C-SPAN Asks Court to Dismiss Sky Angel Claim

C-SPAN has filed a motion to dismiss an antitrust complaint
filed against it in November in a D.C. federal district court by Sky Angel.
C-SPAN says the company was off base when it took its claims that the public
affairs net improperly withdrew its programming from the distributor in 2009
directly to the district court while the issue was still before the FCC.

"We regard the complaint as merely another chapter in Sky
Angel's longstanding dispute with the FCC over whether as a program distributor
it can invoke the so-called program access rules to its benefit," said C-SPAN's
corporate VP/general counsel Bruce Collins in a statement. "They are attempting
to get into federal court by dressing up their program access complaint as an
antitrust violation."

C-SPAN asked the court to dismiss the complaint with
prejudice (it could not then be re-filed), saying there was case law that
clearly prohibited Sky Angel from undertaking what C-SPAN said was "an end
run around the FCC's exclusive jurisdiction on program access issues." It
says that a party can complain to the FCC, then to an appeals court if it
doesn't like the decision. "Nowhere, however, does the statute allow for
district court review of these issues" for a party dissatisfied with the
pace of an FCC decision.

C-SPAN says the district court thus lacks subject matter
jurisdiction over the case.

In 2008, Sky Angel decided to switch from a satellite
service to what it describes as a hybrid satellite/Internet delivery service, a
move that prompted some programmers to choose not to be carried.

Sky Angel subsequently filed a program access suit against
one of those programmers, Discovery. The FCC has yet to resolve the complaint,
but has tentatively concluded an over-the-top aggregator does not fall under
program access rule protections because it does not also own the distribution
facilities that a traditional MVPD does. As an adjunct to that decision, the
commission has also asked for comment on the tentative conclusion and how it
should treat online video providers going forward when it comes to protections
like program carriage and obligations like PEG programming and access
obligations.

Sky Angel says that because C-SPAN is owned and operated by
the cable industry, it "ceased to act as a legitimate collaboration among
competitors" with the withdrawal of programming and instead illegally
harmed competition by depriving Sky Angel of content that was highly valued and
that all of Sky Angel's competitors had access to.

Sky Angel is seeking damages and mandatory access to C-SPAN
for the next decade.

John Eggerton

Contributing editor John Eggerton has been an editor and/or writer on media regulation, legislation and policy for over four decades, including covering the FCC, FTC, Congress, the major media trade associations, and the federal courts. In addition to Multichannel News and Broadcasting + Cable, his work has appeared in Radio World, TV Technology, TV Fax, This Week in Consumer Electronics, Variety and the Encyclopedia Britannica.