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Class Action
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February 12, 2026
Texas Ambulance Co. Faces Suit Over 'Safety Naps' Deduction
An ambulance company required off-the-clock work, automatically deducted time for "safety naps" during employees' 24-hour shifts and failed to include bonuses in overtime calculations, according to a proposed collective action filed in Texas federal court Thursday.
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February 12, 2026
Attys Win $626K In Fees In Mich. City Retiree Benefits Suit
A Michigan federal judge awarded $626,777.80 in attorney fees and costs to class counsel who secured expanded pension and healthcare benefits for retired Pontiac city employees, trimming $100,000 from the request for unsupported billing entries.
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February 12, 2026
Home Services Platform Angi Hit With TCPA Suit
Telemarketers with home services platform Angi Inc. are violating the Telephone Consumer Protection Act by contacting people whose phone numbers are on the national Do Not Call Registry to advertise its products and services, according to a proposed class action filed Tuesday in Colorado federal court.
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February 12, 2026
Roblox Wins Effort To Arbitrate Kids' Data Privacy Suit
Roblox can arbitrate a proposed class action alleging that it secretly harvests users' personal data, a California federal judge ruled Wednesday, finding that the users received conspicuous notice of the fact that clicking "Sign Up" or "Continue" on its platform binds them to the arbitration clause contained in Roblox's terms of use.
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February 12, 2026
Maxeon Dodges Investor Suit Over Financial Disclosures
Maxeon Solar Technologies has escaped a shareholder class action accusing it of misleading investors about its liquidity issues, with a California federal judge ruling that none of the challenged statements in the suit were shown to be false or misleading.
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February 12, 2026
Inventors Push For Discovery On Patent Quality Program
A Washington, D.C., federal judge should ignore the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's attempt to avoid reopening discovery into whether it covertly revived a now-defunct program for flagging "sensitive" patent applications for extra review, according to two inventors who have filed a proposed class action.
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February 12, 2026
Ballard Spahr Enters San Francisco With Benesch Litigators
Ballard Spahr LLP announced Thursday that it has launched a San Francisco office with a four-member litigation team who came aboard from Benesch Friedlander Coplan & Aronoff LLP.
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February 12, 2026
Regeneron, Samsung Bioepis Settle Eye Med Patent Claims
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Samsung Bioepis Co. Ltd. have told a West Virginia federal court they reached an agreement to end patent infringement claims brought by Regeneron over a biosimilar of its eye medication Eylea.
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February 12, 2026
Telehealth Co. Misclassified Employees, Ex-Physician Says
A telehealth platform for weight management misclassified healthcare providers as independent contractors, denying them full wages and expense reimbursements, a former physician alleged in a proposed class and collective action filed in California federal court.
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February 12, 2026
Judge Boasberg Orders DHS To Return Deported Venezuelans
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg instructed the Trump administration Thursday to facilitate the return of Venezuelan nationals it deported in March under the Alien Enemies Act in violation of his earlier order barring their removal so they can pursue their habeas claims.
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February 12, 2026
2nd Circ. Seems Wary Of Restarting Norfolk Derailment Suit
The Second Circuit appeared skeptical Thursday of investors' bid to revive a proposed class action against Norfolk Southern alleging that the company botched disclosures about how an efficiency plan might cause derailments, as judges seemed open to a lower court's interpretation that railroad statements about safety were puffery.
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February 12, 2026
Staffing Co. Recruiters Not OT-Exempt, Judge Rules
TEKsystems Inc. recruiters performed routine sales production work that did not rise to the level of administrative work necessary to be exempt from overtime under the Fair Labor Standards Act, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled.
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February 11, 2026
9th Circ. Partly Reverses Ford's 'Death Wobble' Class Cert.
The Ninth Circuit Wednesday partly remanded a class certification ruling in litigation brought by Ford buyers alleging some of the auto giant's pickup trucks have a steering defect known as the "death wobble," saying the record shows that the claimed defect manifested at varying rates in different model years.
