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Subjects: Filing, Statement

Standard General Highlights FCC's Clear Violations of Duty in Its TEGNA Acquisition Review


Today, Standard General filed a reply brief in response to the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

The brief highlights in detail how the FCC violated its clear duty to act, consistently refused to engage with the transaction parties, and deliberately moved to kill the transaction without due process and without ever expressing any concerns so that they might be addressed ? treatment that no other transaction review has been subjected to by the FCC. Instead of celebrating the creation of the largest minority-owned, female-led broadcast-television company in U.S. history ? with widespread and significant support from countless civil rights organizations, legislators from both sides of the aisle, and labor and minority media groups ? the FCC has consistently acted disparately towards the applicant. This culminated in the decision to have its Media Bureau, which is run by a member of the FCC Chairwoman's staff, move to kill the deal without accountability before the Court?and without any vote by the Commissioners.

To ensure the Court is aware of the facts and not misled by the FCC's mendacious portrayal of its process, Standard General highlighted the timeline of interactions with the FCC since the TEGNA transaction was announced in February 2022. It demonstrates that, over the course of the FCC's review and since its Media Bureau issued its Hearing Designation Order ("HDO"), due process has been unquestionably denied.

"The FCC has shown that it is content to let the Media Bureau destroy this deal, a course that prevents significant gains for diversity and labor while needlessly depriving the public of the transaction's innumerable benefits," said Soo Kim, Founding Partner of Standard General. "The transaction has been put under unprecedented scrutiny, and not once during its nearly year-long review did the Media Bureau raise concerns with the transaction ? much less discuss with the transaction parties how such concerns might be addressed. We continue to urge the Court to look at the facts and compel the FCC to follow its own procedural norms by putting the deal to a vote."

Timeline of Standard General's Attempts to Engage the FCC:

The FCC's Media Bureau has maneuvered unilaterally, circumventing the full Commission, to effectively kill the transaction. It has done so without affording Standard General a full Commission vote or judicial review by delaying the process beyond the May 22, 2023 financing deadline for the transaction.

In addition, earlier today, the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) ruled unanimously in favor of the plaintiff in a case that will now allow parties to challenge federal agencies, like the FCC, in federal court and outside of the agency's normal administrative procedures. The SCOTUS ruling elevates Standard General's standing in Court.

About Standard General

Standard General was founded in 2007 and manages capital for public and private pension funds, endowments, foundations, and high-net-worth individuals. Standard General is a minority-controlled and operated organization. Soo Kim, Standard General's Managing Partner and Chief Investment Officer, is supported by a diverse, highly experienced 17-person team, including seven investment professionals with over 120 years of collective investing experience.



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