Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 2— - FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION; PROMOTION OF EXPORT TRADE AND PREVENTION OF UNFAIR METHODS OF COMPETITION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION › § 57b–1
The Commission can, before starting a formal case, require a person or business to hand over papers, give up physical items, answer written questions under oath, or give sworn oral testimony if the Commission thinks they have information about unfair or deceptive business practices or antitrust problems. The demand must say what conduct is being investigated and which law applies. Demands must clearly describe what to produce, give reasonable return dates, and name the custodian who will receive the materials. Copies or deliveries must be proved by a sworn return. Materials, answers, and testimony must be submitted under oath or with a sworn certificate. If someone refuses to comply or will not let materials be copied, the Commission can ask a federal court to enforce the demand. A person has 20 days after getting a demand (or until the demand’s return date if sooner) to ask the Commission to change or cancel the demand. Time to comply pauses while that request is being considered, except for parts not challenged. If the custodian holds the materials, a person may ask the federal court where the custodian is located to order the custodian to follow the rules. Courts can decide these matters, issue orders, and punish contempt for disobedience. The Commission cannot issue any subpoena or demand under this law unless a Commissioner signs it by Commission resolution, and that signing power cannot be given to anyone else. Definitions in one line each: Civil investigative demand — a written request the Commission issues for documents, things, answers, or testimony. Commission investigation — an inquiry about unfair or deceptive acts or antitrust violations. Commission investigator — an attorney or investigator who enforces those rules. Custodian — the person designated to hold received materials. Documentary material — papers or records. Person — any individual, business, or other legal entity. Violation — an unfair or deceptive act or an antitrust breach. Antitrust violation — unfair methods of competition, violations of antitrust statutes (including preparing a deal that could cause such a violation), or certain foreign antitrust breaches covered by law.
Full Legal Text
Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 57b–1
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73