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February 24, 2026
Campbell's Misclassifies Its Distribution Workers, Court Told
The Campbell's Co. and its subsidiaries Snyder's-Lance Inc. and Pepperidge Farm Inc. misclassified their food distribution workers as independent contractors, leading to wage and hour violations including unpaid minimum wage and overtime, San Diego's city attorney told a California state court.
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February 24, 2026
Supreme Court Asked To Reinstate Arizona Voter ID Rules
Arizona's top legislative leaders and the Republican National Committee are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse a Ninth Circuit decision that partially invalidated certain provisions of two state laws that required proof of citizenship to vote by mail and in presidential elections.
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February 24, 2026
Human Resources Co., Recruiters Settle OT Suit For $285K
A payroll and human resources company will pay $285,000 to resolve a collective action alleging it stiffed recruiters on overtime wages, according to a filing in California federal court.
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February 24, 2026
Instagrammer Drops Indemnification Suit Against Ex-Co.
Instagram celebrity Dan Bilzerian is dropping a suit against the company he used to run that sought indemnification for a defamation suit, stipulating to the dismissal of the case without prejudice.
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February 24, 2026
Calif. Firm Says Texas Immunity Law Blocks $11M Fee Suit
A California law firm is urging an Austin federal judge to dismiss claims that it participated in unlawfully withholding $11 million in attorney fees from a Texas law firm that allegedly helped secure a nine-figure verdict against Walmart, arguing a Texas immunity law protects the Golden State firm from being held liable to non-clients.
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February 24, 2026
Freshfields Bicoastal M&A Tech Duo Move To Covington
Covington & Burling LLP has strengthened its mergers and acquisitions group on both coasts with the additions of two former Freshfields LLP tech M&A partners.
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February 24, 2026
Mintz Lands IP Pro From Wilson Sonsini In San Francisco
Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC. announced Tuesday that it has added a patent litigation attorney who was at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati PC for more than two decades to bolster its intellectual property division.
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February 24, 2026
9th Circ. Sends Meth Sentence Back Over Jury Instruction
The Ninth Circuit has ruled that a man in Hawaii should be resentenced on his drug possession charge after a panel found that a jury was given an erroneous instruction that affected the outcome of his case.
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February 24, 2026
Medtronic's Diabetes Spinoff MiniMed Seeks $742M IPO
Diabetes-focused MiniMed Group on Tuesday launched plans to go public by raising an estimated $742 million in an initial public offering, a move that is part of a previously announced plan by parent company Medtronic to spin its diabetes business into an independent public company.
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February 24, 2026
Tesla Gets Worker's Retaliation Suit Kicked To Arbitration
A worker will have to arbitrate his claims that Tesla harassed him into resigning for complaining about alleged racial discrimination at the electric vehicle maker's Fremont, California, factory, a federal judge ruled, rejecting his argument that an arbitration pact he signed wasn't enforceable.
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February 24, 2026
Paramount Revises WBD Offer As Netflix Bid War Goes On
Paramount Skydance said Tuesday it has submitted a revised proposal to purchase Warner Bros. Discovery, with WBD stating that the new bid could represent a "superior proposal" to its existing merger agreement with Netflix.
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February 24, 2026
Wells Fargo Denies Involvement In Alleged Fla. EB-5 Fraud
Wells Fargo urged a Florida federal court to dismiss it from a proposed class action from EB-5 investors who say the bank facilitated a fraudulent real estate project in Orlando, Florida, arguing the complaint is an untimely "misguided attempt to saddle Wells Fargo with liability."
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February 23, 2026
'Wackadoo': 9th Circ. Awarding Stays 'Like Candy,' Judge Says
The Ninth Circuit is defying U.S. Supreme Court precedent and supersizing its immigration docket by freely awarding lengthy deportation reprieves, according to a new dissent that described a "Wackadoo" realm where noncitizens can safely await "the next Democrat administration."
