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Appellate
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February 18, 2026
5th Circ. Sanctions Atty Over AI-Generated Errors In Brief
The Fifth Circuit on Wednesday sanctioned a Texas attorney for using generative artificial intelligence to draft a brief that was "riddled with fabricated quotations and assertions," while rebuking the attorney for not being more forthcoming about her use of the technology and her failure to check its accuracy.
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February 18, 2026
Birkin Bag Fans Appeal Hermès' 'Predetermined' Antitrust Win
Shoppers urged the Ninth Circuit Wednesday to revive their proposed class action accusing Hermès of illegally tying the sale of its iconic Birkin handbags to other expensive luxury items, arguing that the lower court erroneously "predetermined" the outcome of their case even before they filed their latest complaint.
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February 18, 2026
Duke Energy's $17M Fuel Cost Recovery Improper, Panel Says
The North Carolina Utilities Commission was wrong to let Duke Energy recover over $17 million in fuel costs two years after they were incurred, a North Carolina appeals court panel ruled Wednesday, finding that a statute permits utilities to recover only the fuel costs incurred during a one-year "lookback period."
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February 18, 2026
Pa. Justices Put Limits On Workers' Comp Immunity
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court on Wednesday reined in a state law offering broad immunity from liability for co-workers in workers' compensation cases, saying co‑employee immunity does not automatically apply just because two people work for the same employer.
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February 18, 2026
7th Circ. Mulls Remanding Walmart ADA Injunction Bid Again
A Seventh Circuit judge seemed open Wednesday to having a Wisconsin judge again consider federal employment regulators' injunctive relief request after a jury found Walmart liable for failing to accommodate an employee with Down syndrome, saying the trial record suggests Walmart's schedule-related misstep may not have been a one-time mistake.
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February 18, 2026
Florida Panel Says Pill Mill Charges Must Be Reinstated
A Florida state appeals court ordered the reinstatement of prescription drug-related counts against 11 individuals accused of involvement in a statewide pill mill operation, ruling Wednesday that a lower court wrongly determined their speedy trial rights were violated when dismissing the charges.
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February 18, 2026
Canada's Olympic Body Joins NHL, CHL Antitrust Defense
Canadian hockey officials asked the Ninth Circuit to reject an appeal from junior players who sued the National Hockey League and its pipeline organizations over alleged antitrust violations, arguing certain rules actually benefit the community and foster competition.
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February 18, 2026
4th Circ. Rejects Under Armour's Coverage Rehearing Request
The Fourth Circuit on Wednesday rejected Under Armour's request to reconsider a recent ruling that capped its coverage for a securities class action, government investigations and derivative matters at $100 million.
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February 18, 2026
Trump Taps Atty In Carroll Case For 8th Circ.
President Donald Trump announced Wednesday he's nominating for the Eighth Circuit a co-owner of James Otis Law Group, where the attorney has been part of the legal team representing Trump in writer E. Jean Carroll's defamation suit against the president.
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February 18, 2026
11th Circ. Backs UPS In Worker's Race Bias, Retaliation Case
The Eleventh Circuit declined Wednesday to reinstate a UPS worker's race bias, retaliation and hostile work environment lawsuit, finding that UPS had a legitimate reason for terminating her.
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February 18, 2026
Jury To Get Goldstein Case After Clashing Closing Statements
The jury in SCOTUSblog founder Thomas Goldstein's tax evasion trial will finally begin to deliberate on a 16-count verdict form, after federal prosecutors on Wednesday recounted lies they said he admitted to, and the defense slammed what it described as a shoddy investigation into the charges.
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February 18, 2026
2nd Circ. Won't Stay Judge's Halt Of Syria TPS Termination
A Second Circuit panel has denied the Trump administration's request to stay a district court order postponing the termination of temporary protected status for Syria, holding that the federal government isn't likely to win on appeal.
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February 18, 2026
8th Circ. Won't Review Bad Counsel Claim In Removal Case
An Eighth Circuit panel refused to fault the Board of Immigration Appeals for affirming the denial of a Honduran woman's attempt to reopen removal proceedings when it wasn't clear her ineffective counsel claim was shared with the appropriate disciplinary authority.
