The Wall Street Journal - 26.11.2019

(Ann) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Tuesday, November 26, 2019 |A


since 2007, when it bought the
business from Messrs. Baker
and Fluhr for $310 million.
StubHub accounted for about
14% of eBay’s $2.6 billion of rev-
enue in the third quarter.
Mr. Baker launched Viagogo
in London in 2006. The com-
pany grew through partnerships
with soccer, rugby and other
sports leagues, as well as
through ticketing for festivals
and other music events.
Both companies have faced
criticism over the years for sell-
ing tickets marked up well

above face value.
The live-events business has
been growing for several years
as consumers, especially millen-
nials, continue to shell out for
premium experiences. Concerts,
in particular, have been com-
manding record-high ticket
prices amid rising demand for
live shows.
StubHub faces competition
from nimbler upstarts including
Viagogo, Vivid Seats LLC and
Seat Geek. Ticketmaster, the
largest ticket seller, has been ex-
panding its resale business, too.

WASHINGTON—A federal
judge has ruled that close
presidential advisers aren’t
immune from being forced to
testify in congressional inqui-
ries in an opinion that could
eventually clear the way for
numerous administration offi-
cials to be summoned as part
of the impeachment investiga-
tion of President Trump.
U.S. District Judge Ketanji
Brown Jackson struck a blow
against a decades-old legal
doctrine known as absolute
immunity, which has long
been asserted by lawyers rep-
resenting presidential admin-
istrations of both parties but
has remained largely untested
in the courts.
The Justice Department
said it would appeal and
would seek to stay the ruling
while it asks a higher court to
review the matter.
The Monday ruling comes as
part of a lawsuit brought by the
House of Representatives to en-
force a subpoena against Don
McGahn, Mr. Trump’s former
White House counsel. Though
the House is seeking Mr. Mc-
Gahn’s testimony in matters
unrelated to the president’s in-
teractions with Ukraine that are
part of the current impeach-
ment inquiry, the ruling could
have broader implications.
“The primary takeaway
from the past 250 years of re-
corded American history is
that Presidents are not kings,”
Judge Jackson, an appointee
of President Obama, wrote in
her opinion.
Several administration offi-
cials asked to testify by the
House in the impeachment
probe, including former White
House national security offi-
cials John Bolton and Charles
Kupperman, were ordered not
to appear by the White House.
They have indicated a willing-
ness to testify but were await-
ing court guidance on the im-
munity question raised in the
McGahn suit.
“Don McGahn will comply
with Judge Jackson’s decision
unless it is stayed pending ap-
peal,” said an attorney repre-
senting Mr. McGahn.
“This decision contradicts
longstanding legal precedent
established by administrations
of both political parties,”
White House press secretary
Stephanie Grisham said. “We
will appeal and are confident
that the important constitu-
tional principle advanced by
the administration will be vin-
dicated.”
Democrats in Congress cel-
ebrated the ruling and called
on Mr. McGahn to testify as
soon as possible. “I am
pleased the court has recog-
nized that the Trump adminis-
tration has no grounds to
withhold critical witness testi-
mony from the House during
its impeachment inquiry,” said
Judiciary Committee Chair-
man Jerrold Nadler, whose
panel filed to suit to enforce
its subpoena.


BYBYRONTAU


No Blanket


Immunity


For Aides,


Judge Says


Subpoenas described to The
Wall Street Journal listed more
than a half dozen potential
charges under consideration:
obstruction of justice, money
laundering, conspiracy to de-
fraud the United States, making
false statements to the federal
government, serving as an
agent of a foreign government
without registering with the
Justice Department, donating
funds from foreign nationals,
making contributions in the
name of another person or al-
lowing someone else to use
one’s name to make a contribu-
tion, along with mail fraud and
wire fraud.
It isn’t known whether all
these lines of inquiry relate to
prosecutors’ examination of
Mr. Giuliani and his consulting
business.
Messrs. Parnas and Fruman,
both Florida businessmen and
U.S. citizens born in former So-
viet republics, have pleaded
not guilty. A lawyer for Mr.
Parnas didn’t respond to a re-
quest for comment; a lawyer
for Mr. Fruman didn’t com-
ment.
Investigators have sought

