Weil, Gotshal & Manges (Washington)

Megan Granger

Weil, Gotshal & Manges (Washington)
Partner

Megan Granger is a partner in Weil’s Antitrust/Competition group. Her practice focuses on mergers and government cartel investigations. She has worked on matters across a wide range of industries including agriculture, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, retail, food & beverage, energy, automobile components, and paint/coatings. Ms. Granger is a member of the American Bar Association’s Section of Antitrust Law and the District of Columbia Bar’s Antitrust and Consumer Law Section. In addition, Ms. Granger is involved in the Mentoring and Career Development Committees of the Women’s Bar Association of the District of Columbia. She concentrates her pro bono efforts on the International Refugee Assistance Project and representing veterans in claims for benefits before the US Department of Veterans Affairs. Ms. Granger obtained her J.D. from the University of Virginia School Of Law where she served on the editorial board of the Virginia Law & Business Review. She earned her B.S. in Commerce, with distinction, from the University of Virginia McIntire School of Commerce in 2006.

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Articles

998 Bulletin

John Ren, Megan Granger, Kristin Sanford The US District Court for the Southern District of New York clears a merger between the top third and fourth wireless communications provider (State AGs / T-Mobile / Sprint)

535

T-Mobile’s Marathon to Acquire Sprint: Five Takeaways from the T-Mobile/Sprint Antitrust Litigation After almost two years of scrutiny by state and federal regulators and an ensuing court battle, T-Mobile US, Inc. (“T-Mobile”) is moving forward with its acquisition of Sprint Corporation (...)

Laura A. Wilkinson, Megan Granger The US FTC imposes divestiture and unusual conduct remedies to protect competition after an acquisition in commercial real estate databases and information services (CoStar / Loopnet)

463

On April 26, 2012, the FTC challenged CoStar Group’s proposed $860 million acquisition of LoopNet and accepted a settlement that required not only divestitures, but also “unusual” additional conduct remedies. CoStar is the largest provider of commercial real estate (CRE) information services in (...)

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