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The lawsuit over a deal to combine the two largest U.S. supermarkets came just a day after it was blocked in both federal and Washington state courts.
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U.S. District Court Judge Adrienne Nelson issued the ruling after holding a three-week hearing in Portland, Oregon.
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Oregon is one of eight states to join with the Federal Trade Commission in an effort to hold up the proposal.
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Washington seeks to avoid the situation it found itself in a decade ago, when Albertsons bought the Safeway chain.
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The Federal Trade Commission alleges that the $24.6 billion merger would eliminate competition and raise grocery prices for consumers.
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A lawyer for supermarket chain Albertsons has told a federal judge that the company might have to lay off workers and close stores if its planned merger with Kroger isn’t allowed to proceed.
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The Federal Trade Commission and 9 states want to stop the deal that would combine the country's two largest grocery store chains. The companies say they have to merge to compete with Walmart.
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The Washington state Supreme Court has brushed aside the final remaining legal hurdle in the way of a $4 billion dividend by Albertsons to its shareholders ahead of a proposed merger with grocery rival Kroger.
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The attorneys general of California, Illinois and the District of Columbia are suing Albertsons to stop the grocery chain from paying nearly $4 billion to its shareholders. Washington's attorney general filed a similar lawsuit in state court Tuesday.
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The Kroger Co. includes major chains such as Ralphs, Harris Teeter, Food4Less and Pick 'n Save. Its goal is to eliminate all single-use plastic bags by 2025.