2018-08-06 - Ex Part

Ex PARTE PRESENTATION NOTIFICATION LETTER submitted by c/o Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP

Ex Party Presentation - MA AG Reply Comments

2018-08-06

This document pretains to ITC-T/C-20180612-00109 for Transfer of Control on a International Telecommunications filing.

IBFS_ITCTC2018061200109_1483818

August 6, 2018

VIA ECFS AND IBFS

Ms. Marlene H. Dortch
Secretary
Federal Communications Commission
445 12th Street, SW
Washington, DC 20554

           Re:   Ex Parte Presentation – WC Docket No. 18-193; ITC-T/C-20180612-00109 –
                 TKC Holdings, Inc., Inmate Calling Solutions, LLC d/b/a ICSolutions, and
                 Securus Technologies, Inc.

Dear Ms. Dortch:

       TKC Holdings, Inc. (“TKC”), Inmate Calling Solutions, LLC d/b/a ICSolutions (“ICS”)
and Securus Technologies, Inc. (“STI,” and collectively, with TKC and ICS, “Applicants”), acting
through counsel and in accordance with the Federal Communications Commission’s (“FCC” or
“Commission”) Public Notice,1 hereby submit this ex parte presentation in response to the July 17,
2018, Reply Comments of the Office of the Attorney General of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts.2

        The AG Reply asserts that approving the pending Joint Application will leave the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts (“Commonwealth”) with “only two ICS contractors” who
“constitute the nationwide duopoly identified in the Petition to Deny.”3 Further, the AG Reply
claims that approval will “weaken” the Commonwealth’s “ability to negotiate calling rates
affordable for inmates and their families . . . .”4 These assertions about the potential inevitable
competitive impact of the transaction are incorrect and do not warrant denial or delay of the Joint
Application.

       In their detailed Joint Opposition to the Petition to Deny, filed the same day as the AG’s
Reply, Applicants thoroughly rebutted and debunked the idea that any jurisdiction would be left
with only two bidders in future contracts.5 As demonstrated therein with historical bidding
information, many incumbent competitors besides Global Tel*Link Corporation (“GTL”) and STI
can and do provide inmate telephone service (“ITS”) even to larger correctional facilities today,

1
  Application Filed for the Transfer of Control of Inmate Calling Solutions, LLC d/b/a ICSolutions
to Securus Technologies, Inc., Public Notice, DA 18-684 (rel. Jul. 2, 2018) (“Public Notice”).
2
 Reply Comments of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Office of the Attorney General, WC
Docket No. 18-193 (filed Jul. 23, 2018) (“AG Reply”).
3
    Id. at 1.
4
    Id.
5
 Joint Opposition To Petition To Deny By The Wright Petitioners et al., WC Docket No. 18-193;
ITC-T/C/20180612-00109, at 15-27 (filed Jul. 23, 2018) (“Joint Opposition”).


Ms. Marlene H. Dortch
August 6, 2018
Page 2

including CenturyLink, Inc. (“CenturyLink”) and several other rivals.6 More importantly, there
are no meaningful barriers hindering any rivals from bidding on and winning more ITS business
for correctional facilities of all sizes. Further, the barriers to entry by entirely new providers are
relatively low. To the extent that the AG Reply seeks to piggyback on the claims of the Corrections
Accountability Project (“CAP”), Applicants have similarly demonstrated that the CAP assertions
are without merit.7 The AG’s general exhortations do not in any way counter the Joint Opposition
and Joint Reply on these issues.

        The AG Reply’s claims about intrastate calling rates are another attempt to inject an
industry-wide policy issue into an FCC transfer of control proceeding. As the Joint Opposition
notes, the Commission has long held that transaction proceedings are not the proper forum to
resolve such issues.8 Moreover, the Applicants respectfully note that the Commission does not
have jurisdiction over intrastate ITS rates.9

        Further, even assuming that such a claim is relevant in this context, the AG Reply assumes
that ITS providers are somehow in a position to dictate to correctional facility administrators the
rates charged from their locations. That is simply not the case. As explained in the Joint Reply,
jail administrators and counties set rate and commission levels after balancing the needs of
inmates, friends, family members and those of public safety.10 The AG Reply’s assertion of such
“control” is belied by the rate negotiated by the MADOC11 just this year for its most recent




6
  According to STI, CenturyLink and three other service providers (GTL, ICS, Legacy Long
Distance International, Inc.) participated in bidding on one or more of the contracts that were
opened for competition in the Commonwealth since 2011 – the Massachusetts Department of
Corrections (“MADOC”), Barnstable County and Hampden County. Pay Tel Communications,
Inc. and Network Communications International Corp. d/b/a NCIC are ITS providers currently
registered with the Department of Telecommunications and Cable (“DTC”). Because of the
changes in Massachusetts law discussed below, there may be other active providers who are not
required to register with that DTC.
7
 Consolidated Joint Reply Comments Of TKC Holdings, Inc., Inmate Calling Solutions, LLC d/b/a
ICSolutions and Securus Technologies, Inc., WC Docket No. 18-193; ITC-T/C/20180612-00109,
at 5-7 (filed Jul. 23, 2018) (“Joint Reply”).
8
    Joint Opposition at 8-9.
9
    See Global Tel*Link v. FCC, 866 F.3d 397, 408-412 (D.C. Cir. 2017).
10
   Joint Reply at 6-7. With respect to in-person visits versus video visitation services (AG Reply
at 2, n.1), decisions to restrict in person visits would be made by the Massachusetts correctional
facility administrators, not dictated by STI. Finally, the status of video visitation in Massachusetts
is totally irrelevant to Commission consideration of the merits of the Joint Application.
11
  The MADOC is by far the largest correctional system in the Commonwealth, with an estimated
average daily inmate population (“ADP”) of approximately 9,000.