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February 18, 2026
Colo. County's Housing Impact Fee Unlawful, Panel Told
A Texas residential property developer asked a Colorado Court of Appeals panel to find that a Colorado county's employee housing impact fee methodology for new residential construction projects violates state law, arguing Wednesday that the methodology aims to cure existing deficiencies.
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February 18, 2026
'Flawed' Ruling Let SEC Hide Breach Records, DC Circ. Told
The New Civil Liberties Alliance has told the D.C. Circuit that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should have to turn over documents related to an internal information breach, arguing a lower court improperly allowed the agency to exempt documents from a Freedom of Information Act request.
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February 18, 2026
Fla. Court Rejects Appeal Of 'Customary Use' Beach Ruling
A Florida state appeals court declined to review a 2024 judgment establishing public access to some Walton County beaches, finding that a June repeal of a law that prompted the litigation rendered the underlying judgment null.
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February 18, 2026
Trump Admin Doubles Down At DC Circ. In Fight Over CFPB
The Trump administration has pressed the D.C. Circuit to lift an injunction barring mass layoffs at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, slamming it as a "sweeping intrusion" on agency management that rests on incorrect speculation about what the end goal is.
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February 18, 2026
BMW Rips Onesta's Claim That Qualcomm Deal Ends Patent Row
Onesta IP has told the Federal Circuit that it reached a deal with Qualcomm that resolves its controversial patent suits against BMW in Germany over U.S. patents, but BMW fired back that Onesta doesn't have "any shred of evidence to back its grandiose assertions."
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February 18, 2026
Del. Justices Mull Genworth Liability Insurer Appeal
An attorney for AIG Financial urged a Delaware Supreme Court panel on Wednesday to consider whether a Superior Court judge misapplied policy language and misconstrued related litigation involving "one of the most sophisticated purchasers of insurance imaginable," in dismissing a policyholder class suit challenging long-term care premium hikes.
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February 18, 2026
DOJ Allowed To Dictate Pay, Term Of Google Search Watchers
A D.C. federal judge sided with the U.S. Department of Justice on Tuesday regarding the key terms of service for the five-member technical committee tasked with observing Google's compliance with mandates to prop up rival search engines with search results and data.
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February 18, 2026
Will Jurors Penalize AI? Study Examines Trade Secrets Impact
A forthcoming academic study suggests juries may treat AI-enabled actions more harshly than human conduct in trade secrets disputes, resulting in what the authors call an “AI penalty.” Attorneys say reality is more complicated.
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February 18, 2026
Judge Rejects FTC's Emergency Bid To Spare Merger Rule
The Federal Trade Commission has just until Thursday to obtain Fifth Circuit intervention after a Texas federal judge refused Wednesday to extend his seven-day pause on the order scrapping the agency's premerger reporting overhaul.
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February 18, 2026
Conn. Justice Tackles Precedent, AI In Renomination Hearing
Answering a question about abortion rights during a renomination hearing Wednesday, a cautious Connecticut Supreme Court justice said courts must be mindful when overruling past decisions, questioning whether the doctrine of stare decisis, or allowing past opinions to stand, could become "not much of a doctrine at all."
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February 18, 2026
State Law Matters More For Bankruptcy Tolling, NC Justices Told
A real estate rental agency told North Carolina's high court Wednesday that it didn't miss its chance to collect a $507,000 debt because a decade-long statute of limitations period for judgment renewal was tolled by the debtor's bankruptcy.
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February 18, 2026
2nd Circ. Says No Pension Bill For Bus Co. After Union Switch
The Second Circuit on Wednesday backed a ruling that cut a school bus company's pension withdrawal liability to zero, siding with the company's interpretation that federal benefits law entitled it to a discount on what was owed when its employees switched from one union to another.
Expert Analysis
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Texas, One Year In
A year after the Texas Business Court's first decision, it's clear that Texas didn't just copy Delaware and instead built something uniquely its own, combining specialization with constitutional accountability and creating a model that looks forward without losing touch with the state's democratic and statutory roots, says Chris Bankler at Jackson Walker.
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What's At Stake In High Court Pension Liability Case
The U.S. Supreme Court’s upcoming decision in M&K Employee Solutions v. Trustees of the IAM National Pension Fund will determine how an employer’s liability for withdrawing from a multiemployer retirement plan is calculated — a narrow but key issue for employer financial planning and collective bargaining, say attorneys at Thompson Hine.
