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									September 16, 2025
									DOJ Fights Court Order To Reinstate NCUA Board MembersThe Trump administration has told the D.C. Circuit that the president had the right to remove two National Credit Union Administration board members at will, and that a lower court was wrong to reinstate them and read extra job protections into the law. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Ky. Judge Backs Fed's Debit-Fee Cap In Split With ND RulingA Kentucky federal judge on Monday upheld a Federal Reserve Board cap on debit-card swipe fees that a local merchant challenged as overly generous to banks, breaking with a North Dakota federal court that recently rejected the same regulation. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Fed. Circ. Won't Look At USAA's Nixed $223M Patent VerdictsThe full Federal Circuit declined Tuesday to scrutinize panel decisions that wiped out a pair of patent infringement verdicts against PNC Bank that totaled nearly $223 million, rejecting United Services Automobile Association's arguments that the appeals court wrongly invalidated its mobile check deposit patents. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Chase Accused Of Credit Card Perks Bait-And-SwitchJPMorgan Chase Bank NA has been hit with a consumer's proposed class action accusing it of soliciting customers to pay for $750 credit card memberships and refusing to provide the card's promised benefits of select restaurant and streaming service payment reimbursement. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Goldman, Morgan Stanley Beat Archegos Suit At 2nd Circ.The Second Circuit on Tuesday upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit accusing Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley of profiting off insider knowledge that the investment firm Archegos Capital Management was about to collapse, ruling that the companies had no duty to withhold from trading on the information. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Wells Fargo Brass Reach Settlement In 'Sham' Hiring SuitWells Fargo investors and executives have told a California federal judge they've reached a settlement in a derivative suit claiming the bank's leadership failed to address the company's discriminatory lending and hiring practices. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Starbucks Resolves Swipe Fee Claims With BofA, MastercardStarbucks is the latest retailer to settle claims in an antitrust action Tuesday in New York federal court alleging Mastercard, Bank of America and several other financial institutions were part of an illegal scheme forcing merchants to pay excessive fees when shoppers pay with their credit or debit cards. 
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									September 16, 2025
									FDIC Gets More Discovery In SVB Fraud Coverage RowA Chubb unit must comply with a previous order forcing it to give documents relating to the drafting history of certain policy provisions to Silicon Valley Bank former parent SVB Financial Group in a $73 million private equity fraud coverage dispute, a North Carolina federal court ruled. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Influencers Walk Back Claim Of Capital One SettlementAttorneys for a proposed class of social media influencers on Tuesday withdrew a notice of settlement in their suit accusing Capital One of stealing commissions from creators, saying no settlement exists and that they signed the notice on Capital One's behalf without permission. 
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									September 16, 2025
									BlackRock Blames Coal Production Cuts On Falling DemandBlackRock Inc. told a Texas federal court that coal production has declined because demand from coal-fired power plants has been falling for years, not because asset managers conspired to pressure the producers. 
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									September 16, 2025
									NJ Justices Suspend Atty Over Bank Loan Scheme ConvictionThe New Jersey Supreme Court has indefinitely suspended an attorney and former director of the now-shuttered Park Avenue Bank after he was convicted for his role in a scheme to profit off of a loan using a straw borrower. 
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									September 16, 2025
									Wachtell, Squire Patton Lead National Bank's $369M Vista BuyWachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz-advised National Bank Holdings Corp. has agreed to acquire Squire Patton Boggs LLP-led Vista Bancshares Inc. in a transaction valued at $369.1 million, the banks announced Tuesday. 
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									September 15, 2025
									Rocket Mortgage Can't Defeat DOJ's Racial Bias SuitA Colorado federal judge has declined to toss the federal government's race discrimination suit against Rocket Mortgage, an appraisal management company and an appraiser, finding, among other things, that Rocket could have requested correction of the appraisal at the heart of the suit. 
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									September 15, 2025
									Ex-Coinbase CLO, OCC Acting Chief Joins BitGo's BoardA former chief legal officer of digital asset exchange Coinbase Inc. and onetime acting head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has joined the board of directors of cryptocurrency custodian BitGo Inc. 