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February 11, 2026
Epstein Survivor Can Pursue Claims BofA 'Turned A Blind Eye'
A survivor of Jeffrey Epstein's sex-trafficking enterprise has adequately alleged Bank of America "turned a blind eye" to a trove of public information that the disgraced financier was a serial sexual abuser while monetarily benefiting from the scheme, a Manhattan federal judge said Wednesday.
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February 11, 2026
PNC Customer's Improper Withdrawal Claims Can Proceed
A Maryland federal judge has ruled that a PNC Bank customer has standing to challenge the bank's withdrawal of money from his checking account to cover a home-equity credit line, but dismissed his individual damages claim and asked for more briefing on his bid for class certification.
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February 11, 2026
Renters Can't Block RealPage, Equity Residential Subpoenas
A Tennessee federal judge has refused to quash subpoenas issued by property management software company RealPage Inc. and property owner Equity Residential in multidistrict litigation that accuses landlords of using RealPage software to fix rental prices.
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February 11, 2026
7th Circ. May Seek Ill. Justices' Input In Hyundai BIPA Row
A Seventh Circuit panel on Wednesday appeared skeptical about whether Hyundai Motor America had any control over biometric data captured by cameras installed in certain Hyundai vehicles and how a proposed class of drivers was injured under Illinois' biometric privacy law, but one judge suggested the case presents a question the state's top court may need to answer.
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February 11, 2026
Instagram CEO Denies Users Can Be 'Addicted' To Platform
Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri testified Wednesday in front of a California state jury considering claims his company and Google's YouTube harm children's mental health, saying he does not believe a user can become "addicted" to the platform in a clinical sense despite having used the term himself in the past.
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February 11, 2026
'The Shoe Is On The Other Foot': Judge Needles Meta In MDL
A California federal judge presiding over social media addiction multidistrict litigation Wednesday criticized Meta's bid to push newly filed arbitration demands into court, saying she doesn't have jurisdiction over those claims and noting "big companies" are always insisting on arbitration, but "when they don't like the fact that they're arbitrating, they complain about it."
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February 11, 2026
Amazon Says $309M Returns Deal At Risk If Detail Unsealed
Amazon urged a Seattle federal judge to keep secret a provision of a recently announced $309 million settlement agreement that would resolve claims the e-commerce giant shorted consumers on refunds for returned goods, arguing that revealing the details could torpedo the deal.
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February 11, 2026
GM Execs Ditch Investors' Cruise AV Securities Fraud Suit
A Michigan federal judge on Wednesday tossed the remaining claims against General Motors and its top executives in a proposed securities fraud class action alleging its self-driving car unit Cruise LLC misrepresented the technological capabilities and commercial readiness of its autonomous vehicles.
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February 11, 2026
Judge Seeks Clarity On OpenAI's 'Project Giraffe' For IP Suit
A New York federal magistrate judge on Wednesday ordered OpenAI to respond to questions about its "Project Giraffe," which plaintiffs suing over the company's use of copyrighted material in ChatGPT training describe as an effort to identify and block infringing outputs.
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February 11, 2026
Mobile Home Orgs Can't Bring Class Suit, Fla. Panel Says
A Florida panel ruled in a Wednesday split decision that two mobile homeowners' associations can't combine to bring one class action alleging unreasonable rent increases, citing state court rules that allow only one association to bring claims on behalf of its own members.
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February 11, 2026
9th Circ. Mulls DMCA Claim Against Microsoft And OpenAI
A group of software developers Wednesday urged the Ninth Circuit to revive their claim that Microsoft, GitHub and OpenAI violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act by stripping copyright management information from the developers' open source code, which the companies then used to develop the artificial intelligence tools for Microsoft's Copilot software.
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February 11, 2026
Luxottica Franchisee Gets Another Shot At Antitrust Claims
An Ohio federal judge partially reversed course Wednesday after previously permanently tossing a Luxottica franchisee's antitrust claims, concluding that an attempt to amend them wouldn't be futile because it might be possible to show that allegedly suppressed insurance reimbursement rates were an ongoing violation that resets the statute of limitations.
