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Banking
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February 12, 2026
Top SEC Enforcer Sees Fewer Cases Over Common Violations
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's enforcement chief says she is confident that many violations of federal securities laws concerning requirements for reporting, recordkeeping and internal accounting should not result in agency enforcement actions.
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February 12, 2026
Bipartisan Bill Targets Scam Ads On Social Media Platforms
Federal lawmakers are pushing to require social media companies to crack down on fraudulent advertising on their platforms under new bipartisan legislation that is drawing praise from banking and consumer groups.
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February 12, 2026
Solar Co. PosiGen Control Suit Dismissed In Conn.
A lawsuit accusing Brookfield affiliates of seizing control of solar company PosiGen and driving it deeper into insolvency has been dismissed with prejudice in Connecticut federal court, ending a closely watched dispute that preceded the company's Chapter 11 filing in Texas.
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February 12, 2026
McCarter & English Can't Tank $22M Suit, Insurer Says
Two insurance companies have urged a Connecticut Superior Court judge to maintain a $22.3 million professional negligence lawsuit against McCarter & English LLP, saying document production delays don't warrant killing the case less than a month before trial.
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February 11, 2026
Epstein Survivor Can Pursue Claims BofA 'Turned A Blind Eye'
A survivor of Jeffrey Epstein's sex-trafficking enterprise has adequately alleged Bank of America "turned a blind eye" to a trove of public information that the disgraced financier was a serial sexual abuser while monetarily benefiting from the scheme, a Manhattan federal judge said Wednesday.
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February 11, 2026
PNC Customer's Improper Withdrawal Claims Can Proceed
A Maryland federal judge has ruled that a PNC Bank customer has standing to challenge the bank's withdrawal of money from his checking account to cover a home-equity credit line, but dismissed his individual damages claim and asked for more briefing on his bid for class certification.
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February 11, 2026
DC Circ. Questions Denial Of CFTC Whistleblower Award
The D.C. Circuit seemed skeptical Wednesday morning about the argument that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission wrongly denied a man a $147 million whistleblower incentive award after he tipped off the agency about foreign exchange market manipulation.
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February 11, 2026
SC High Court Probes Clerk's Misconduct In Murdaugh Appeal
The South Carolina Supreme Court on Wednesday closely inspected Alex Murdaugh's appeal claiming the jury in his high-profile double-murder trial was biased because of comments made by a clerk of court, voicing questions and statements favorable to the disgraced lawyer's arguments.
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February 11, 2026
NBA Pro Says He Would've Balked At Deal Over Adviser's Role
A former New York Knicks shooting guard on Wednesday testified that he didn't know his former Morgan Stanley adviser had a stake in the player's $2.1 million life insurance investment and would have passed on the deal had he known, echoing testimony from two other NBA veterans.
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February 11, 2026
Paxful Sentenced To $4M Fine Over Compliance Failures
A California federal judge sentenced now-shuttered crypto exchange Paxful Holdings Inc. to a $4 million penalty in line with a December 2025 plea agreement that saw the firm cop to anti-money laundering failures that enabled illicit transfers of criminal proceeds.
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February 11, 2026
JPMorgan Says Calif. City's Interest-Rate Swap Suit Is Barred
JPMorgan Chase & Co. has sued in Manhattan federal court to block Richmond, California, from pursuing a new lawsuit of its own over past interest-rate swap transactions, alleging the city's case breaches a 2015 settlement by seeking millions of dollars for already-released claims.
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February 11, 2026
Crypto Scam Victims Can't Sue Signature Bank, 2nd Circ. Says
The Second Circuit has upheld the dismissal of a suit by a cryptocurrency trading club against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., as receiver of the failed Signature Bank, alleging negligence by the bank led to the club being defrauded and losing much of the $33 million invested in it.
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February 11, 2026
Apple Keeps PTAB Win Over Fintiv Patent Claims At Fed. Circ.
The Federal Circuit on Wednesday upheld Apple's Patent Trial and Appeal Board win in its challenge to claims in a patent issued to the defunct Austin, Texas-based mobile payment startup that would become Fintiv.