information from prospective
witnesses about Messrs. Par-
nas’s and Fruman’s political
and business activities, and
how they intersected with the
Trump administration and Mr.
Giuliani’s work, according to
the people.
The subpoenas also sought
materials related to America
First Action and America First
Policies, two pro-Trump
groups. Kelly Sadler, a spokes-
woman for the groups, said the
organizations contacted the

Manhattan U.S. attorney’s of-
fice last month and offered to
cooperate. She said neither
group received a subpoena.
Prosecutors alleged in the
indictment last month that
Messrs. Fruman and Parnas
concealed the true source of a

$325,000 donation to America
First Action by listing it as a
gift from an energy company
they had recently founded. The
super PAC said it has placed
the contribution into a segre-
gated bank account.
Mr. Giuliani said when cli-
ents have asked him to do
something related to the
Trump administration, he has
referred them to registered
lobbyists. He also denied busi-
ness dealings in Ukraine since
he started as Mr. Trump’s law-
yer in April 2018. “All they
have to do is come and ask
me,” he said of investigators.
Messrs. Giuliani and Trump
have pressed Ukraine to inves-
tigate former Vice President
Joe Biden, now a Democratic
presidential candidate, and his
son, Hunter Biden. They allege
it was corrupt for Hunter Biden
to serve on the board of Bu-
risma Group, a Ukrainian gas
company, while his father as
vice president was leading an
anticorruption effort. The Bi-
dens have denied wrongdoing.
The younger Mr. Biden has said
he used “poor judgment” when
he joined the board, but said

he did nothing improper.
Messrs. Parnas and Fruman
assisted Mr. Giuliani in his
push for investigations in
Ukraine, efforts that at times
aligned with business opportu-
nities sought by the two men,
the Journal has previously re-
ported, citing people familiar
with the matter.
At least two of the people
who got subpoenas had been
asked by Mr. Parnas to invest
in Fraud Guarantee—a fraud-
insurance company he helped
set up in Florida—or to help
fund a promised $500,000 pay-
ment to Mr. Giuliani, people
familiar with Mr. Parnas’s re-
quests said.
A representative for one of
those people, a Florida busi-
nessman, said the man had de-
clined to provide any money.
The other man, also a Florida
businessman, did invest in
Fraud Guarantee after Mr. Par-
nas told him his plan was to
secure a $20 million federal
grant, according to one of the
businessman’s associates.
—Joe Palazzolo
and Alex Leary
contributed to this article.

Subpoenas issued to people
with ties to President Trump’s
personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani,
indicate a broad federal inves-
tigation into possible money
laundering, obstruction of jus-
tice and campaign-finance vio-

lations and show that prosecu-
tors are probing Mr. Giuliani’s
consulting businesses and
other sources of income, ac-
cording to people familiar with
the matter.
In recent weeks, prosecutors
have sent subpoenas and other
requests to potential witnesses
seeking records and informa-
tion related to Mr. Giuliani and
two of his associates, according
to the people. The investiga-
tion, led by the Manhattan U.S.
attorney’s office and the Fed-
eral Bureau of Investigation,
already has led to campaign-fi-
nance charges against the asso-
ciates, Lev Parnas and Igor
Fruman.
A concern of the investiga-
tion is whether Mr. Giuliani vi-
olated federal lobbying laws by
serving as an unregistered
agent of a foreign government
or hid his work for foreign na-
tionals, said one person famil-
iar with the investigation. Mr.
Giuliani has denied ever serv-
ing as a lobbyist of agent of a
foreign government.
Prosecutors seek documents
and correspondence with Mr.
Giuliani, Giuliani Partners—a
security-consulting firm
founded by Mr. Giuliani in
2002—or “any related person
or entity,” according to one of
the subpoenas. It also seeks
documents “related to any ac-
tual or potential payments, or
agreements” with Mr. Giuliani.
The subpoenas offer the
clearest indication yet that fed-
eral prosecutors are examining
Mr. Giuliani’s consulting work.
Giuliani Partnershas had sev-
eral foreign clients, including a
city in Ukraine. The subpoenas
also sought information on a
company co-founded by Mr.
Parnas that paid Mr. Giuliani
for business and legal advice.
Mr. Giuliani said in an inter-
view he hadn’t been contacted
by prosecutors and has denied
wrongdoing.