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									September 15, 2025
									2nd Circ. Upholds Dismissal Of Libor Rigging ClaimsThe Second Circuit on Monday affirmed the dismissal of investor lawsuits alleging multiple global banks, including UBS and Lloyds Bank, conspired to rig the benchmark interest rate Libor, which is tied to the British pound, finding the plaintiffs never showed they actually lost money from the alleged manipulation. 
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									September 15, 2025
									Senate Confirms Top Trump Economist To Federal ReserveThe U.S. Senate narrowly confirmed top White House economist Stephen Miran to the Federal Reserve Board on Monday, giving President Donald Trump a close ally at the central bank as he pushes for greater control over the traditionally independent body. 
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									September 15, 2025
									DC Circ. Says Fed's Cook Can Keep Job For NowA D.C. Circuit panel said Monday that Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook can remain on the central bank's board while challenging President Donald Trump's effort to fire her, clearing the way for her to participate in a key interest-rate policy vote this week. 
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									September 15, 2025
									Bank CEO's Wife Says She Never Joined $7M FraudThe wife of a former Puerto Rican bank CEO asked a Florida federal judge Friday to dismiss the bank receiver's $7 million conspiracy claim against her, arguing that simply signing a loan note is not proof that she knowingly joined any scheme to defraud the bank. 
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									September 15, 2025
									Robinhood Seeks Legal Shield After Mass. AG Sues KalshiEXDays after Massachusetts' attorney general sued so-called prediction market operator KalshiEX, accusing it of running an unlicensed sports betting platform, Robinhood, which provides access to the Kalshi system on its own platform, urged a federal judge Monday to grant it protection from similar claims. 
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									September 15, 2025
									Court Urged To Block Offshore Asset Freeze In $28M Tax RowThe federal government's claim that a beneficiary of offshore trusts is likely to spend down assets to avoid a $28 million tax bill lacks evidence, the beneficiary argued in urging a Florida federal court not to freeze his accounts. 
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									September 15, 2025
									Simpson Thacher Adds Ex-Goodwin Debt Financing ProSimpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP has added an attorney previously with Goodwin Procter LLP who specializes in debt financing transactions as a partner in its Boston office, the firm has announced. 
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									September 15, 2025
									4 More Cadwalader Attys Exit In Charlotte, Head to ProskauerProskauer Rose LLP announced Monday that it will launch an office in Charlotte, North Carolina, with a four-partner leveraged finance team from Cadwalader Wickersham & Taft LLP. 
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									September 14, 2025
									Fed's Cook Defends Reinstatement As Trump Pushes For StayFederal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook squared off with the Trump administration over the weekend as the D.C. Circuit mulls whether to keep in place a lower-court hold on President Donald Trump's effort to fire her ahead of a key interest-rate policy vote this coming week. 
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									September 12, 2025
									8th Circ. Pauses Challenges To Abandoned Climate RegsThe Eighth Circuit on Friday said it would wait to rule on challenges to Biden-era climate disclosure rules that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has said it will no longer defend, giving the regulator time to decide what it wants to do with the rules. 
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									September 12, 2025
									UBS Can't Slip Blockchain Company's Spoofing ClaimsUBS' investment banking division can't shed claims that it manipulated trading prices for a software company by means of spoofing, or placing trades it later canceled, though a Manhattan federal judge on Friday tossed the software company's allegations relating to the alleged scheme's long-term effect on its trading prices. 
Expert Analysis
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								What Money Transmitters Need To Know About New Colo. Law  Colorado's new Money Transmission Modernization Act updates standards for the licensing, supervision and regulation of money transmitters while codifying an agent-to-payee exemption, and represents another step toward standardizing these rules across state governments, say Sarah Auchterlonie and Joel Herberman at Brownstein Hyatt. 
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								When Legal Advocacy Crosses The Line Into Incivility  As judges issue sanctions for courtroom incivility, and state bars advance formal discipline rules, trial lawyers must understand that the difference between zealous advocacy and unprofessionalism is not just a matter of tone; it's a marker of skill, credibility and potentially disciplinary exposure, says Nate Sabri at Perkins Coie. 
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								Two Bills Promise A Crypto Revamp, But Not A Done Deal Yet  Recent efforts in Congress toward an updated regulatory framework for digital assets have led to two bills — the GENIUS Act and the CLARITY Act — that represent the most consequential legislative developments yet in the push for coherent, pro-innovation, reliable regulation for the industry, but both face multiple hurdles, says Mike Katz at Manatt. 
