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Class Action
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April 22, 2026
Bayer 'Natural' Vitamin Buyer Classes Affirmed By 9th Circ.
A split Ninth Circuit on Tuesday upheld a federal district court's certification of New York and California classes of consumers who bought Bayer Healthcare multivitamin gummies that were allegedly labeled falsely as "natural," finding the company "demands more" from the plaintiffs at this stage of the litigation than certification requires.
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April 22, 2026
Workers' Attys Get $940K As $4.7M Tobacco Deal Approved
A Virginia federal judge on Wednesday awarded $940,000 in attorney fees to class counsel who secured a $4.7 million settlement with food distributor Performance Food Group over claims that it unlawfully charged tobacco users an extra fee for health benefits.
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April 22, 2026
Samba TV Must Face Wiretap, Privacy Claims In Data Suit
A California federal judge allowed invasion of privacy and Federal Wiretap Act claims against smart TV advertising company Samba TV to proceed to discovery Tuesday, ruling that a proposed class's allegations that the company collected viewing data to build viewer profiles that include their political leanings constituted actionable harm.
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April 22, 2026
Poland Spring Drinkers Renew Class Cert. Bid In False-Ad Suit
Purchasers of Poland Spring bottled water have again urged a Connecticut federal judge to certify proposed classes in their lawsuit that claims the former Nestle brand was actually bottling groundwater, setting a proposed class period end date after the judge initially denied their certification request for lacking a date.
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April 22, 2026
Fast Food Parent Co. Wants Out Of Workers' Tobacco Fee Suit
The parent company of Arby's, Dunkin' and other fast-food chains urged a Georgia federal court to toss the remaining claims in a class action alleging employees in its health plan were unlawfully charged more for using tobacco, pointing to the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 Loper Bright ruling.
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April 22, 2026
2nd Circ. Amends Revival Of Mortgage-Backed Securities Suit
The Second Circuit on Wednesday pulled back from a holding that mortgages underlying a union pension fund's mortgage-backed securities investments that tanked during the financial crisis were plan assets under federal benefits law in a proposed class action that the appellate court revived in March against Wells Fargo and Ocwen.
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April 22, 2026
Illinois Judge Sends Kalshi Gambling Suit To New York
An Illinois federal judge transferred a putative class action suit accusing Kalshi Inc. of violating Illinois gambling and consumer protection laws to New York, which has consolidated similar lawsuits claiming the platform falsely markets itself as a "prediction market," when it is actually running an illegal sports gambling operation.
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April 22, 2026
Immunity Bars Fla. Prepaid Tuition Suit, 11th Circ. Says
The Eleventh Circuit ruled that parents' proposed class action seeking damages from the Florida Prepaid College Board over failing to provide a portion of tuition for their daughters' education cannot proceed, saying their claims are barred under sovereign immunity.
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April 22, 2026
Natural Gas Co. Seeks Dismissal Of Unpaid Royalties Suit
A natural gas company urged a Colorado federal judge to dismiss a proposed class action accusing it of underpaying oil and gas royalties, arguing the complaint relies on speculation about deductions and improperly attempts to convert a handful of leases into a case covering thousands of contracts.
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April 22, 2026
Hyundai, Kia Face Claims Over Defective Charging System
A subsidiary of Hyundai Motor Group is facing a proposed class action in New Jersey federal court alleging it sold defective charging units and benefited financially from covering up the problems.
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April 22, 2026
Judge Lets AI Copyright Claims Against Databricks Proceed
A California federal judge has denied a bid from software and artificial intelligence firms Databricks and Mosaic ML to escape authors' allegations that their works were used to train large language models, saying the proposed class of writers had asserted a sufficient complaint.
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April 22, 2026
Tesla Seeks Out Of Investor Suit Over Its Self-Driving Goals
Automaker Tesla Inc. seeks to shed a proposed investor class action alleging the company overstated its success developing autonomous driving technology, arguing that it had already defeated "nearly identical allegations" in a California federal court and before the Ninth Circuit.
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April 22, 2026
Colo. Tenants Say Property Firm Charged $3M In Hidden Fees
A national property management firm was hit with a proposed class action in Colorado federal court alleging that it charges tenants nearly $3 million in unauthorized fees annually for gas, common area electricity and pest control.
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April 22, 2026
Workers Get 'One More Chance' In General Mills Bias Suit
A Georgia federal judge Wednesday warned General Mills plant workers claiming they were subjected to racist harassment that they've got one last chance to bring their proposed class action up to his standard before he tosses it for good.
