UPDATED, with comment from AG: Oregonās attorney general has dropped a civil investigative demand for Paramount to turn over records related to its efforts to secure federal approval for its merger with Warner Bros. Discovery.
Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield also had asked a state circuit court judge to order Paramount to turn over the materials and to delay Paramountās closing of its proposed acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery by 60 days so the documents could be reviewed. A hearing has been scheduled for Monday in Multnomah County Circuit Court.
A Paramount spokesperson said, āWe are pleased that the Oregon Attorney General has withdrawn its motion to delay this transaction. It was the right decision and avoids an unwarranted effort to delay a lawful, pro-competitive merger.
āAntitrust authorities around the world have carefully reviewed this transaction, clearing it or concluding that it does not violate any competition laws. That regulatory record underscores what the facts, the law and the economics make clear: this transaction will create a stronger challenger to dominant global streaming and technology platforms, expand consumer choice, increase investment in premium content and theatrical distribution, and create more opportunities for creators and workers. We look forward to completing the transaction and delivering those benefits.ā
Jenny Hansson, communications director for Rayfield, said in a statement, āParamount made it clear that they werenāt going to comply with the investigative demand, and that they think theyāre above the law. Weāre not going to let them waste Oregoniansā resources on these games. Weāve withdrawn the motion to consider our next steps.ā
California Attorney General Rob Bonta and other state attorneys general are said to be considering a legal challenge to the transaction.
Rayfield sought Paramount records of lobbying of federal officials, as well as its role in a statement that the DOJ released in support of the transaction. The attorney general also sought documents ārelated to the formulation and execution of lobbying strategies aimed at obtaining regulatory approval of the proposed merger, which Respond as internally named āProject Warrior.’ā
In a court filing, Paramount has objected to the document requests, arguing, among other things, that they impose āburdens and demands which are disproportionateā to the Oregon investigation and are āof such marginal relevance that the value of any materials sought is outweighed by the burden imposed on Paramount in having to provide such information.ā
āLobbying activities and related communications are wholly irrelevant to whether the proposed acquisition āviolates Oregonās antitrust laws,’ā the companyās legal team wrote.

