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Banking
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January 16, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London saw the David Lloyd gym chain file an intellectual property claim against its founder, security company Primekings reignite a long-running dispute with the former owners of an acquired business, and a pair of Belizean developers sue a finance executive they say shut them out of a cruise port project.
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January 15, 2026
BuzzFeed Loses Bid To Unseal HSBC Laundering Report
The U.S. Department of Justice does not have to provide to former BuzzFeed reporter Jason Leopold a confidential report on HSBC Bank's anti-money laundering compliance, a D.C. federal judge ruled Thursday, saying disclosure of the entire report, even with redactions, risks chilling the cooperation of foreign regulators.
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January 15, 2026
Ill. Biz Owner Gets 6 Years For $55M Bank Scams, PPP Fraud
An Illinois businessman has been sentenced to six years in prison and ordered to pay over $23.3 million in restitution in connection with claims that he defrauded banks through applications for commercial loans, lines of credit and the pandemic-era Paycheck Protection Program.
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January 15, 2026
Harvard Club Settles Pandemic Loan Fraud Claims For $2.4M
The Harvard Club of Boston, a private club that is not formally affiliated with Harvard University, has agreed to pay approximately $2.4 million to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act by obtaining a COVID-19-era Paycheck Protection Program loan for which it was not eligible.
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January 15, 2026
6th Circ. Favors Comerica Bank In Ch. 7 Fraud Suit
Comerica Bank is not liable for the actions of a former Chapter 7 liquidator, to whom the bank was paying fees during the bankruptcy of a tool manufacturer, the Sixth Circuit has found.
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January 15, 2026
Visa, Mastercard Defend Swipe-Fee Deal Amid Objections
Visa and Mastercard have again urged a New York federal judge to grant the first green light to a new settlement between the card issuers and a class of potentially millions of merchants to resolve two decades of antitrust litigation, pushing back against objections from Walmart and other merchant industry groups.
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January 15, 2026
Crypto Lender Nexo Fined $500K For Unlicensed Loans
The California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation announced that crypto-backed loan company Nexo Capital Inc. will pay a $500,000 penalty to settle claims it did not have a valid license when making its high-risk loans to California residents.
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January 15, 2026
Trucking Brokers Ordered To Pay $1.5M Over Ponzi Scheme
A Florida federal judge on Thursday ordered two men connected to a scheme involving a trucking and logistics business to pay nearly $1.5 million to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which accused the pair of illegally selling most of the $112 million worth of unregistered securities to victims in a fraud targeting Haitian Americans.
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January 15, 2026
Murphy's Legacy: Tackling Some Of NJ's 'Intractable' Issues
When New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy took office, he had his pick of policy challenges that had plagued the Garden State for years. The state's pension fund had been underfunded for decades, municipalities had been locked in litigation over their affordable housing obligations, and the state's public transit system needed a major overhaul.
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January 15, 2026
Real Estate Execs Indicted In Mortgage Fraud Scheme
An Ohio grand jury on Wednesday indicted two Israeli real estate entrepreneurs and two co-conspirators for allegedly double-pledging multifamily properties to multiple lenders and falsifying financial statements to further their scheme.
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January 15, 2026
Digital Infrastructure Biz Nets $240M For Data Center Expansion
Digital infrastructure company DC Blox obtained $240 million worth of holdco financing in order to support the company's plan to expand hyperscale data centers, the company announced Thursday.
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January 15, 2026
NY Bill Criminalizes Unlicensed Cryptocurrency Businesses
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and New York State Sen. Zellnor Myrie on Thursday announced a proposed law to criminalize operating a cryptocurrency business without a license, saying crypto has become an "ideal vehicle for money laundering."
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January 14, 2026
FTC Says Payments Co. Should Pay $53M For Violating Deal
The Federal Trade Commission has asked a Nevada federal judge to order a payment processor and two of its executives to pay over $52.9 million for consumer relief after allegedly violating terms of its 2015 settlement of the regulator's claims it willfully facilitated payments for bad actors.