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April 22, 2026
Nintendo Customers Jump In On Tariff Refund Suits
Video game giant Nintendo stands to make "windfall profits" through refunds of President Donald Trump's now-invalidated global tariff regime since those costs were actually passed on to consumers, a proposed class action in Washington federal court said, joining the chorus of customers looking to secure tariff-related refunds.
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April 22, 2026
SolarEdge Inks $55M Investor Deal Over Europe Sales Claims
A group of SolarEdge Technologies Inc. investors have asked a New York federal judge to approve a $55 million preliminary settlement they reached with the company and two of its top executives, saying it would be a "highly favorable resolution" of their claims that the company misrepresented the demand for solar energy products in Europe.
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April 22, 2026
Frontier Only Pays Flight Attendants While In Air, Suit Says
Frontier Airlines underpaid flight attendants by compensating them only for time spent in the air while requiring hours of unpaid work before and after each flight, according to a proposed class action filed in New Jersey federal court.
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April 22, 2026
Paint Co. Says Injury Firm Used Stolen Data To Solicit Clients
A paint company has asked a North Carolina federal court to boot the opposing counsel in a putative data breach class action, accusing them of finding stolen data on the dark web and using it to solicit potential plaintiffs before victims were even notified of the breach.
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April 22, 2026
Ex-Conn. Prosecutor Fights Drug Co. Bid To Appeal DQ Denial
Insurers Humana Inc. and Molina Healthcare Inc. urged a federal judge to turn down a group of generic-drug makers' request for an immediate trip to the Third Circuit, arguing the drugmakers' bid for a second chance to disqualify Connecticut's former assistant attorney general from an antitrust case was not qualified for an interlocutory appeal.
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April 22, 2026
Mass. Justices Reject Additional Rules For Punitive Damages
Massachusetts' highest court on Wednesday rejected a bid by Philip Morris USA Inc. to impose rules aimed at curbing big-dollar punitive damages awards, declining to wipe out or further reduce a verdict against the tobacco company that was already slashed from $1 billion to $56 million.
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April 22, 2026
LinkSquares Settles Sales Reps' OT Suit On 1st Day Of Trial
Legal tech company LinkSquares Inc. and inside sales representatives who claimed they were misclassified as overtime-exempt reached a settlement to avoid a jury trial that was set to begin in Boston federal court Tuesday.
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April 22, 2026
Yelp Stiffed Calif. Workers On Boot-Up Time, Suit Says
Yelp failed to pay hourly workers for the minutes they spent waiting for their work computers to boot up before they could clock in for each shift, a former worker alleged in a proposed class action in California state court.
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April 21, 2026
Capital One Clients Seek Cert. Over Info Sent To Meta, Google
Counsel for Capital One customers urged a California federal judge Tuesday to certify a class over claims their personal financial information was illegally disclosed to Meta Platforms Inc., Google LLC and others, saying the customers' claims share a common question — whether the financial giant obtained consent based on its privacy disclosures.
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April 21, 2026
Armistice Capital Head Calls COVID Stock Rise 'Fun,' 'Lucky'
Armistice Capital's founder defended his hedge fund Tuesday from claims it pump-and-dumped $250 million in Vaxart stock during the COVID-19 pandemic, telling a California federal jury that he and his fund got "lucky" and that the stock's rapid surge was "fun."
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April 21, 2026
Nourish Can't Ax Wiretap Claims In Google Data Sharing Row
An Illinois federal judge has refused to cut wiretap and negligence claims from a proposed class action accusing telehealth provider Nourish Inc. of deploying tracking tools that illegally transmitted website visitors' sensitive health information to Google, while tossing several privacy and contract allegations and rebuking the plaintiffs for filing a "press release complaint."
Editor's Picks
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NFL Seeks To End Race-Based Concussion Tests After Outcry
The NFL said Wednesday it will push to end the use of "race-norming," which assumes Black former players start with lower baseline cognitive test scores, in assessing claims for payouts from the more than $1 billion concussion settlement amid allegations that it is discriminatory.