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								2 NY Rulings May Stem Foreign Co. Derivative Suits  In recent decades, shareholders have challenged the internal affairs doctrine by bringing a series of derivative actions in New York state court on behalf of foreign corporations, but the New York Court of Appeals' recent rulings in Ezrasons v. Rudd and Haussmann v. Baumann should slow that trend, say attorneys at Cleary. 
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								Despite Rule Delay, FTC Scrutiny Looms For Subscriptions  Even though the Federal Trade Commission has delayed its click-to-cancel rule that introduces strict protocols for auto-renewing subscriptions, businesses should expect active enforcement of the new requirements after July, and look to the FTC's recent lawsuits against Uber and Cleo AI as warnings, say attorneys at Holland & Knight. 
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								AGs Take Up Consumer Protection Mantle Amid CFPB Cuts  State attorneys general are stepping up to fill the enforcement gap as the Trump administration restructures the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, creating a new regulatory dynamic that companies must closely monitor as oversight shifts toward states, say attorneys at Cozen O’Connor. 
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								Va.'s Altered Surcharge Law Poses Constitutional Questions  Virginia's recently amended consumer protection law requiring sellers to display the total price rather than expressly prohibiting surcharges follows New York's recent revision of its antisurcharge statute and may raise similar First Amendment questions, says attorneys at Stinson. 
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								Series Volunteering At Schools Makes Me A Better Lawyer  Speaking to elementary school students about the importance of college and other opportunities after high school — especially students who may not see those paths reflected in their daily lives — not only taught me the importance of giving back, but also helped to sharpen several skills essential to a successful legal practice, says Guillermo Escobedo at Constangy. 
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								Fed's Crypto Guidance Yank Could Drive Innovation  The Federal Reserve Board's recent withdrawal of guidance letters brings regulatory consistency and broadens banks' ability to innovate in the crypto-asset space, but key distinctions remain between the Fed's policy on crypto liquidity and that of the other banking regulators, says Dan Hartman at Nutter. 
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								Attacks On Judicial Independence Tend To Manifest In 3 Ways  Attacks on judicial independence now run the gamut from gross (bald-faced interference) to systemic (structural changes) to insidious (efforts to undermine public trust), so lawyers, judges and the public must recognize the fateful moment in which we live and defend the rule of law every day, says Jim Moliterno at Washington and Lee University. 
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								OCC's Digital Embrace Delivers Risk, Opportunity For Banks.jpg)  As the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency continues to release and seek more information on banks' participation in the crypto-asset arena, institutions may see greater opportunity to pursue digital asset and custody services, but must simultaneously educate themselves on transformations occurring throughout the industry, says Kirstin Kanski at Spencer Fane. 
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								Remediation Still Reigns Despite DOJ's White Collar Shake-Up  Though the U.S. Department of Justice’s recently announced corporate enforcement policy changes adopt a softer tone acknowledging the risks of overregulation, the DOJ has not shifted its compliance and remediation expectations, which remain key to more favorable resolutions, say Jonny Frank, Michele Edwards and Chris Hoyle at StoneTurn. 
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								Series Law School's Missed Lessons: Appreciating Civil Procedure.jpg)  If you’re like me, law school’s often complex and theoretical approach to teaching civil procedure may have contributed to an early struggle with the topic, but when seen from a practical perspective, new lawyers may find they enjoy mastering these rules, says Chloe Villagomez at Foster Garvey. 
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								Section 899 Could Be A Costly Tax Shift For US Borrowers  Intended to deter foreign governments from applying unfair taxes to U.S. companies, the proposal adding new Section 899 to the Internal Revenue Code would more likely increase tax burdens on U.S. borrowers than non-U.S. lenders unless Congress limits its scope, says Michael Bolotin at Debevoise. 
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								Calif. Bar Exam Fiasco Shows Why Attys Must Disclose AI Use  The recent revelation that a handful of questions from the controversial California bar exam administered in February were drafted using generative artificial intelligence demonstrates the continued importance of disclosure for attorneys who use AI tools, say attorneys at Troutman.