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February 11, 2026
Banking Group Of The Year: Sullivan & Cromwell
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP's financial services practice steered Discover through its nearly $51 billion merger with Capital One and shepherded SVB Financial Group through its Chapter 11 proceedings after Silicon Valley Bank failed, earning a spot among the 2025 Law360 Banking Groups of the Year.
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February 10, 2026
Ill. Tax, Tip Swipe Fee Ban Survives Banks' Challenge
An Illinois federal judge Tuesday cleared most of a landmark Illinois law banning swipe fees on tax and tip payments to take effect this summer, dealing a major blow to banking industry groups that sought to block the law altogether.
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February 10, 2026
5th Circ. Says Bank Worker's ERISA Claims Can Be Arbitrated
The Fifth Circuit on Tuesday held that a former employee at a Texas-based bank must arbitrate his proposed class claims accusing the bank of failing to invest retirement funds, reversing a lower court's finding that the arbitration clause didn't apply to him because it was added after his employment ended.
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February 10, 2026
7th Circ. Mulls Outcome Health Execs' $1B Fraud Convictions
Seventh Circuit judges hearing former Outcome Health executives' challenge to a $1 billion fraud conviction seemed critical of the U.S. government's handling of the case on Tuesday as they questioned why its admitted asset over-restraint and introduction of certain grand jury statements should not require reversal.
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February 10, 2026
Colony Ridge To Pay $68M To End DOJ, Texas Lending Case
Houston-area developer Colony Ridge will pay $68 million to settle with the U.S. government and state of Texas over claims that it targeted Hispanic consumers with predatory land sales and financing, the U.S. Department of Justice said Tuesday.
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February 10, 2026
Swipe-Fee Class Wants Personal Injury Firm Sanctioned
A class of merchants in a lengthy antitrust litigation against Visa and Mastercard is seeking sanctions against a personal injury firm and one of its referral partners, arguing the third-party entities have repeatedly misled would-be class members about the case's settlement and how much recovery they might receive.
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February 10, 2026
BlackRock Brass Face Derivative Suit Over Coal Investments
Several officers and directors of BlackRock have been hit with a shareholder's derivative suit accusing them of damaging the asset manager's reputation by participating in a scheme to drive up coal prices, an issue at the center of an antitrust suit brought by a coalition of Republican-led states.
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February 10, 2026
HSBC Ignored $8M Pig Butchering Scam Warnings, Suit Says
A retired anesthesiologist and his sons have sued HSBC's U.S. arm, accusing it of ignoring warning signs and allowing scammers to siphon more than $8 million from the elderly retiree's accounts through an international "romance pig butchering" fraud.
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February 10, 2026
Financial Services Forum Taps Ex-Truist Exec For GC
Banking industry group Financial Services Forum has hired a general counsel who most recently was a senior Truist Financial Corp. lawyer and who previously worked at the Federal Reserve Board of Governors as senior counsel in its legal division.
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February 10, 2026
Biz Says Bank Unit Wrongfully Put It On High-Risk List
A family-owned cutlery seller told a Georgia federal court Tuesday that a U.S. Bank payment processing subsidiary wrongfully placed it on a list that flags businesses for suspicion of high-risk behavior and terminated its payment processing services without justification.
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February 10, 2026
Feds Argue Russian Billionaire Lacks Yacht Ownership
The U.S. Department of Justice urged the Second Circuit to affirm a district court decision that authorized the United States to sell a Russian billionaire's seized superyacht, arguing he can't suffer the loss of something he barely owns.
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February 10, 2026
'Pig Butchering' Fugitive Gets 20 Years For $73M Crypto Scam
A dual citizen of China and Saint Kitts and Nevis was sentenced in absentia to 20 years in prison and three years supervised release for his role in an international money laundering scheme that laundered over $73 million worth of criminal proceeds obtained through so-called "pig butchering" cryptocurrency investment scams.
Expert Analysis
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How A 1947 Tugboat Ruling May Shape Work Product In AI Era
Rapid advances in generative artificial intelligence test work-product principles first articulated in the U.S. Supreme Court’s nearly 80-year-old Hickman v. Taylor decision, as courts and ethics bodies confront whether disclosure of attorneys’ AI prompts and outputs would reveal their thought processes, say Larry Silver and Sasha Burton at Langsam Stevens.
