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Even as Elon Musk calls philanthropy ‘very hard,’ everyday Americans gave a record $617 billion—despite feeling the squeeze over the cost of living

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Never get between an Apple antitrust monitor and his per diem

By
Philip Elmer-DeWitt
Philip Elmer-DeWitt
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By
Philip Elmer-DeWitt
Philip Elmer-DeWitt
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December 3, 2013, 12:23 PM ET
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Bromwich

FORTUNE — My colleague Roger Parloff has posted a fascinating back-channel account of the rapidly deteriorating relations between Apple (AAPL) and Michael Bromwich, its court-appointed e-book antitrust monitor.

The trigger, as it so often is, was money.

“On October 24,” Parloff reports, “Apple liaison [Kyle] Andeer angered Bromwich by sending him an email questioning Bromwich’s proposed $1,100 hourly fee and 15% ‘administrative fee.’

“Andeer offered, as a counterproposal, a $800 hourly rate for Bromwich and a $700 rate for his antitrust specialist… Andeer further informed Bromwich — in gestures that we now know were seen as quite insulting by Bromwich — that, in accordance with Apple’s standard expense policy, Bromwich would be limited to ‘per diems of $15 for breakfast, $25 for lunch, and $30 for dinner’…

“Bromwich responded with a tart reminder that he was a court-appointed monitor, not one of Apple’s outside counsel, and that the propriety of his fees was a matter to be determined by the court, the Justice Department, and the state attorneys general.

“He also wryly suggested that he would consider following Apple’s expense policy only upon being advised ‘whether your lawyers from Gibson Dunn working on this matter … follow these expense guidelines without exception.'”

“But legal fees are clearly not the crux of this dispute,” Parloff adds, pointing out that Gibson Dunn, Apple’s outside counsel, bills more than $1,000 per hour and that its appellate ace, Ted Olson, has reportedly charged as much as $1,800.

Judge Cote.

Apple’s real target, Parloff suggests, is the court that appointed Bromwich.

“Lurking beneath Apple’s bristling at the monitor’s legal fees and bridling at his ‘disruptiveness’ is a more fundamental issue,” he writes. “Should a monitor have ever been appointed here at all — an unusual step in a case like this one, in which the defendant has no long history of either egregious wrongdoing or recalcitrant behavior…

“Directly or indirectly, the company appears to be arguing that the overkill that such an appointment reflects is of a piece with a loss of perspective that Apple claims has characterized Judge [Denise] Cote’s rulings throughout the case. In the end, Apple’s key target here appears not to be Bromwich at all, but rather Judge Cote.”

LINKS:

  • Behind Apple’s mutiny against its court-ordered e-books monitor
  • Apple to judge: You and your antitrust monitor are way out of line
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By Philip Elmer-DeWitt
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