Expert Analysis
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Written Consent Ruling May Signal Change For Telemarketing
The Fifth Circuit's ruling in Bradford v. Sovereign Pest Control is a takedown of the Federal Communications Commission's prior express written consent regulation, and because Loper Bright empowers courts to disregard agency interpretations, Telephone Consumer Protection Act litigants now have an opportunity to challenge previously settled FCC regulations, orders and interpretations, say attorneys at Manatt.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Draft Pleadings
Most law school graduates step into their first jobs without ever having drafted a complaint, answer, motion or other type of pleading, but that gap can be closed by understanding the strategy embedded in every filing, writing with clarity and purpose, and seeking feedback at every step, says Eric Yakaitis at Haug Barron.
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On ESI Control
Several recent federal court decisions have perpetuated a split over what constitutes “control” of electronically stored information — with judges divided on whether the standard should turn on a party's legal right or practical ability to obtain the information, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Insurer Lessons From 1st Wave Of GenAI Coverage Rulings
Several pending cases target the issue of whether generative AI may appropriately replace human professional decision-making, and though each case is still in discovery, the decisions thus far provide insurers with guidance on how courts may view these claims, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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The Role Of Operational Data In Tech Platform Liability Suits
As litigation becomes a de facto substitute for the regulation of major technology platforms, with plaintiffs advancing claims under product liability, public nuisance and consumer protection laws, among others, courts are evaluating how platform systems operate in practice based on large-scale operational data, say attorneys at Brattle.
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2nd Circ. Ruling Reinforces Securities Act Limits Post-Slack
The Second Circuit's recent decision to limit treatment of mandatory reverse splits as actionable sales in Knapp v. Barclays is narrow but important, offering issuers a stronger basis to challenge expansive Securities Act theories and reinforcing the post-Slack v. Pirani discipline of tracing, says Elisha Kobre at Sheppard.
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2 Discovery Rulings Break With Heppner On AI Privilege Issue
While a New York federal court’s recent ruling in U.S. v. Heppner suggests that some litigants’ communications with AI tools are discoverable, two other recent federal court decisions demonstrate that such interactions generally qualify for work-product protection under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, says Joshua Dunn at Brown Rudnick.
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What AI Analysis Can Reveal About Securities Class Actions
AI-based reviews of complaint text can enhance securities litigation analysis by enabling more systematic identification of comparable class actions and by improving the accuracy of settlement amount predictions, particularly in larger cases, say Mark Howrey and Emma Dong at Analysis Group.
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Opinion
BNP Paribas Case Could Upend Global Banking Norms
If upheld on appeal, a New York federal jury's multimillion-dollar verdict against BNP Paribas would create an unpredictable liability landscape for global financial institutions in which fully lawful services in foreign countries can give rise to civil liability in U.S. courts, in a manner contrary to federal law, say attorneys at White & Case.
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Series
Isshin-Ryu Karate Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My involvement in martial arts, specifically Isshin-ryu, which has principles rooted in the eight codes of karate, has been one of the most foundational in the development of my personality, and particularly my approach to challenges — including in my practice of law, says Kaitlyn Stone at Barnes & Thornburg.
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5 Key Questions Attys Should Ask About Statistical Analyses
Even attorneys without a background in statistics can effectively vet the general concepts of a statistical analysis by asking targeted questions and can thereby reinforce the credibility and relevance of expert testimony — or expose its weaknesses, say Katrina Schydlower and Christopher Cunio at Hunton and Kevin Cahill at FTI Consulting.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: April Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy identifies practice tips from three recent rulings involving allegations of racial discrimination in mortgage applications, health insurance networks and actual cash value losses.
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Keys To Building Defensible Psychedelic Therapy Programs
Given the rapidly evolving legal environment for psychedelic therapies and heightened liability and compliance risks facing providers, meticulous documentation, robust risk management protocols, and proactive engagement with professional organizations and insurers are essential strategies, say Kimberly Chew at Husch Blackwell and L. Alison McInnes at Mindful Health Solutions.
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How Securities Litigation Risks Materialized In The 1st Quarter
The securities litigation landscape in 2026's first quarter was defined by higher filing frequency and increased litigation exposure with rising average settlement values, meaning issuers should maximize data-driven legal defenses early to disqualify alleged fraud-revealing stock drops, say Nessim Mezrahi and Stephen Sigrist at SAR.
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Opinion
State Bars Need To Get Specific About AI Confidentiality
Lawyers need to put actual client information into artificial intelligence tools to get their full value, but they cannot confidently do so until state bars offer clear, formal authority on which plan tiers of the three most popular generative AI tools are safe to use when sharing specific client details, says attorney Nick Berk.