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Appellate
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March 12, 2026
Top Texas Court Upholds Death Sentence For ICU Nurse
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Thursday affirmed the death sentence of a former cardiovascular nurse convicted of intentionally murdering patients recovering from operations, finding that Texas prosecutors' accusation that defense counsel engaged in "misdirection and deception" was "mild."
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March 12, 2026
Ex-Dealer's Retaliation Suit Against Harrah's NC Revived
The Fourth Circuit on Thursday revived employment retaliation claims against Harrah's and Caesars Entertainment by a former table games dealer, finding the lower court abused its discretion by making "speculative assertions" about the need to add as a defendant a related tribal gaming enterprise.
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March 12, 2026
Cops' Misdeeds Don't Undo Conviction, Pa. Panel Says
Police misconduct following a murder investigation and subsequent jury conviction cannot be the basis for a new trial, the Pennsylvania Superior Court has ruled, saying the law enforcement officials' alleged misdeeds have no bearing on the case at hand.
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March 12, 2026
Amazon Faces Revived Suit Over Teens' Sodium Nitrite Deaths
A Ninth Circuit panel on Thursday reopened a lawsuit against Amazon brought by the families of two teens who used sodium nitrite purchased through the retailer to take their own lives, ruling that the families' negligence and product liability claims can move forward under Washington state law.
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March 12, 2026
Judge Newman Takes Suspension Battle To Supreme Court
Federal Circuit Judge Pauline Newman brought her fight against a suspension imposed on her by her colleagues to the U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday, arguing that a lower court wrongly held that her challenges to the order are not subject to judicial review.
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March 12, 2026
DC Circ. Spends Hours Debating 'Same' Generic Label Reqs
The D.C. Circuit spent more than three hours Thursday going round with Vanda Pharmaceuticals and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration about whether the label for a generic sleep-wake disorder medication is "the same" as the branded one because it doesn't include Braille.
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March 12, 2026
Activist Asks 11th Circ. To Revive Illegal Police Probe Claims
An activist who claims her phone and car were seized by police on trumped-up allegations stemming from her opposition to Atlanta's controversial "Cop City" project asked the Eleventh Circuit on Wednesday to revive her suit and reverse a federal district court's ruling that the warrants for her property were reasonable.
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March 12, 2026
Wash. Justices OK Jury Instruction In TB Malpractice Case
The Washington State Supreme Court declined Thursday to flip a family's loss in a case blaming an Evergreen State doctor for failing to address signs of an intestinal tuberculosis infection that led to a patient's death, rejecting a challenge to a jury instruction on the physician's exercise of judgment.
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March 12, 2026
Colo. Panel Clarifies Workers Comp Law On Maintenance Care
In interpreting the Colorado Workers' Compensation Act, the Colorado Court of Appeals ruled for the first time Thursday that employers and their insurers cannot limit maintenance medical benefits to any specific treatment in a final admission of liability.
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March 12, 2026
IP Notebook: TM Use Fight, Popeye, Kurt Cobain
This edition of emerging copyright and trademark cases and trends looks at an appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court that questions the definition of trademark "use in commerce" under the Lanham Act and a battle over the use of "Popeye" as a trademark.
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March 12, 2026
Colo. Appeals Panel Finds Preemption Applies To Noise Claim
A Colorado Court of Appeals panel ruled Thursday that federal preemption extends to injunctive relief in a dispute between two Colorado counties over noise levels from training flights at Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport.
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March 12, 2026
NY Court Grants New Trial For 1998 NYC Restaurant Murder
A man who was convicted of murder for the 1998 shooting death of an employee at a Brooklyn Chinese restaurant has been granted another trial in light of new witness statements, with a New York Appeals Court reversing a lower court's decision.
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March 12, 2026
Insurer Asks NC Justices To Free It From Captive Carrier Row
A Georgia insurance company told North Carolina's highest court that the state's Business Court doesn't have jurisdiction over it in a shareholder dispute over the demise of a defunct captive insurer, arguing it had nothing to do with the supposed bad acts of its individual members.
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March 12, 2026
Chubb Unit Can't Tag Excess Insurer For $100M Settlement
The Georgia Court of Appeals rejected an attempt by a Chubb unit to share liability with an excess insurer for coverage of a $100 million settlement between a boat manufacturer and the family of a boy who died in a boating accident.