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February 23, 2026
Meta Can't Use Calif. Law To Ax Ill. Biometric Privacy Dispute
The protections offered by California's data privacy law are an inferior substitute for those under Illinois' biometric privacy law, an Illinois federal judge found, refusing to allow Meta to escape a proposed class action accusing it of improperly storing Messenger and Messenger Kids users' facial geometries.
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February 23, 2026
YouTube VP Says 5-6 Hours Daily 'Very Good' For His Kids
A YouTube vice president testified Monday in a California bellwether trial over allegations that the platform and Instagram harm children, denying that YouTube was designed to be addictive and saying he'd allowed his children to watch five to six hours a day and that it had been "very good" for them.
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February 23, 2026
Meta Socials 'Druggify' Teen Preoccupations, NM Jury Hears
An addiction expert testified Monday in the New Mexico attorney general's mental health trial against Facebook and Instagram that teens are unusually vulnerable to social media addiction because of how it "druggifies social validation."
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February 23, 2026
Brie, Franco Can't Duck Claims That 'Together' Is a 'Rip-Off'
A California federal judge has refused to dismiss StudioFest's lawsuit alleging the horror film "Together," starring real-life spouses Alison Brie and Dave Franco, is a "blatant rip-off" of a screenplay the production company pitched to the couple's agents in 2020, saying the complaint plausibly alleges "substantial similarities" between the two works.
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February 23, 2026
User Fights To Keep Nvidia 'Decline All' Tracking Suit Alive
Artificial intelligence chipmaker Nvidia cannot escape a proposed privacy class action alleging that it secretly installed third-party tracking cookies even after users clicked "decline all" on its website banner, a user has told a California federal judge.
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February 23, 2026
Chemical Co. PQ Contaminated Port Of Tacoma, Suit Says
The Port of Tacoma has sued Pennsylvania chemical company PQ LLC for millions of dollars in cleanup costs, going to Washington federal court to hold the business liable for contamination from a now-shuttered manufacturing and processing plant.
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February 23, 2026
Fed Defends Ex-Wells Fargo Exec's Golden Parachute Denial
The Federal Reserve urged a California federal court to uphold its denial of a former Wells Fargo anti-money laundering executive's bid for a "golden parachute" payout of over $450,000, arguing he was found responsible for significant problems that led to a consent order for the bank a decade ago.
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February 23, 2026
Capital One Fights Consumers' Sanction Bid In Privacy Suit
Capital One urged a California federal judge Monday to reject customers' sanctions bid for allegedly failing to provide sufficient discovery in privacy litigation, saying the bank provided requested discovery and the information consumers now seek relates to a different factual and legal theory that they "pivoted" to after discovery closed.
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February 23, 2026
Corcept Mischaracterized Drug Approval Odds, Investor Says
Pharmaceutical company Corcept Therapeutics Inc. faces a proposed investor class action alleging it overstated approval prospects for a Cushing's syndrome drug candidate, hurting investors when its trading prices halved after it disclosed the U.S. Food and Drug Administration wouldn't accept the approval bid.
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February 23, 2026
AARP's $12.5M Privacy Deal OK'd, But Attys Get Below Bid
A California federal judge on Friday granted final approval to AARP's $12.5 million settlement with 2.5 million website users in a Video Privacy Protection Act suit over the use of Meta tracking pixels, but slashed $625,000 off the plaintiffs' attorney fee bid, saying the result was fair but not extraordinary.
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February 23, 2026
Calif. Cities Sue Feds Over Grant Conditions Tied To DEI
Several cities and counties in California and Oregon have sued the federal government in California federal court, alleging the Trump administration is conditioning federal grants on recipients abandoning the promotion of diversity, equity and inclusion or "gender ideology," which could leave them with the untenable choice of forgoing critical funds.
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February 23, 2026
Bernstein Litowitz To Lead Fortinet Investors' Suit
Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP will lead a consolidated securities suit accusing cybersecurity company Fortinet of overstating an expected revenue boost related to customer software upgrades.
