Amazon Jury Trial Over FTC’s Prime Cancellation Claims Opens

Amazon Jury Trial Over FTC’s Prime Cancellation Claims Opens

Amazon Jury Trial Over FTC’s Prime Cancellation Claims Opens

FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson Photographer: Allison Robbert/Bloomberg
FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson Photographer: Allison Robbert/Bloomberg

Amazon.com Inc. squared off in court against the Federal Trade Commission over allegations that the company duped customers into signing up for the Prime subscription service and then made it too hard to cancel.

At a four-week trial that kicked off this week in Seattle federal court, a nine-person jury will decide whether Amazon broke consumer protection laws — potentially exposing the company to billions of dollars in penalties and refunds.

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Amazon’s thirst for growth led the company to enroll more than 35 million people in Prime without their consent, FTC attorney Jonathan Cohen told the jury Tuesday during his opening remarks.

“Nothing about Prime matters more than the number of members, whether those members wanted to be members or not,” Cohen said. The case is about “one of the largest companies acting like they are above the law.”

Moez Kaba, a lawyer representing Amazon, said the FTC is taking the company to task over formatting issues, like digital font choices and the size of buttons, that went beyond a reasonable reading of the law. Amazon complied with its obligations, he said.

“This is not a shadowy, gimmicky program,” he said. “Nobody gets automatically enrolled for Prime.”

FTC Chair Andrew FergusonPhotographer: Allison Robbert/Bloomberg
FTC Chair Andrew FergusonPhotographer: Allison Robbert/Bloomberg

The civil enforcement case was launched by the FTC two years ago when Joe Biden was president. It now pits the the Trump administration against the world’s largest online retailer despite Amazon’s efforts to deepen ties with the White House and reset relations after years of federal scrutiny. The FTC has a separate antitrust case against the company going to trial in 2027.

The FTC claims Amazon makes it easy to enroll in Prime, but requires consumers to click through multiple steps to cancel — process is so arduous that the company internally nicknamed it the , after Homer’s epic poem. The agency is accusing three Amazon executives of rejecting changes to the process because it would have harmed the company’s bottom line.

Senior Vice Presidents Neil Lindsay and Russell Grandinetti and Vice President Jamil Ghani are accused of helping to orchestrate the plan and ignoring pleas by colleagues to end techniques “to mislead or trick users” into signing up for Prime without clearly stating the services’ terms and conditions, including for billing and free trials.

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