DIG on Chief Justice Roberts:
https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-2008-11-19-0811180063-story.html
https://architecturalafterlife.com/2017/11/13/warren-steel/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fushi_Copperweld
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copperweld_Corp._v._Independence_Tube_Corp.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/breyer-roberts-ginsburg-are-richest-supreme-court-justices-n597081
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Chief Justice Roberts owned by Rothschilds ?
His father was President of CSC Industries, parent company of Copperweld owned by Rothschilds
Copperweld escapes anti-trust collusion charges with a subsidiary, during period when John Glover Roberts Jr. is working for supreme court judge Rhenquist,
In 1986, John Glover Roberts jr. entered private law practice in Washington, D.C., as an associate at the law firm Hogan & Hartson (now Hogan Lovells) and worked in the field of corporate law.
Copperweld picked up by Chinese in 2012 and then Delisted 12/27/2012 from NASDAQ.. days after Roberts upheld ACHA legality
Chief Justice Roberts Father:
Mr. Roberts "was highly regarded on both sides of the spectrum - both by his white-collar colleagues and by his United Steel Workers of America colleagues," Bruce Davis, a former Bethlehem legal executive, told The Sun in a 2005 profile of Mr. Roberts.
"Jack was one who vigorously resisted the characterization of 'us versus them,' " he said.
Mark Reutter, a former Sun reporter and author of Making Steel, a history of Sparrows Point, observed, "Roberts, I think was much more of an intellectual. Not quite the old-line, rough-and-tumble steel man."
A year after his 1985 retirement from Bethlehem, he joined Copperweld Steel Co. in Warren, Ohio.
In 1987, he was named president and chief executive officer of CSC Industries Inc., parent company of Copperweld, positions he held until retiring in 1990.
French holding company Imétal S.A. (today known as Imerys), owned by the Rothschild family, acquired controlling interest of Copperweld Corporation in 1975.
Copperweld Corp. v. Independence Tube Corp., 467 U.S. 752 (1984), is a major US antitrust law case decided by the Supreme Court concerning the Pittsburgh firm Copperweld Corporation and the Chicago firm Independence Tube.[1] It held that a parent company is incapable of conspiring with its wholly owned subsidiary for purposes of Section 1 of the Sherman Act because they cannot be considered separate economic entities.
The Supreme Court, in an opinion by Chief Justice Burger and joined by Justices Blackmun, Powell, Rehnquist and O'Connor, held that an agreement between a wholly owned subsidiary and a parent did not fall under the definition of an "agreement" in Section 1 of the Sherman Act because the two companies, while legally separate, constituted a single economic entity.
In 1999, Cleveland, Ohio-based LTV Steel acquired Copperweld Corporation from Imétal for $650 million, and the subsidiary became known as LTV Copperweld.
Dofasco (today a division of Arcelor Mittal) acquired most of the LTV Copperweld assets, including 50% of the bimetallic wire division,
which would in turn be sold to a private investor David S. Jones for $14.2 million in 2006 and operated as Copperweld Bimetallics LLC.
It was the only division of the previous conglomerate to continue to operate under the Copperweld name, and kept the established brand as a registered trademark for its copper-clad steel conductors.
Enter Fushi International, In August 2007, however, the owner sold the company for US$22.5 million to Fushi International, founded by Li Fu in 2001.
The acquisition is significant because it represents the first major investment in the state of Tennessee for a mainland Chinese company.
Fushi International had quickly grown to be the preeminent supplier of CCA wire in China, but was virtually unknown outside the PRC.
For some time, the company had been seeking to broaden its market footprint globally.
By acquiring Copperweld, it not only opened up a worldwide distribution channel, it also gained product diversification by the presence of CCS wire in its new subsidiary's lineup.
Three months later, Fushi International was listed on the Nasdaq, and changed its name to Fushi Copperweld, capitalizing on the established brand name in the west.
After a two-year effort to take the company private, a group of investors headed by Chairman Fu Li delisted from the Nasdaq on December 27, 2012. The company is today privately held.