Getty Images/4kodiak(WASHINGTON) The House Judiciary Committee wrote to Attorney General Merrick Garland alerting him of potential "criminal conduct by Amazon and certain of its executives," in a letter written by members of the committee and obtained by ABC News. The judiciary committee, led by Antitrust Subcommittee Chairman David Cicilline, alleges Amazon lied to Congress over whether it used data it collected from third-party sellers. "Throughout the course of the Committee's investigation, Amazon attempted to cover up its lie by offering ever-shifting explanations of what it called its 'Seller Data Protection Policy,'" the letter says. "Among other things, in written statements to the Committee, Amazon made a distinction between the "individual" seller data that Amazon supposedly protected and the "aggregated" seller data that its private-label business could use." Amazon also allegedly lied to Congress about mani
House lawmakers who spent much of 2019 and 2020 probing Amazon for possible antitrust violations now accuse the tech giant of lying to Congress and want the Justice Department to
House lawmakers who spent much of 2019 and 2020 probing Amazon for possible antitrust violations now accuse the tech giant of lying to Congress and want the Justice Department to