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California
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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
Chevron Fined $1M For Double-Counting Renewable Fuels
Chevron agreed to pay a $1.07 million penalty for double-counting renewable fuel credits, settling a lawsuit from the U.S. Department of Justice accusing it of violating the Clean Air Act.
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March 12, 2026
PayPal Execs Hit With Derivative Suit Over 2027 Forecast
PayPal executives and directors were hit with a shareholder's derivative suit accusing them of damaging the company with comments about the strong growth trajectory for its branded checkout segment that the investor said turned out to be untrue.
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March 12, 2026
Ex-Cruise Atty Shifts Gears To Become Rivian's Chief Counsel
A former deputy general counsel at the autonomous vehicle startup Cruise has joined Rivian, the electric vehicle maker based in Irvine, California, as its chief corporate counsel.
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March 12, 2026
Sheppard Welcomes Back Business Litigator In LA
Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP has rehired one of its former business litigators in Los Angeles following his stint as the legal leader of boutique family office Point Break Capital LLC.
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March 12, 2026
Calif. Bar Says Internal Docs Bolster Claims Against Exam Co.
The State Bar of California has bulked up its breach of contract and fraud suit against the administrator of its "disastrous" February 2025 bar exam, filing an amended complaint in light of information it says it learned from internal communications unearthed amid discovery.
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March 12, 2026
Food Service Co. Sued Over Unpaid Travel Time At LAX
A food service company failed to pay employees for time spent shuttling to and from an American Airlines lounge at Los Angeles International Airport, resulting in unpaid minimum and overtime wages, according to a proposed class action filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
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March 12, 2026
Feds Sue To Stop California's 'Illegal' EV Regulations
The Trump administration sued California on Thursday, alleging the Golden State over a decade ago adopted "illegal" requirements for automakers to sell more low- or zero-emission cars and trucks, saying the mandates trample on the federal government's authority to regulate vehicle fuel economy.
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March 12, 2026
Sidley Adds Cooley Corporate And Securities Pro In San Diego
Sidley Austin LLP continues expanding its California team, bringing in another Cooley LLP lawyer — this one a corporate and securities expert — as a partner in its San Diego office.
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March 11, 2026
Uber Must Fork Over Internal Docs In FTC Subscription Fight
A California magistrate judge ordered Uber to produce numerous internal documents to the Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday in litigation accusing the ride-share giant of enrolling consumers into its paid subscription service without consent, after the FTC accused the company of stonewalling discovery and producing only 72 documents totaling 179 pages.
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March 11, 2026
9th Circ. Reviews Stay Policy Amid Trump Appointees' Attack
The Ninth Circuit's chief judge said the court is reviewing how to manage its "enormous immigration docket" after several judges appointed by President Donald Trump "unilaterally disrupted" the court's policymaking with a ruling questioning the legality of the court's practice to automatically stay deportations pending a review of the merits.
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March 11, 2026
Meta, Google Rest In Bellwether Social Media Harm Trial
Meta Platforms and Google rested their defense Wednesday in a landmark California bellwether trial accusing their social media platforms of harming children, with the cases-in-chief ending in a somewhat anticlimactic manner as jurors were shown videotaped depositions after weeks of dramatic live testimony and attorney theatrics.
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March 11, 2026
Uber Argues It Doesn't Have Same Duty To Safety As Taxi Cos.
Uber can't be held liable for the alleged sexual assault of a passenger by a North Carolina driver, the company told the California federal court overseeing multidistrict litigation over similar claims, arguing that it is a technology company and therefore doesn't have the same duty to ensure passenger safety as a taxi company.
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March 11, 2026
Calif. City Must Pay Dow, PPG $6.5M Over Hidden Reports
A San Francisco judge on Wednesday ordered a California city to pay more than $6.5 million in sanctions for destroying and concealing reports in litigation against Dow Chemical and PPG Industries over dry cleaning chemicals that allegedly contaminated city sites, calling the withheld discovery an "explosive development."