ByRebecca Davis
O’Brien,Rebecca
Ballhaus
andShelby Holliday

Subpoenas Signal Broad Probe of Giuliani


Federal prosecutors have sent subpoenas to potential witnesses seeking records related to Rudy Giuliani and two of his associates.

SIAVOSH HOSSEINI/NURPHOTO/ZUMA PRESS

and likely drawn antitrust scru-
tiny. Because of StubHub and
Viagogo’s largely complemen-
tary geographic businesses, in-
dustry experts don’t expect sig-
nificant regulatory hurdles.
“Versus other potential buy-
ers, this does the most to main-
tain the status quo in the eco-
system,” said David Goldberg, a
former Ticketmaster executive
and now senior adviser to pri-
vate-equity firm TPG’s growth-
investing arm.
EBay decided to explore sell-
ing StubHub shortly after two
activist investors surfaced in
January and urged it to exit
businesses unrelated to its core
marketplace.
The company agreed to con-
sider selling StubHub and its in-
ternationally focused classified
business. It also added board
members as part of a settlement
with the investors, Elliott Man-
agement Corp. and Starboard
Value LP.
Elliott had said it believed
StubHub could sell for between
$3.5 billion and $4.5 billion,
and eBay’s classified businesses
for between $8 billion and $
billion.
In September, eBay CEO
Devin Wenig stepped down, in
part because of disagreement
over selling StubHub and the
classifieds business.
EBay in October warned in-

vestors it could report its first
quarterly revenue decline in
four years. The company also
said sluggish sales of merchan-
dise through its main platform
helped cause a 57% year-over-
year decline in third-quarter
profit.
Its shares have slumped since
then but are still up on the year,
and rallied 2.1% to close at
$35.85 Monday. That gives the
company a market value of
about $29 billion.
EBay has been working for
years to redefine itself as shop-
pers increasingly turn to their
phones, showing little patience
for scrolling through thousands
of listings.
The company touts that 80%
of items on its website are new,
with the bulk sold at a fixed
price rather than being auc-
tioned. It has rolled out im-
proved search features and per-
sonalized recommendations and
reviews. It recently launched
marketing campaigns aimed at
shedding what some see as an
outdated image.
The all-cash takeover, re-
ported Monday by The Wall
Street Journal, was financed
with cash on hand, debt under-
written by JPMorgan Chase &
Co. and new equity funding
from existing backers Bessemer
Venture Partners and Madrone
Capital Partners.

The secondary ticketing mar-
ket overall, meanwhile, has been
contending with a more-aggres-
sive primary ticketing market.
Concert promoters, venues
and teams have been pricing the
most coveted seats and VIP ex-
periences at a premium to cap-
ture more of the value of a
ticket and squeeze out brokers.
Vivid Seats had been in dis-
cussions about buying StubHub,
according to people familiar
with the matter, a deal that
many in the industry said would
have consolidated market share

Showtime
StubHubaccountsforasmall
shareofeBay’stotalrevenue.

Quarterly segment revenue

Source: the company

$3.

0

0.

1.

1.

2.

