Amazon has been flagged by the House Judiciary Committee for potential criminal obstruction of Congress because it allegedly refused to provide information as part of an antitrust probe.
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The U.S. House Judiciary has asked the Department of Justice to investigate Amazon for the alleged criminal obstruction. In a letter to U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, Democratic and Republican lawmakers claim that Amazon refused to provide information that lawmakers were seeking as part of an antitrust probe into Amazon's competitive practices.
More than that, the letter alleges that Amazon's refusal to provide the information amounted to the company "covering up" the lie that Amazon told lawmakers about its treatment of third-party sellers on its marketplace, The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday
"There's no factual basis for this, as demonstrated in thehuge volume of information we've provided over several years of good-faith cooperation with this investigation," Amazon said in a statement.
Amazon adds that its own internal policies prohibit using seller data to develop Amazon products. The Seattle-based retail juggernaut also denied that it or its executives ever misled the committee.
While the House Judiciary letter says it is alerting the Justice Department to "potentially criminal conduct by Amazon and certain of its executives," it doesn't specify which executives.
"Amazon repeatedly endeavored to thwart the Committee's efforts to uncover the truth about Amazon's business practices," the letter reads. "For this, it must be held accountable."
At issue are Amazon's responses to inquiries about how it uses seller data when creating its own Amazon-branded, first-party products. The investigation also probed how Amazon treats its own products in search results.
Amazon denied using seller data and said it doesn't give its own products any privilege in search results.
According to The Wall Street Journal, the interactions between lawmakers and Amazon have been particularly contentious during the House antitrust investigation. The letter makes Amazon the only company in the probe that lawmakers have accused of illegal obstruction.