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									October 24, 2025
									Edelson Looks To Drop Claims Against Ex-Girardi Keese AttysEdelson PC has signaled plans to drop civil claims it lodged against two former Girardi Keese attorneys over Tom Girardi's theft of millions from clients, but the Illinois federal judge handling the case said Friday that he wants to discuss the firm's filing. 
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									October 24, 2025
									Levi Strauss Sues Rival 7 For All Mankind Over Pocket Tab TMLevi Strauss has sued rival apparel giant Seven For All Mankind and its parent company Delta Galil USA in California federal court for alleged trademark infringement for copying a small, distinct "tab" design sewn into back pockets of denim jeans and other apparel. 
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									October 24, 2025
									Calif. Groups Push Billionaire Tax To Offset Federal CutsA tax on the wealthiest Californians is once again on the table in the nation's largest state, this time via a proposal for a voter referendum. 
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									October 24, 2025
									Tricida Investors Win OK Of $14.2M Deal Over Kidney DrugA California federal judge on Thursday granted final approval to a $14.2 million settlement that ends a class action against Tricida Inc. founder Gerrit Klaerner claiming he and the company misled investors on the approval chances for their new kidney disease drug, including nearly $4 million for plaintiffs' counsel. 
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									October 24, 2025
									'Rehashed' Arg Sinks Wholesaler Bid To Revive Antitrust SuitA California federal judge refused Thursday to rethink permanently dismissing a retail wholesaler's antitrust lawsuit against a rival, reiterating that customers could easily end allegedly exclusive arrangements, and declined to consider an asserted change in Ninth Circuit law because that change was raised without observing government shutdown procedures. 
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									October 24, 2025
									Calif. Justices Reject Plan To Wipe Atty Discipline RecordsCalifornia's high court has rejected a proposal that would have imposed a one-time automatic expungement of attorney discipline records in what the state bar hoped would be a "means of redressing historical racial disparities in discipline." 
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									October 24, 2025
									Judge Backs DOI, Calif. Tribe In $21M Waste Lease DisputeA federal judge has given a quick win to the U.S. Department of the Interior and a California tribe in a challenge by a waste management company over a decision to cancel its 25-year project lease, saying the determination was not arbitrary or capricious. 
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									October 24, 2025
									Popular TaxProf Blog Returns After ShutdownAfter Typepad's decision to shut down last month, the Association of American Law Schools is giving new life to one of the defunct hosted blogging platform's popular legal blogs. 
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									October 24, 2025
									Federal Circuit Backs PTAB's Ax Of Charging PatentThe Federal Circuit on Friday refused to revive claims in a charging patent that Apple had challenged at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, affirming the board's findings that the claims were invalid. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Sanctions Threats Mount For Atty Who Ignored Citation OrderAn attorney who ignored a show cause order earlier this summer after his co-counsel included a fake case citation in a filing for their then-client, a former in-house attorney for Workday Inc., told a San Francisco federal judge Thursday that his failure to respond was a "mistake," in response to a renewed show cause order. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Quinn Emanuel Loses Bid To Get $1.7M Bill From Sheriff CaseA California state appeals court Thursday shot down Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP's effort to recover a more than $1.7 million bill for representing a former Los Angeles County sheriff in a suit county supervisors lodged, finding that the sheriff lacked authority to retain the firm. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Highest Bench Doesn't Mean Your Kids Listen, Jackson JokesJustice Ketanji Brown Jackson may have overcome numerous challenges and inked her name into history as the nation's first Black woman to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court, but that still doesn't mean her daughters take her advice, she told a crowd Thursday at California State University Dominguez Hills. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Top Calif. Judge Warns Attys On AI, Eyes Antitrust ChangesSpeaking at an antitrust law conference Thursday, California Supreme Court Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero warned Golden State lawyers to use artificial intelligence "cautiously and not cut any corners," and talked about "important work" by the California Law Revision Commission that could result in the state's antitrust law being "untethered" from federal law. 
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									October 23, 2025
									EV-Maker Rivian Will Pay $250M To End Investors' Fraud SuitRivian Automotive Inc. investors asked a California federal judge Thursday to greenlight a $250 million settlement resolving their claims that the company underpriced its electric vehicles and misrepresented its profitability ahead of a blockbuster 2021 initial public offering, just one day before a summary judgment hearing. 
