Justice Department appeals judge's approval of AT&T-Time Warner merger

AT&T-Time Warner merger will change media landscape

The Department of Justice said Thursday it would appeal a judge's decision last month clearing AT&T to acquire Time Warner for $85 billion. 

AT&T's purchase of Time Warner won approval from U.S. District Court Judge Richard Leon on June 12, with the two companies completed their merger, one of the biggest media deals ever, just two days later.

"The court's decision could hardly have been more thorough, fact-based, and well-reasoned," AT&T General Counsel David McAtee said in a statement responding to the Justice Department's move. "While the losing party in litigation always has the right to appeal if it wishes, we are surprised that the DOJ has chosen to do so under these circumstances. We are ready to defend the court's decision at the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals."

The Trump administration had opposed the merger, moving to block it on grounds that it hurt media industry competition. The deal joined one of the country's biggest telecom providers with a media powerhouse that owns the Warner Bros. movie studio and DC Comics, as well as the cable-TV networks CNN, HBO, TBS and TNT.

AT&T's stock fell 1.3 percent after hours.   

The judge's 200-page opinion permitted the merger to go forward with no conditions. The closing came swiftly after the Justice Department signaled it wouldn't ask the court to postpone the merger while it pondered an appeal of the judge's decision.

What does the AT&T-Time Warner merger mean for consumers?

The merger could shape the way consumers stream TV and movies and how much they pay, and may usher in a new era of accelerating change and deal making in the media and telecom worlds.

The Justice Department had pressured Time Warner to sell Turner Broadcasting, which includes the cable news operation CNN, or other segments of the business, which both companies resisted. They've now won that bet.

In his opinion, Leon cited the "tectonic changes" brought about by the likes of Netflix, Hulu and Amazon and consumers choosing to cut the cable cord. "AT&T and Time Warner concluded that each had a problem the other could solve," he wrote. "Together, AT&T and Time Warner concluded that both companies could stop 'chasing taillights' and catch up with the competition."

-- CBS News' Jillian Harding contributed reporting.

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