No, but if you're found guilty of a crime you might very well be put on parole with a very different set of rights and expectations until you've finished that parole. I don't know if the guy's trying to check into every aspect of their business or not, but we know they used at least one aspect of the business, the app store and blocking apps, as one method to try and get Random House to join Agency pricing. One of the monitor's jobs is to assess the companies anti-trust policies. I'd think interviewing top execs would be a necessity to completing that task.
Sounds to me like Apple's lawyers are doing what their paid for (being pains in the butt) as is the monitor and this probably wouldn't get as much notice if it was some other company bitching.