2.

billion

2016 ’17 ’18 ’

Marketplace StubHub
Classifieds

countries, the benefit of scale
in a $10 billion global resale
market.
“The ultimate vision really is
that fans can go to one place to
buy any ticket for any event
anywhere in the world in their
own language and currency,” Vi-
agogo Chief Executive Eric
Baker, a StubHub co-founder,
said in an interview.
StubHub, the No. 1 competitor
in the secondary-ticketing mar-
ket, was founded in San Francisco
in 2000 by Mr. Baker and Jeff
Fluhr, both former Stanford Busi-
ness School students.
It essentially established the
market for legitimate online re-
sale of tickets. It has become so
prolific as a destination for
purchasing tickets that many
fans don’t realize it is a resale
platform.
The website had more than
240 million unique visitors last
year and sold tickets valued at
more than $4.75 billion.
EBay has owned StubHub


ContinuedfromPageOne


EBay Sets


Sale of


StubHub


U.S. NEWS


of the president’s appeal after
he files a formal petition with
the court next month. Given
the magnitude of the constitu-
tional questions involved, the
court’s decision to give Mr.
Trump time to mount the ap-
peal doesn’t come as a sur-
prise.
The justices, in a brief writ-
ten order on Monday, stayed
an October appeals court rul-
ing that upheld a subpoena by
the House Oversight Commit-
tee to Mazars USA LLP. The
committee is seeking eight
years of financial records
about Mr. Trump and his affil-
iated businesses as part of its
probe into White House ethics
issues, including whether the
president is improperly profit-

ing from his office.
Mr. Trump has said the
Democratic-controlled House
is using the subpoena as a po-
litical weapon that isn’t tied to
any legitimate legislative pur-
pose. The House panel said
Mr. Trump is engaged in a le-
gal assault on the authority of
a coequal branch of govern-
ment to hold the White House
accountable for its actions.
The court, as is its custom
with emergency stay orders,
didn’t explain its reasoning.
The justices, as part of issu-
ing the stay, said Mr. Trump
must file his high-court appeal
by Dec. 5. That timeline would
give the court enough operat-
ing room to formally accept
the case for review, hear argu-

ments and issue a ruling dur-
ing its current term, which
runs through the end of June.
But, a June decision means
House Democrats will be wait-
ing another seven months for
a chance at the records.
The president’s lawyers, in
their emergency request filed
Nov. 15, argued that blocking
the subpoena was especially
important because the litiga-
tion raises “unprecedented
separation-of-powers issues
that warrant the court’s re-
view.” The case “will have
lasting consequences for the
functioning of the presidency,”
they said.
The oversight panel urged
the court to deny the stay so
it could move forward to col-

lect the Trump financial re-
cords, noting the subpoena al-
ready has been pending for
more than 200 days. The
committee in court papers
said it would suffer “severe
harm...by being deprived of
information it urgently needs
to exercise its constitutional
functions.”
The committee’s probe be-
gan before the House
launched a formal impeach-
ment inquiry of Mr. Trump,
and its focus is separate from
the House’s examination of
Mr. Trump’s dealings with
Ukraine. The House, however,
has left open the possibility
that it may bring articles of
impeachment against the
president for other conduct.

WASHINGTON—The Su-
preme Court granted President
Trump’s emergency request to
suspend enforcement of a con-
gressional subpoena seeking
his financial records from his
accounting firm, a move that
could keep the documents from
House Democrats for months—
if they see them at all.
Along with blocking the
subpoena for now, the court
signaled Mr. Trump would
have to move quickly with his
appeal, ensuring the president
can’t delay proceedings
through the 2020 election.
The high court’s action also
makes it likely that the jus-
tices will agree to a full review

BYBRENTKENDALL

Court Halts Trump Record Release


StubHub’s website had more than 240 million unique visitors last
year and sold tickets valued at more than $4.75 billion.

K.C. ALFRED/SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE/ZUMA

One concern in the
federal probe is
whether Mr. Giuliani
broke lobbying laws.
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