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January 14, 2026
Judge Asks If Execs 'Blindsided' Truist With Mass Exodus
A North Carolina business judge on Wednesday repeatedly returned to whether three former executives who led Truist's real estate finance arm ever revealed to the bank that they were in "secret" talks to join a competitor and bring dozens of their colleagues with them, signaling he'd let a jury decide if the mass exodus is to blame for the business's alleged losses.
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January 14, 2026
Wells Fargo Brass Gets 1st OK For 'Fake' Diversity Suit Deal
A California federal judge has granted the first green light to a settlement reached between Wells Fargo investors and executives in a derivative suit claiming the bank's leadership failed to address the company's discriminatory lending practices and engaged in "fake" interviews with diverse candidates.
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January 14, 2026
Swedbank Says DOJ Has Closed AML Probe Without Action
Swedbank, one of the biggest banks serving Europe's Baltic region, said Wednesday that the U.S. Department of Justice has released it from a long-running anti-money-laundering-related investigation, removing another U.S. legal cloud hanging over the lender.
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January 14, 2026
Senate Banking Committee Postpones Crypto Bill Markup
The Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday night postponed a highly anticipated mark-up of a bill to regulate the cryptocurrency industry, hours after Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong voiced his opposition to the latest draft, saying his firm would "rather have no bill than a bad bill."
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January 14, 2026
JPMorgan's Tobacco-Use Health Fee Is Illegal, Employee Says
A JPMorgan Chase & Co. employee has hit the financial giant with a proposed class action in a New York federal court accusing it of issuing health insurance plans including fee requirements for tobacco users that violate the antidiscrimination provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.
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January 14, 2026
Miami Man Admits To $250K Zelle Scam In Connecticut
A Florida man has pled guilty to a conspiracy charge in Connecticut federal court over his role in scams that ripped off victims including Zelle users for more than $250,000, prosecutors said Wednesday.
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January 14, 2026
Conn. Credit Union Hit With 2nd Data Breach Class Lawsuit
Connecticut's Ellafi Federal Credit Union on Wednesday was hit with a second proposed class action over an October data breach that affected more than 17,600 members.
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January 14, 2026
2nd Circ. Suspects Forum Shopping In Credit Suisse Suit
Two Second Circuit judges Wednesday sounded inclined to uphold the dismissal of a breach of duty claim against Credit Suisse and others tied to its auditing firm, with one saying the decision to bring the stock-plunge case in New York "almost smacks of forum shopping."
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January 14, 2026
MoFo Taps Ex-FTX GC, Associate Counsel As Fintech Partners
The former top lawyer and another former in-house counsel at imploded cryptocurrency exchange FTX have joined Morrison Foerster LLP as partners in its financial services and fintech industry groups, the firm announced on Wednesday.
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January 14, 2026
$9.6M Deal Over Capital One 401(k) Forfeitures Gets 1st OK
A New York federal judge preliminarily approved Capital One Financial Corp.'s $9.6 million settlement to end a proposed class action alleging it improperly used $42.65 million in forfeited employee funds that were paid into the company's retirement plan to reduce its own contributions instead of curtailing administrative costs.
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January 14, 2026
Alternative Asset 401(k) Investing Rule Sent To OMB
The White House Office of Management and Budget is reviewing a proposed rule from the U.S. Department of Labor's employee benefits arm related to fiduciary duties involved with alternative asset investing in 401(k)s, marking the last hurdle before the regulations' release for public comment.
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January 13, 2026
Sen. Crypto Bill Tees Up DeFi, Stablecoin Yield For Key Hearing
The Senate Banking Committee's latest proposal to regulate crypto markets takes on issues like decentralized finance, stablecoin interest and customer protections not addressed in previous versions, but experts said the text is far from final and much is to be hammered out at a key hearing this week.
