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A federal judge in Sacramento issued a preliminary injunction on April 17-18, 2026, barring Nexstar Media Group from integrating recently acquired Tegna stations while antitrust litigation proceeds.
Chief U.S. District Judge Troy L. Nunley found plaintiffs — DirecTV and a coalition of eight state attorneys general led by California’s Rob Bonta and New York’s Letitia James — likely to succeed on claims that the roughly $6.2 billion deal would substantially lessen competition in local television markets.
The order does not unwind the March 19 closing, which followed approvals and limited waivers from the Federal Communications Commission and the Justice Department, but requires Nexstar to maintain Tegna as a separate, economically viable business unit and refrain from consolidating operations.
Plaintiffs argue the tie-up, which gives Nexstar control of about 265 stations reaching roughly 80% of U.S. households, would raise retransmission fees, threaten local newsrooms and enable leverage over pay-TV providers (including potential blackouts of NFL games). Nexstar said it will appeal to the Ninth Circuit.
The injunction takes effect April 21 and the case will proceed to trial, where defeat could force an unwind of the transaction.







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