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									October 23, 2025
									OpenAI Reduced Suicide Safety Before Teen Died, Parents SayOpenAI decided to remove some longstanding suicide prevention protocols and cut short its safety testing in the months before a California teenager died by suicide, according to an updated version of the wrongful death suit filed by the teen's parents in San Francisco County Superior Court. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Ex-Amazon Coder Says She's Turned Life Around Since HackA former Amazon.com Inc. coder who exposed the personal data of nearly 100 million people should be sent to prison, the U.S. government said in a new Seattle federal court filing that seeks a seven-year sentence for her. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Debt Co. Owner Says CFPB Erred With $5.8M Restitution BidA U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau bid for $5.8 million in restitution against a manager of a now-shuttered debt relief company should be denied because it does not take into account refunds that customers have already received, a California federal judge has been told. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Adidas Hid Ye's Hate Speech From Investors, 9th Circ. ToldAdidas investors urged the Ninth Circuit on Thursday to revive allegations that the sportswear giant failed to disclose the risks of relying on the rapper Ye for a multibillion-dollar fashion partnership, arguing that executives hid evidence of his "raging" antisemitism, like his proposal for a swastika shoe design. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Google Rips $425M Privacy Verdict As Users Seek $2.4B MoreA class of some 98 million cellphone users who won a $425 million jury verdict finding that Google unlawfully collected their information asked a California federal judge to make the tech giant disgorge another $2.36 billion, while Google asked the court to dismantle the class and vacate the verdict. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Ex-SVB Top Brass Can't Ditch FDIC Suit Over 2023 CollapseSilicon Valley Bank's former CEO and several other past members of the bank's top brass must face a suit from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. accusing them of mismanagement that led to the bank's costly 2023 failure, a California federal judge has ruled. 
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									October 23, 2025
									9th Circ. Calls For Evidence Hearing Over ICE Facility AccessThe Ninth Circuit on Thursday partially remanded the Washington State Department of Health's lawsuit accusing GEO Group of illegally blocking access to an immigration facility for safety inspections, calling for an evidentiary hearing into how the refusal for access played out. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Calif. Injury Atty Convicted Of Manslaughter Over DUI CrashA Southern California personal injury attorney has been convicted of felony vehicular manslaughter for driving while intoxicated and causing a 2019 freeway collision that resulted in the death of a U.S. Postal Service big rig driver, according to Orange County prosecutors. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Calif. Tribe Joins Suit Seeking To Halt Barred Owl Culling PlanAn Oregon federal judge has let the Yurok Tribe intervene in an animal advocacy group's lawsuit seeking to block the U.S. government from killing thousands of protected barred owls as a means to save the threatened northern spotted owl, saying the tribe has a specific interest in the action. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Ex-Intel Workers Seek High Court Review Of 401(k) SuitFormer Intel employees urged the U.S. Supreme Court to review the dismissal of their suit claiming their retirement savings were pushed into subpar investment options, saying the Ninth Circuit imposed too strict a standard by requiring them to identify similar funds for comparison. 
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									October 23, 2025
									SEC Being Misled In CBD Fraud Fight, CEO ClaimsThe U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has "unwittingly" taken the side of a former partner with a terminated licensing agreement, a pharmaceutical CEO told a California federal court this week, asking for summary judgment on the SEC's core claims that he defrauded investors. 
Expert Analysis
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								IPO Suit Reinforces Strict Section 11 Tracing Requirement  A California federal court's recent dismissal of an investor class action against Allbirds in connection with the company's initial public offering cites the U.S. Supreme Court's 2023 Slack v. Pirani decision, reinforcing the firm tracing requirement for Section 11 plaintiffs — even at the pleading stage, say attorneys at Paul Weiss. 
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								What Novel NIL Suit Reveals About College Sports Landscape  A first-of-its-kind name, image and likeness lawsuit — recently filed in Wisconsin state court by the University of Wisconsin-Madison against the University of Miami — highlights new challenges and risks following the NCAA’s landmark agreement to allow schools to make NIL deals and share revenue with student-athletes, say attorneys at O'Melveny. 
