The Michigan attorney general’s department, which wants to probe
Attorney General Dana Nessel (D) claims she can’t issue subpoenas against the Indianapolis-based pharmaceutical giant under the state’s Consumer Protection Act because precedent says that if conduct or a transaction is generally allowed by state or federal law, it can’t be investigated. That too-broad precedent poses problems for consumers who may have paid a contractor for shoddy work or a shady car dealer for a lemon, ...
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