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March 11, 2026
Wash. Says ICE Contractor Cannot Defend Barring Inspection
The Washington State Department of Health said a contractor's attempts to escape an evidentiary hearing demonstrated that the company could not defend its jurisdictional claims in a lawsuit accusing it of illegally restricting access to an immigration facility.
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March 11, 2026
OpenAI Wants 'Parallel' ChatGPT Murder-Suicide Suit Tossed
OpenAI has asked a California federal judge to dismiss a suit alleging ChatGPT encouraged a man to murder his mother and then commit suicide, saying the case filed by the perpetrator's estate largely mirrors a "parallel" state court action lodged earlier by the mother's estate.
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March 11, 2026
Microsoft Backs Anthropic In DOD Security Risk Label Row
Microsoft has thrown its support behind Anthropic's bid to block the Trump administration from enforcing an order designating the artificial intelligence company a supply chain risk to national security, saying an injunction would avoid disrupting the military's use of advanced AI.
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March 11, 2026
Calif. Wants Truck Cos., Feds' Clean Truck Pact Claims Nixed
California officials again asked a federal judge to gut key claims from heavy-duty truck manufacturers and the federal government challenging the 2023 deal in which the manufacturers agreed to stringent state emissions standards and stiff penalties for noncompliance in the coming years.
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March 11, 2026
Del Monte's Minority Lenders Say Ch. 11 Plan Unfair
A minority group of lenders to Del Monte Foods are objecting to the canned food giant's Chapter 11 plan disclosures, saying the disclosure is uninformative and the proposed plan hopelessly unfair to their interests.
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March 11, 2026
Fed. Circ. OKs Dropbox, Box Inc. Wins In Patent Challenges
The Federal Circuit on Wednesday declined to breathe new life into a pair of data management patents Dropbox and Box Inc. challenged at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board after being sued in federal district court for infringement.
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March 11, 2026
Bayer Sees 'Light At The End Of The Tunnel' In Roundup Suits
After more than a decade and tens of thousands of cases, a recent settlement announcement and a high-stakes high court hearing may finally give the makers of the weedkiller Roundup an off-ramp in seemingly never-ending litigation.
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March 11, 2026
3 Attys Escape Ford's 'Retaliatory' Lemon Law RICO Suit
A California federal judge has shut down Ford Motor Co.'s revised racketeering lawsuit accusing three attorneys affiliated with Knight Law Group LLP of orchestrating a massive fraudulent legal billing scheme, saying the attorneys' underlying conduct in pursuing lemon law litigation is shielded by First Amendment protections.
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March 11, 2026
Investor Says JPMorgan Enabled $328M Crypto Scam
A proposed class suit filed Tuesday in California federal court accuses JPMorgan Chase Bank NA of enabling a $328 million cryptocurrency scam at Florida-based Goliath Ventures Inc.
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March 11, 2026
Orrick Lands Gunderson Dettmer Tech Transactions Pro
Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP is boosting its transactions team with a Gunderson Dettmer Stough Villeneuve Franklin & Hachigian LLP technology transactions ace as a partner in its Silicon Valley office, the firm announced on Wednesday.
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March 11, 2026
17 States Fight 'Unprecedented' WH Admissions Data Demand
A coalition of more than a dozen states led by Massachusetts asked a federal judge Wednesday to block enforcement of a new Trump administration requirement to retroactively report detailed data on sex and race in college admissions, saying the survey was hastily implemented and rife with issues that expose schools to potential liability.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
Despite Deputy AG Remarks, DOJ Can't Sideline DC Bar
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche’s recent suggestion that the D.C. Bar would be prevented from reviewing misconduct complaints about U.S. Department of Justice attorneys runs contrary to federal statutes, local rules and decades of case law, and sends the troubling message that federal prosecutors are subject to different rules, say attorneys at HWG.