Expert Analysis
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And Now A Word From The Panel: MDL Year In Review
2025 was a roller coaster for the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation, with the panel canceling one hearing session due to the absence of new MDL petitions, yet also issuing rulings on more new MDL petitions than in 2024 — making it clear that MDLs are still thriving, says Alan Rothman at Sidley Austin.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: January Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses five rulings from October and November, and identifies practice tips from cases involving consumer fraud, oil and gas leases, toxic torts, and wage and hour issues.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Judicial Use Informs Guardrails
U.S. Magistrate Judge Maritza Dominguez Braswell at the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado discusses why having a sense of how generative AI tools behave, where they add value, where they introduce risk and how they are reshaping the practice of law is key for today's judges.
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Lessons From EdTech Provider's Data Breach Settlements
Education technology company Illuminate Education's recent settlements with three states and the Federal Trade Commission over state privacy law claims following a student data breach are some of the first of their kind, suggesting a shift in enforcement focus to how companies handle student data and highlighting the potential for coordinated enforcement actions, say attorneys at Wilson Sonsini.
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Key Sectors, Antitrust Risks In Pricing Algorithm Litigation
Algorithmic pricing lawsuits have proliferated in rental housing, hotels, health insurance and equipment rental industries, and companies should consider emerging risk factors when implementing business strategies this year, say attorneys at Hunton.
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What A Calif. Mileage Tax Would Mean For Employers
California is considering implementing a mileage tax that would likely trigger existing state laws requiring employers to reimburse employees for work-related driving, creating a new mandatory business expense with significant bottom-line implications for employers, says Eric Fox at Ogletree.
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Cybersecurity Must Remain Financial Sector's Focus In 2026
In 2026, financial institutions face a wave of more prescriptive cybersecurity legal requirements demanding clearer governance, faster incident reporting, and stronger oversight of third-party and AI-driven risks, making it crucial to understand these issues before they materialize into crises, say attorneys at Sidley.
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How 2025 Recalibrated Fair Use For The AI Era
Although the Second Circuit's decision last year in Romanova v. Amilus Inc. did not involve artificial intelligence, its formulation of relevant fair use factors provides a useful guide for lower courts examining AI cases in 2026, demanding close attention from legal practitioners on both sides of these disputes, say attorneys at Cleary.
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2026 Int'l Arbitration Trends: Next Steps In Age Of AI, Crypto
Parties' use of artificial intelligence and blockchain technologies will continue in 2026, and international arbitrators will be called upon to evolve by building expertise in blockchain functionality, cryptography and decentralized finance protocols, and understanding the power and limitations of large language models, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: 5 Tips From Ex-SEC Unit Chief
My move to private practice has reaffirmed my belief in the value of adaptability, collaboration and strategic thinking — qualities that are essential not only for successful client outcomes, but also for sustained professional satisfaction, says Dabney O’Riordan at Fried Frank.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Start A Law Firm
Launching and sustaining a law firm requires skills most law schools don't teach, but every lawyer should understand a few core principles that can make the leap calculated rather than reckless, says Sam Katz at Athlaw.
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Justices' Med Mal Ruling May Hurt Federal Anti-SLAPP Suits
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Berk v. Choy restricts the application of certain state laws in diversity actions in federal court — and while the ruling concerned affidavit requirements in medical malpractice suits, it may also affect the use of anti-SLAPP statutes in federal litigation, says Travis Chance at Brownstein Hyatt.
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Fed. Circ. Patent Decisions In 2025: An Empirical Review
In 2025, the Federal Circuit's increased output was not enough to keep up with its ever-growing patent case load, and patent owners and applicants fared poorly overall as the court's affirmance rate fell, says Dan Bagatell at Perkins Coie.
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Key False Claims Act Trends From The Last Year
The False Claims Act remains a powerful enforcement tool after some record verdicts and settlements in 2025, and while traditional fraud areas remain a priority, new initiatives are raising questions about its expanding application, says Veronica Nannis at Joseph Greenwald.
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Series
Hosting Exchange Students Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Opening my home to foreign exchange students makes me a better lawyer not just because prioritizing visiting high schoolers forces me to hone my organization and time management skills but also because sharing the study-abroad experience with newcomers and locals reconnects me to my community, says Alison Lippa at Nicolaides Fink.