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March 12, 2026
Ga. Justices Say City's Immunity Nixes $33M Crash Verdict
The Georgia Supreme Court on Thursday vacated a nearly $33 million verdict that a city was ordered to pay to a college student's family after the car the student was driving crashed into a roadside planter, ruling the city's roadway hazard liability largely ends at the road's shoulder.
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March 12, 2026
CBP Clears Redesigned Innoscience Chips After ITC Case
U.S. Customs and Border Protection has found that modified versions of Innoscience's semiconductor chips no longer infringe an Efficient Power Conversion patent, after the U.S. International Trade Commission blocked infringing imports.
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March 12, 2026
Mich. Court Orders Resentencing For Lawnmower Thief
A man who was sentenced to up to five years in prison for stealing a lawnmower and utility trailer should have been punished under different guidelines, a Michigan appeals panel found, rejecting a lower court's purchase price evaluation of the stolen property at more than $20,000.
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March 12, 2026
Texas Criminal Court Rejects 'I Need A Lawyer' Appeal
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on Thursday rejected the handwritten petition of a defendant who was interviewed after he told police officers, "I need a lawyer," sparking a dissent from two judges who said a lower court erred in finding he did not clearly invoke his right to counsel.
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March 12, 2026
Justices Told Fed. Circ.'s 1-Line Orders Flout Loper Bright
A lighting company has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take a look at a Federal Circuit decision that affirmed the invalidation of various claims in its LED patents, saying the circuit's one-line orders without explaining the court's reasoning violate the justices' decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo.
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March 12, 2026
4th Circ. Scolds Atty Suspected Of Using AI In Race Bias Suit
The Fourth Circuit has reprimanded an attorney suspected of using generative artificial intelligence to draft briefs in a race discrimination lawsuit against Baltimore Gas and Electric Co., warning that courts need to grapple with the technology as it "may soon become the norm."
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March 12, 2026
Feds Rip 'Incoherent' SBF Claim Of Political Weaponization
Federal prosecutors fired back at convicted FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried's pro se bid for a new trial as a "transparent attempt" to further allegedly false narratives that his collapsed crypto exchange was solvent, and he was a victim of political retribution.
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March 12, 2026
Amazon, Workers Clash Over Security Pay At 2nd Circ.
Amazon and a group of warehouse workers sparred in letters to the Second Circuit over the impact a recent Connecticut Supreme Court ruling has on whether employees must be paid for time spent exiting company warehouses.
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March 12, 2026
Full 9th Circ. Deeply Divided On Rehearing TPS Vacatur
The full Ninth Circuit delivered 51 pages of concurrences and dissents while declining to revisit a unanimous panel decision that found Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem lacked the authority to vacate a temporary protected status extension for Venezuela.
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March 12, 2026
1st Circ. Temporarily Pauses Third-Country Removal Ruling
A panel of the First Circuit has paused a district court order holding that a class of noncitizens facing removal to countries to which they have no ties must receive meaningful notice and an opportunity to raise fears about being deported to those countries.
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March 12, 2026
Mich. Justices Weigh City Manager's Sway In Pot Retail Case
The Michigan Supreme Court heard arguments Thursday over whether a city manager violated the state's Open Meetings Act when he evaluated and ranked applicants for limited recreational marijuana licenses behind closed doors.
Expert Analysis
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OCC Mortgage Escrow Rules Add Fuel To Preemption Debate
Two rules proposed in December by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which would preempt state laws requiring national banks to pay interest on mortgage escrow accounts, are a bold new federal gambit in the debate over how much authority Congress intended to hand state regulators under the Dodd-Frank Act, says Christian Hancock at Bradley Arant.
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When Tokenized Real-World Assets Collide With Real World
The city of Detroit's ongoing case against Real Token, alleging building code and safety violations across over 400 Detroit residential properties, highlights the brave new world we face when real estate assets are tokenized via blockchain technology — and what happens to the human tenants caught in the middle, say Biying Cheng and Cornell law professor David Reiss.
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Mass. Ruling Raises Questions About Whistleblower Status
In Galvin v. Roxbury Community College, Massachusetts' top appellate court held that an individual was protected from retaliation as a whistleblower, even though he engaged in illegal activity, raising questions about whether whistleblowers who commit illegal acts are protected and whether trusted employees are doing their job or whistleblowing, say attorneys at Littler.
