Lexpert US Guides

Litigation 2014

The Lexpert Guides to the Leading US/Canada Cross-Border Corporate and Litigation Lawyers in Canada profiles leading business lawyers and features articles for attorneys and in-house counsel in the US about business law issues in Canada.

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16 | LEXPERT • December 2014 | www.lexpert.ca COMPETITION ENFORCEMENT PHOTO: SHUTTERSTOCK IN COMPETITION ENFORCEMENT BARELY A YEAR into his tenure, Canada's newest Competition Commissioner, John Pecman, announced a restructuring of the Competition Bureau, which has historically been divided into four enforcement branches: Criminal Matters, Civil Matters, Mergers, and Fair Business Practices. Under the realignment, Criminal Matters and Fair Business Practices have combined and will be responsible for all criminal cases including conspiracies, cartels and bid-rigging. Mergers and Civil Matters will also combine, with responsibility for all non-criminal matters, including mergers and non-criminal competitor agreements. In a mid-2014 press release announcing the changes, Pecman pointed out that the realignment would not reduce the Bureau's size, but would produce greater synergies and collaboration. e realignment was, he said, "about building a stronger, more fl exible and more adaptive agency." If the mostly positive reviews of his fi rst year in offi ce are any indication, Pecman stands a good chance of delivering on that promise. As the fi rst commissioner to have risen to the position through the Bureau's ranks and the fi rst economist to hold the position – his predecessors were all lawyers, as are virtually all his counterparts around the world, including the US – he was bound to come under special scrutiny. But he appears to be passing muster. "By and large, Pecman is delivering," says Chris Hersh in Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP's Toronto offi ce. " e Bureau's not perfect under Pecman and it won't be perfect a er his tenure. But he has made the Bureau more predictable and he's been very accessible to both lawyers and clients." e emerging environment represents a marked departure from the sometimes chilly relations that existed with Pecman's predecessor, Melanie Aitken, now a partner in Bennett Jones LLP's The Competition Bureau has changed its approach and this is getting positive reviews from the business community in Canada BY JULIUS MELNITZER A SHIFT

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