Expert Analysis
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4 Steps To Designing Effective Survey Samples For Trial
The Federal Trade Commission's recent move to exclude a defense expert's survey in FTC v. Amazon on the basis of flaws in the survey sample design highlights that ensuring survey evidence inclusion at trial requires following a road map for effective survey sample design, say consultants at Compass Lexecon.
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Junior Attys Must Beware Of 5 Common Legal Brief Mistakes
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Junior law firm associates must be careful to avoid five common pitfalls when drafting legal briefs — from including every possible argument to not developing a theme — to build the reputation of a sought-after litigator, says James Argionis at Cozen O'Connor.
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Opinion
State AGs, Not Local Officials, Should Lead Public Litigation
Local governments’ public nuisance lawsuits can raise constitutional and jurisdictional challenges, reinforcing the principle that state attorneys general — not municipalities — are best positioned to litigate on behalf of citizens when it is warranted, says former Utah Attorney General John Swallow.
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Montana Federal Ruling Takes Broad View Of 'Related Claims'
A Montana federal court recently took a broad view of related claims, ruling that claims brought by different plaintiffs in different states alleging different legal theories were nevertheless under a directors and officers insurance policy, illustrating the range of interpretations courts may give these clauses, say attorneys at Hunton.
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Lessons As Joint Employer Suits Shift From Rare To Routine
Joint employer allegations now appear so frequently that employers should treat them as part of the ordinary risk landscape, and several recent decisions demonstrate how fluid the liability doctrine has become, says Thomas O’Connell at Buchalter.
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Utilizing 6th Circ.'s Expanded Internal Investigation Protection
A recent Sixth Circuit decision in In re: FirstEnergy demonstrates one way that businesses can use a very limited showing to protect internal investigations from discovery in commercial litigation, while those looking to force production will need to employ a carefully calibrated approach, say attorneys at Brownstein Hyatt.
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3rd Circ. Clarifies Ch. 11 3rd-Party Liability Scope Post-Purdue
A recent Third Circuit decision that tort claims against the purchaser of a debtor's business belong to the debtor's bankruptcy estate reinvigorates the use of Chapter 11 for the resolution of nondebtor liability in mass tort bankruptcies following last year's U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Purdue Pharma, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.
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Series
Power To The Paralegals: How And Why Training Must Evolve
Empowering paralegals through new models of education that emphasize digital fluency, interdisciplinary collaboration and human-centered lawyering could help solve workforce challenges and the justice gap — if firms, educators and policymakers get on board, say Kristine Custodio Suero and Kelli Radnothy.
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Mortality Table Defenses In Actuarial Equivalent Cases
Employee Retirement Income Security Act class action plaintiffs are filing claims against defined benefit pension plans over the actuarial factors used to calculate alternative forms of annuity payments, including by arguing that employers may use mortality tables from the Middle Ages, but several defenses are available to reframe this debate, say attorneys at Jackson Lewis.
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Series
Playing Softball Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My time on the softball field has taught me lessons that also apply to success in legal work — on effective preparation, flexibility, communication and teamwork, says Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty.
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And Now A Word From The Panel: Choosing MDL Venues
One of the most interesting yet least predictable facets of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation's practice is venue — namely where the panel decides to place a new MDL proceeding — and its choices reflect the tension between neutrality and case-specific factors, says Alan Rothman at Sidley.
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Analyzing AI's Evolving Role In Class Action Claims Admin
Artificial intelligence is becoming a strategic asset in the hands of skilled litigators, reshaping everything from class certification strategy to claims analysis — and now, the nuts and bolts of settlement administration, with synthetic fraud, algorithmic review and ethical tension emerging as central concerns, says Dominique Fite at CPT Group.
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11th Circ.'s FCRA Standing Ruling Offers Compliance Lessons
The Eleventh Circuit's recent decision in Nelson v. Experian on establishing Article III standing under the Fair Credit Reporting Act should prompt businesses to survey FCRA compliance programs, review open matters for standing defenses and refresh training materials, say attorneys at Nixon Peabody.
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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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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Time Management
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.