Expert Analysis
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OFAC Sanctions Will Intensify Amid Global Tensions In 2026
The Office of Foreign Assets Control will ramp up its targeting of companies in the private equity, venture capital, real estate and legal markets in 2026, in keeping with the aggressive foreign policy approach embraced by the Trump administration in 2025, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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5 E-Discovery Predictions For 2026 And Beyond
2026 will likely be shaped by issues ranging from artificial intelligence regulatory turbulence to potential evidence rule changes, and e-discovery professionals will need to understand how to effectively guide the responsible and defensible adoption of emerging tools, while also ensuring effective safeguards, say attorneys at Littler.
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Reinventing Bank Risk Mgmt. After 2025's Cartel Crackdown
The Trump administration's 2025 designation of certain transnational drug cartels as terrorists means that banks must adapt to a narrowing margin of error in their customer screening and transaction assessments by treating financial crime prevention as a continuous and cross-enterprise concern with national security implications, says Jack Harrington at Bradley Arant.
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Roundup
Massachusetts Banking Brief
In this Expert Analysis series, attorneys provide quarterly recaps discussing the biggest developments in Massachusetts banking regulation and policymaking.
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Reviewing Historical And Recent NYDFS Blockchain Guidance
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
An industry letter released in the fall by the New York State Department of Financial Services, together with guidance issued over the past decade, signals a heightened regulatory expectation for covered institutions regarding the use of blockchain analytics and requires review, says Nicole De Santis at Nomadis Consulting.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Courts Can Boost Access To Justice
Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Samuel A. Thumma writes that generative artificial intelligence tools offer a profound opportunity to enhance access to justice and engender public confidence in courts’ use of technology, and judges can seize this opportunity in five key ways.
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Shopify Suit Is An Early Antitrust Test Of 'Buy Now, Pay Later'
An ongoing antitrust suit in Minnesota federal court filed by Sezzle against Shopify — one of the earliest such lawsuits focused on buy now, pay later services — could play a particularly informative role in how short-term credit offerings and the broader market develop, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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2025's Most Notable State AG Activity By The Numbers
State attorneys general were active in 2025, working across party lines to address federal regulatory gaps in artificial intelligence, take action on consumer protection issues, continue antitrust enforcement and announce large settlements on behalf of their citizens, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.
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Opinion
The Case For Emulating, Not Dividing, The Ninth Circuit
Champions for improved judicial administration should reject the unfounded criticisms driving recent Senate proposals to divide the Ninth Circuit and instead seek to replicate the court's unique strengths and successes, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.
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Banking M&A Outlook Reflects Favorable Regulatory Climate
The banking mergers and acquisitions environment is starting 2026 with a rare alignment of favorable market conditions and a more permissive regulatory atmosphere, creating a clear window for banks to pursue transformative combinations and shape the competitive landscape, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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Targeted Action, Rule Tweaks Reflect 2025 AML Priority Shifts
Though 2025’s anti-money-laundering landscape was characterized not by volume of penalties but by the strategic recalibration of how illicit finance risk is handled, a series of targeted enforcement actions signaled that regulators aren't easing off the accelerator, even as they refine the rules of the road, say attorneys at MoFo.
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Series
Mass. Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q4
Among the most significant developments on the banking regulation front in Massachusetts last quarter, Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell announced her bid for reelection, and the state Division of Banks continued its fintech focus by finalizing rules implementing a new money transmitter law, say attorneys at Nutter.
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Series
Muay Thai Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Muay Thai kickboxing has taught me that in order to win, one must stick to one's game plan and adapt under pressure, just as when facing challenges by opposing counsel or judges, says Mark Schork at Feldman Shepherd.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Intentional Career-Building
A successful legal career is built through intention: understanding expectations, assessing strengths honestly and proactively seeking opportunities to grow and cultivating relationships that support your development, say Erika Drous and Hillary Mann at Morrison Foerster.
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State AG Enforcement During CFPB Gap Predicts 2026 Trends
State attorneys general responded to the decrease in Consumer Financial Protection Bureau enforcement in 2025 by stepping in to regulate consumer finance more than ever before, and the trends in rebooting CFPB investigations, cracking down on ESG and DEI initiatives, and fighting financial exploitation of homeowners will likely extend into 2026, say attorneys at Cozen O'Connor.