New Jersey’s Attorney General has officially sued eight of the state’s businesses for inflated prices in the wake of the Hurricane Sandy disaster. AG Jeffrey Chiesa has brought the case against seven gas stations and a hotel for price gouging, the first cases of their kind since the storm hit. According to court documents, gas stations are being accused of inflating prices from 17 to 59 percent; the hotel is accused of inflating prices by 32 percent. More than 2,000 complaints have been submitted to New Jersey’s Consumer Affairs Division over unfair prices of essentials such as food, water, gas and lodging. AG Chiesa says the Division has yet to investigate hundreds more claims.
Featured News
Oregon Just Passed the Country’s Toughest Chatbot Law. Your Company May Already Be Breaking It.
Mar 23, 2026 by
CPI
Newsmax, DirecTV Join Challenge to FCC’s Nexstar-Tegna Decision
Mar 23, 2026 by
CPI
House Committee Readies Hearing on Tokenized Securities Trading Rules
Mar 23, 2026 by
CPI
Vinson & Elkins Launches Brussels Office With Hire of Hogan Lovells Antitrust Partner
Mar 23, 2026 by
CPI
Italy’s Competition Watchdog Penalizes Trustpilot Over Consumer Review System
Mar 23, 2026 by
CPI
Antitrust Mix by CPI
Antitrust Chronicle® – Data-Driven Competition
Mar 19, 2026 by
CPI
Data-Driven Competition: Implications For Enforcement and Merger Control
Mar 19, 2026 by
Alexandre de Corniere & Greg Taylor
From Tipping to Trustees: Why Data-Driven Markets Require Institutional Design, Not Optimization
Mar 19, 2026 by
Jens Prüfer & Paul de Bijl
Data Barriers to Entry: What We’ve Learned About Spotting Them and What We Still Don’t Know About Solutions
Mar 19, 2026 by
Bruno Carballa-Smichowski
When the Perfect Is the Enemy of the Good: Price Discrimination, Affordability, Precarity and Market Dynamism
Mar 19, 2026 by
Dan Ciuriak