptive painkiller ads has temporarily blocked Aft from releasing ads that claim its Maxigesic painkiller is stronger than other paracetamol-ibuprofen combination drugs.
NZ competition cop wants to block OfficeMax deal
New Zealand has asked the country's High Court to block Platinum Equity LLC's bid to buy OfficeMax Holdings Limited, echoing concerns voiced by Australia's competition regulator that the deal will hinder competition.
Global Briefing: AT&T merger challenge, EU bias, jail time in NZ
A possible challenge to the AT&T, Time Warner mega merger by the DOJ, an explanation for the EU's fascination with U.S. tech giants, and a win for New Zealand's consumer regulator. Here's the big competition and consumer protection news from around the globe this week.
Wesfarmers head slams dairy industry probes
The head of Wesfarmers has slammed inquiries into the dairy industry by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and the Senate, saying the industry needs better infrastructure, not inquiries.
Australian Unity to pay $620,000 for altering policies mid-year
Australian Unity will fork over $620,000 in compensation to policy holders after an investigation by the consumer regulator found the health insurer had moved the goal posts by altering dental benefits in annual policies halfway through the year.
AirAsia pays up after wrongly charging kids
AirAsia has agreed to refund thousands of passengers with children who were wrongly charged an extra $60 fee on flights from Darwin to Bali for seven years.
LG appeal to clarify murky area of consumer law
The ACCC will have another go at its case against electronics giant LG next May, according to an order Thursday, and its appeal gives the full Federal Court a chance to clarify whether companies must inform consumers with faulty products of their rights under the Australian Consumer Law.
Judge OKs BrisConnections’ traffic expert in $2B suit
The judge overseeing a multibillion dollar consumer protection suit by the receiver of defunct toll road company BrisConnections against global engineering firm Arup has signed off on Brisconnections' key expert report over the objections of Arup.
ACCC launches inquiry into NBN’s service
The ACCC has launched a public inquiry into the much maligned national broadband network, saying it will enforce new service standard rules if necessary.