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								Series Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Time Management-media.jpg)  Law students typically have weeks or months to prepare for any given deadline, but the unpredictability of practicing in the real world means that lawyers must become time-management pros, ready to adapt to scheduling conflicts and unexpected assignments at any given moment, says David Thomas at Honigman. 
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								Calif. Bill May Shake Up Healthcare Investment Landscape  If signed by the governor, newly passed California legislation would significantly expand the Office of Health Care Affordability's oversight of private equity and hedge fund investments in healthcare companies and management services organizations, and raise several questions about companies' data confidentiality and filing burdens, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray. 
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								Privacy Policy Lessons After Google App Data Verdict.jpg)  In Rodriguez v. Google, a California federal jury recently found that Google unlawfully invaded app users' privacy by collecting, using and disclosing pseudonymized data, highlighting the complex interplay between nonpersonalized data and customers' understanding of privacy policy choices, says Beth Waller at Woods Rogers. 
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								How Hyperlinks Are Changing E-Discovery Responsibilities  A recent e-discovery dispute over hyperlinked data in Hubbard v. Crow shows how courts have increasingly broadened the definition of control to account for cloud-based evidence, and why organizations must rethink preservation practices to avoid spoliation risks, says Bree Murphy at Exterro. 
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								Recent Precedent May Aid In Defending Ad Tech Class Actions  An emergent line of appellate court precedent regarding the indecipherability of anonymized advertising technology transmissions can be used as a powerful tool to counteract the explosion of advertising technology class actions under myriad statutory theories, say attorneys at Duane Morris. 
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								Earned Wage Access Providers Face State Law Labyrinth  At least 12 states have established laws or rules regulating services that allow employees to access earned wages before payday, with more laws potentially to follow suit, creating an evolving state licensing maze even for fintech providers that partner with banks, say attorneys at Venable. 
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								Sales And Use Tax Strategies For Renewables After OBBBA  With the One Big Beautiful Bill Act sharply curtailing federal tax incentives for solar and wind projects, it is vital for developers to carefully manage state and local sales and use tax exposures through early planning and careful contract structuring, say advisers at KPMG. 
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								9th Circ. Ruling Leaves SEC Gag Rule Open To Future Attacks  Though the Ninth Circuit's recent ruling in Powell v. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission leaves the SEC's no-admit, no-deny rule intact, it could provide some fodder for litigants who wish to criticize the commission's activities either before or after settling with the commission, says Jonathan Richman at Brown Rudnick. 
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								Series Writing Musicals Makes Me A Better Lawyer  My experiences with writing musicals and practicing law have shown that the building blocks for both endeavors are one and the same, because drama is necessary for the law to exist, says Addison O’Donnell at LOIS Law. 
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								Diverging FAA Preemption Rulings Underscore Role Of Venue  Two recent rulings evaluating Federal Arbitration Act preemption of state laws — one from the California Supreme Court, upholding the state law, and another from a New York federal court, upholding the arbitration agreement — demonstrate why venue should be a key consideration when seeking to enforce arbitration clauses, say attorneys at Hollingsworth. 
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								A Reminder Of The Limits Of The SEC's Crypto Thaw  As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's regulatory thaw has opened up new possibilities for tokenization projects, the Ninth Circuit's recent decision in SEC v. Barry that certain fractional interests are investment contracts, and thus securities, illustrates that guardrails remain via the Howey test, say attorneys at Skadden. 
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								What Prop 65 Ruling Means For Cosmetics, Personal Care Biz  A California federal court's recent decision on Proposition 65 warnings is good news for companies in the cosmetics and personal care space, as it will relieve businesses of the need to apply such warnings to products containing titanium dioxide and likely stop a wave of pending failure-to-warn litigation, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis. 
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								Series Adapting To Private Practice: From Va. AUSA To Mid-Law  Returning to the firm where I began my career after seven years as an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia has been complex, nuanced and rewarding, and I’ve learned that the pursuit of justice remains the constant, even as the mindset and client change, says Kristin Johnson at Woods Rogers.