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Contract Disputes Recap: Formation, Performance, Certainty
Three recent decisions offer helpful takeaways about addressing potential obstacles to contract formation, liability for specific performance and requirements for claiming a sum certain, says Ken Kanzawa at Seyfarth Shaw.
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Border Czar Bribery Probe Spotlights 'Public Official' Scope
Reports that border czar Tom Homan allegedly accepted cash from a federal agent prior to his appointment raise important questions for government contractors about when a private citizen can be prosecuted as a public official under federal bribery laws, say Gregory Rosen at Rogers Joseph and Jason Manning at Levy Firestone.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Educating Your Community
Nearly two decades prosecuting scammers and elder fraud taught me that proactively educating the public about the risks they face and the rights they possess is essential to building trust within our communities, empowering otherwise vulnerable citizens and preventing wrongdoers from gaining a foothold, says Roger Handberg at GrayRobinson.
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ConvergeOne Ch. 11 Ruling Clarifies Lender Incentive Limits
The recent ConvergeOne ruling from a Texas federal court marks the latest rebuke of selective lender incentives in bankruptcy, and, along with two appellate decision from late 2024, delineates the boundaries of liability management exercises inside and outside Chapter 11, says Pratik Raj Ghosh at MoloLamken.
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How A 9th Circ. False Ad Ruling Could Shift Class Certification
The Ninth Circuit's July decision in Noohi v. Johnson & Johnson, holding that unexecuted damages models may suffice for purposes of class certification, has the potential to create judicial inefficiencies and crippling uncertainties for class action defendants, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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7 Areas To Watch As FTC Ends Push For A Noncompete Ban
As the government ends its push for a nationwide noncompete ban, employers who do not want to be caught without protections for legitimate business interests should explore supplementing their noncompetes by deploying elements of seven practical, enforceable tools, including nondisclosure agreements and garden leave strategies, say attorneys at Seyfarth.
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Shifting Crypto Landscape Complicates Tornado Cash Verdict
Amid shifts in the decentralized finance regulatory landscape, the mixed verdict in the prosecution of Tornado Cash’s founder may represent the high-water mark in a cryptocurrency enforcement strategy from which the U.S. Department of Justice has begun to retreat, say attorneys at Venable.
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5 Crisis Lawyering Skills For An Age Of Uncertainty
As attorneys increasingly face unprecedented and pervasive situations — from prosecutions of law enforcement officials to executive orders targeting law firms — they must develop several essential competencies of effective crisis lawyering, says Ray Brescia at Albany Law School.
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Insights From Recent Cases On Navigating Snap Removal
Snap removal, which allows defendants to transfer state court cases to federal court before a forum defendant is properly joined and served, is viewed differently across federal circuits — but keys to making it work can be drawn from recent decisions critiquing the practice, say attorneys at Perkins Coie.
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Opinion
It's Time For The Judiciary To Fix Its Cybersecurity Problem
After recent reports that hackers have once again infiltrated federal courts’ electronic case management systems, the judiciary should strengthen its cybersecurity practices in line with executive branch standards, outlining clear roles and responsibilities for execution, says Ilona Cohen at HackerOne.
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Tips For Cos. Crafting Enforceable Online Arbitration Clauses
Recent rulings from the Ninth Circuit and the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California indicate that courts are carefully examining the enforceability of online arbitration clauses, so businesses should review the design of their websites and consider specific language next to the "purchase" button, say attorneys at DTO Law.
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Parody Defendants Are Finding Success Post-Jack Daniel's
Recent decisions demonstrate that, although the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Jack Daniel's v. VIP Products did benefit trademark plaintiffs by significantly limiting the First Amendment expressive use defense, courts also now appear to be less likely to find a parodic work likely to cause confusion, says Andrew Michaels at University of Houston Law Center.
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State Of Insurance: Q3 Notes From Illinois
Matthew Fortin at BatesCarey discusses notable developments in Illinois insurance law from the last quarter including a state appellate court's weighing in on the scope of appraisal, a pending certified question in the Illinois Supreme Court from the Seventh Circuit on the applicability of pollution exclusions to permitted emissions, and more.