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How Cos. Should Prepare For Prop 65 Listing Of Bisphenols
California regulators are moving toward classifying all p,p'-bisphenol chemicals as causing reproductive toxicity under Proposition 65, which could require warning notices for a vast range of consumer and industrial products, and open the floodgates to private litigation — so companies should proactively review their suppy chains, says Gregory Berlin at Alston & Bird.
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Rule Amendments Pave Path For A Privilege Claim 'Offensive'
Litigators should consider leveraging forthcoming amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which will require early negotiations of privilege-related discovery claims, by taking an offensive posture toward privilege logs at the outset of discovery, says David Ben-Meir at Ben-Meir Law.
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Series
My Miniature Livestock Farm Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Raising miniature livestock on my farm, where I am fully present with the animals, is an almost meditative time that allows me to return to work invigorated, ready to juggle numerous responsibilities and motivated to tackle hard issues in new ways, says Ted Kobus at BakerHostetler.
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The Future Of Gen AI Training Amid Reddit Data Scraping Suit
Reddit's lawsuit against Perplexity AI is not framed as a classic copyright infringement fight, demonstrating that even when companies avoid fair use claims, the path by which training data is obtained is legally consequential, say attorneys at Troutman Pepper.
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Litigation Funding Could Create Ethics Issues For Attorneys
A litigation investor’s recent complaint claiming a New York mass torts lawyer effectively ran a Ponzi scheme illustrates how litigation funding arrangements can subject attorneys to legal ethics dilemmas and potential liability, so engagement letters must have very clear terms, says Matthew Feinberg at Goldberg Segalla.
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Calif. Species Protections Will Increase Compliance Burdens
California's recently enacted A.B. 1319 automatically protects species when the federal government rolls back its own protections — which could mean an onslaught of state-level compliance mandates for the regulated community that come with no advance notice or public hearings, says attorney David Smith.
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What To Mull After 9th Circ. Ruling On NLRB Constitutionality
The Ninth Circuit recently rejected three constitutional attacks on the National Labor Relations Board in NLRB v. North Mountain Foothills Apartments, leaving open a debate about what remedies the NLRB can award employees and creating a circuit split that could foretell a U.S. Supreme Court resolution, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: November Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses five recent rulings and identifies practice tips from cases involving claims related to oil and gas royalty payments, consumer fraud, life insurance, automobile insurance, and securities violations.
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On Dynamic Databases
Several recent federal court decisions illustrate how parties continue to grapple with the discovery of data in dynamic databases, so counsel involved in these disputes must consider how structured data should be produced consistent with the requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Assessing The SEC's Changing Approach To NFT Regulation
Early U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission actions on nonfungible tokens pushed for broad regulation, but subsequent court decisions — including a recent California federal court ruling in Adonis Real v. Yuga Labs — and SEC commissioners' statements have narrowed the regulatory focus toward a more fact-specific approach, say attorneys at Wilson Elser.
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Courts Stay Consistent In 'Period Of Restoration' Rulings
Three recent rulings centering on the period of restoration in lost business income claims followed the same themes in interpreting this infrequently litigated, but highly consequential, provision of first-party property and time element insurance coverage, say attorneys at Zelle.
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Revisiting Jury Trial Right May Upend State Regulatory Power
Justice Neil Gorsuch’s recent use of a denial of certiorari to call for the U.S. Supreme Court to revisit whether the Seventh Amendment jury trial right extends to states, building off last year's Jarkesy ruling, could foretell a profound change in state regulators' ability to enforce penalties against regulated companies, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Legal Guardrails For AI Tools In The Hiring Process
Although artificial intelligence can help close the gaps that bad actors exploit in modern recruiting, its precision also makes it subject to tighter scrutiny, meaning new regulatory regimes should be top of mind for U.S.-centric employers exploring fraud-focused AI-enabled tools, say attorneys at Ogletree.
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Series
Building With Lego Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Building with Lego has taught me to follow directions and adapt to unexpected challenges, and in pairing discipline with imagination, allows me to stay grounded while finding new ways to make complex deals come together, says Paul Levin at Venable.