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Takeaways From 7th Circ.'s Bank Fraud Conviction Reversal
The Seventh Circuit’s recent decision in U.S. v. Robinson, holding that a bank fraud conviction must be grounded in a clear misrepresentation to the financial institution itself, signals that the court will not hesitate to correct substantive errors, even in unpreserved challenges, say attorneys at Quinn Emanuel.
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Navigating Privilege Law Patchwork In Dual-Purpose Comms
Three years after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to resolve a circuit split in In re: Grand Jury, federal courts remain split as to when attorney-client privilege applies to dual-purpose legal and business communications, and understanding the fragmented landscape is essential for managing risks, say attorneys at Covington.
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AG Watch: Calif. Fills Federal Consumer Protection Void
California's consumer protection efforts seem to be intensifying as federal oversight wanes, with Attorney General Rob Bonta recently taking actions related to buy now, pay later products, credit reporting and medical debt, consumer credit discrimination, and the use of artificial intelligence in consumer services, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Key Changes In World Bank's New Compliance Updates
Recent updates to integrity guidelines for companies that bid and work on World Bank-financed projects are sufficiently extensive and unique that covered businesses must take proactive steps to map the changes against their existing compliance programs or risk severe business consequences, say attorneys at Steptoe.
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Decoding The SEC's Plans To Revitalize The US IPO Market
Chairman Paul Atkins' recent speech showcased the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's plans to ease certain disclosure burdens, rein in politicized shareholder voting and mitigate litigation risk, which could encourage more U.S. companies to seek public listings stateside and make U.S. stock exchanges more competitive for foreign companies, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.
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Banking Regulation Themes To Anticipate In 2026
The banking enforcement and rulemaking agenda for this year is likely to reflect a mix of targeted reform, deregulatory recalibration and new priorities aligned with supervisory modernization, says Kim Prior at King & Spalding.
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Easing Equity Research Firewall Shows SEC Open To Updates
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent agreement to modify a decades-old settlement meant to limit investment bankers’ influence over research analysts within major broker-dealer firms reflects a shift toward a commission that recognizes how rules can be modernized to lighten compliance burdens without eliminating core safeguards, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.
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Series
Calif. Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q4
The regulatory and litigation developments for California financial institutions in the fourth quarter of 2025 were incremental but consequential, with the Department of Financial Protection & Innovation relying on public enforcement actions to articulate expectations, and lawmakers and privacy regulators playing a role as well, says Stephen Britt at Stinson.
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Series
Fly-Fishing Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Much like skilled attorneys, the best anglers prize preparation, presentation and patience while respecting their adversaries — both human and trout, says Rob Braverman at Braverman Greenspun.
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4 Ways GCs Can Manage Growing Service Of Process Volume
As automation and arbitration increase the volume of legal filings, in-house counsel must build scalable service of process systems that strengthen corporate governance and manage risk in real time, says Paul Mathews at Corporation Service Co.
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Series
NY Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q4
In the fourth quarter of last year, New York state enacted several developments that affect financial services regulation and business, cementing upcoming compliance obligations including cybersecurity best practices and retail stores' cash management, says Chris Bonner at Barclay Damon.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Forming Measurable Ties
Relationship-building should begin as early as possible in a law firm merger, as intentional pathways to bringing people together drive collaboration, positive client response, engagements and growth, says Amie Colby at Troutman.
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Opinion
US Cybersecurity Strategy Must Include Immigration Reform
Cyberthreats are escalating while the cybersecurity workforce remains constrained due to a lack of clear standards for national-interest determinations, processing backlogs affecting professionals who protect critical public systems and visa allocations that do not reflect real-world demands, says Rusten Hurd at Colombo & Hurd.
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How 2025 Executive Orders Are Reshaping Consumer Finance
In 2025, President Donald Trump used executive orders to initiate a reversal of policies on fair lending, urge agencies to use enforcement and supervisory tools to police debanking, and reduce consumer financial regulation — and the resulting flurry of deregulatory activity will likely continue in 2026, says Elizabeth Tucci at Goodwin.