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Series
Judges On AI: Practical Use Cases In Chambers
U.S. Magistrate Judge Allison Goddard in the Southern District of California discusses how she uses generative artificial intelligence tools in chambers to make work more efficient and effective — from editing jury instructions for clarity to summarizing key documents.
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Notable Q4 Updates In Insurance Class Actions
Last quarter featured a novel class action theory about car rental reimbursement coverage, another win for insurers in total loss valuations, a potentially broad-reaching Idaho Supreme Court ruling about illusory underinsured motorist coverage, and homeowners blaming rising premiums on the fossil fuel industry, says Kevin Zimmerman at BakerHostetler.
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Opinion
Criminalizing Officials' Speech Erodes Trust In Justice System
Federal prosecutors reportedly investigating whether Minnesota officials’ public statements illegally impeded immigration enforcement is a dangerous overextension of obstruction law that would criminalize dissent and sow public distrust in law enforcement, say Marc Levin and Khalil Cumberbatch at the Council on Criminal Justice.
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Series
Trail Running Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Navigating the muddy, root-filled path of trail marathons and ultramarathons provides fertile training ground for my high-stakes fractional general counsel work, teaching me to slow down my mind when the terrain shifts, sharpen my focus and trust my training, says Eric Proos at Next Era Legal.
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Reflections From High Court Oral Args Over Fed Gov. Removal
In the oral arguments last month for Trump v. Cook, which asks the U.S. Supreme Court to clarify the circumstances under which the president can remove a Federal Reserve Board governor, the justices appeared skeptical about ruling on the substantive issues in view of the limited record and analysis, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.
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Opinion
Justices' Monsanto Decision May Fix A Preemption Mistake
In Monsanto Co. v. Durnell, the U.S. Supreme Court will address whether federal law preempts states' label-based failure-to-warn claims when federal regulators have not required a warning — and its decision could correct a long-standing misinterpretation of a prior high court ruling, thus ending myriad meritless state law personal injury claims, says Lawrence Ebner at Capital Appellate.
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Tips From Del. Decision Nixing Major Earnout Damages Award
The Delaware Supreme Court recently vacated in part the largest earnout-related damages award in Delaware history, making clear that the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing cannot be used to rescue parties from drafting choices where the relevant regulatory risk was foreseeable at signing, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.
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What's At Stake In Possible Circuit Split On Medicaid Rule
A recent Eleventh Circuit decision, reviving Florida's lawsuit against a federal rule that reduces Medicaid funding based on agreements between hospitals, sets up a potential circuit split with the Fifth Circuit, with important ramifications for states looking to private administrators to run provider tax programs, say Liz Goodman, Karuna Seshasai and Rebecca Pitt at FTI Consulting.
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Takeaways From 8th Circ. Ruling On Worker's 'BLM' Display
The Eighth Circuit's recent decision in Home Depot v. National Labor Relations Board, finding that Home Depot legally prohibited an employee from displaying Black Lives Matter messaging on his uniform, reaffirms employers' right to restrict politically sensitive material, but should not be read as a blank check, say attorneys at Hunton.
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NC Ruling Shows Mallory's Evolving Effects For Policyholders
A recent North Carolina decision, PDII v. Sky Aircraft, demonstrates how the U.S. Supreme Court's consequential jurisdiction decision in Mallory v. Norfolk Southern may permit suits against insurers anywhere they do business so long as the forum state has a business registration statute that requires submitting to in-state lawsuits, says Christopher Popecki at Pillsbury.
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Malpractice Claim Assignability Continues To Divide Courts
Recent decisions from courts across the country demonstrate how different jurisdictions balance competing policy interests in determining whether legal malpractice claims can be assigned, providing a framework to identify when and how to challenge any attempted assignment, says Christopher Blazejewski at Sherin & Lodgen.
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Tips For Financial Advisers Facing TRO From Former Firm
The Eighth Circuit's recent decision in Choreo v. Lors, overturning a lower court's sweeping injunction after financial advisers moved to a new firm, gives advisers new strategies to fight restraining orders from their old firms, such as focusing on whether the alleged irreparable harm is calculable, say attorneys at Kutak Rock.