Ms. Marlene H. Dortch
August 6, 2018
Page 3

contract, which it awarded to STI. STI agreed to charge a per minute rate of $0.10 for all intrastate
calls, which is well below the interim rates currently approved by the DTC.12

        The AG Reply again attempts to raise rate fears by blaming STI for the policy decision of
the Massachusetts legislature to limit the DTC’s jurisdiction over Internet Protocol enabled
services.13 This is another basis, the AG Reply asserts, for denying the pending Joint Application.
Again, this is an attempt to insert a totally extraneous state-related issue into this FCC transfer of
control proceeding. STI cannot be “penalized” in the instant FCC proceeding for relying on a
policy decision made by the Commonwealth’s legislature, which to date has not been questioned
by the regulatory agency itself even after being duly informed of the effects of this policy decision
by STI in 2016. Furthermore, as the new MADOC contract demonstrates, correctional facilities
can and do control rates charged in their facilities regardless of whether those rates are regulated
by the DTC.

         In sum, Applicants have responded to and answered the competition issues raised by the
AG Reply. Other assertions are false or have no place in considering the public interest merits of
this transaction as reflected in the Joint Application and the Joint Opposition. The AG Reply does
not take issue with those representations. Nothing raised by the AG Reply justifies denial or delay
in acting on the Joint Application.




12
  STI fully complies with the interim interstate per-minute rate caps set by the Commission at all
facilities it serves, including for interstate calls originating in Massachusetts. 47 C.F.R. § 64.6030.
13
  Mass. Gen. Laws Chapter 25C, Section 6A provides, with certain exceptions not applicable here,
that “notwithstanding any other general or special law to the contrary, no department, agency,
commission or political subdivision of the commonwealth, shall enact, adopt or enforce, either
directly or indirectly, any law, rule, regulation, ordinance, standard, order or other provision having
the force or effect of law that regulates or has the effect of regulating, the entry, rates, terms or
conditions of VoIP Service or IP enabled service.” Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 25C, § 6A(b). It further
defines "Internet Protocol enabled service" or "IP enabled service" as a “service, capability,
functionality, or application provided using Internet Protocol, or any successor protocol, that
enables an end user to send or receive a communication in Internet Protocol format or any
successor format, regardless of technology; provided, however, that no service included within the
definition of ‘Voice over Internet Protocol service’ shall be included within this definition.” Id.
§ 6A(a). STI employs outbound-only IP-based network technology in providing its ITS.


Ms. Marlene H. Dortch
August 6, 2018
Page 4




  //gk-W if L/b
 Howard M. Liberman          U . p£&           il C. Besozzi
 Paige K. Fronabarger         ^               fer M. Bean
 Wilkinson Barker Knauer, LLP               Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP
 1800 M Street, N.W., Suite 800N            2550 M Street, N.W.
 Washington, DC 20036                       Washington, DC 20037
 202-783-4141 (tel)                         202-457-6000 (tel)
 202-783-5851 (fax)                         202-457-6315 (fax)
 hliberman@wbklaw.com                       paul.besozzi@squirepb.cpm
 pfronabarger@wbklaw.com                    peter.bean@squirepb.com

 Counsel for TKC Holdings, Inc. and Inmate Andrew D. Lipman
 Calling Solutions, LLC d/b/a ICSolutions  Russell M. Blau
                                           Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP
                                           1111 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
                                           Washington, DC 20004
                                           202-373-6033 (tel)
                                           202-739-3001 (fax)
                                           andrew.lipman@morganlewis.com
                                           russell.blau@morganlewis.com

                                            Counsel for Securus Technologies, Inc.


cc:   The Honorable Maura Healey, Attorney General, Commonwealth of Massachusetts
      (by First Class Mail)
      Jodie May, Wireline Competition Bureau, FCC (by email)
      Sumita Mukhoty, International Bureau, FCC (by email)
      Jim Bird, Office of General Counsel, FCC (by email)


                           DECLARATION OF DENNIS J. REINHOLD

I, Dennis J. Reinhold, hereby declare under penalty of perjury as follows:

     1. Iam the Senior Vice President and General Counsel of Securus Technologies, Inc.;

     2. I have read the foregoing Ex Parte Presentation, which was prepared pursuant to my
        supervision and control;

     3. This Declaration is submitted in support of the foregoing Ex Parte Presentation; and

     4. The allegations of fact contained in the Ex Parte Presentation are true and correct to the
        best of my knowledge and belief.


         Dated:     August 6       2018




010-8655-4958/1/AMERICAS



Document Created: 2018-08-06 16:36:08
Document Modified: 2018-08-06 16:36:08

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