Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Class Action
-
August 14, 2025
Beef Consumers Settle With Cargill In Price-Fixing MDL
Beef consumers have disclosed a new settlement in a consolidated Minnesota federal court litigation accusing major beef producers of price-fixing, resolving their piece of the case against Cargill.
-
August 14, 2025
Cargill's $4M Deal Advances In Turkey Price-Fix Case
An Illinois federal judge on Thursday granted his initial approval to a $4 million deal Cargill has reached with commercial and institutional indirect purchaser plaintiffs in antitrust litigation accusing poultry producers of conspiring to pad the price of the bird, saying the amount provides "tangible and substantial" relief to the class.
-
August 14, 2025
Conn. Credit Union Hit With Suit Over Data Breach
A North Haven, Connecticut-based credit union is facing a proposed class action over allegations that it failed to properly safeguard customers' personal information in a June data breach and violated state law by delaying notification to victims.
-
August 14, 2025
HCA Settles Antitrust Claims Over Mission Health Contracts
HCA Healthcare Inc. has made several commitments for the operation of its Mission Health hospital system in North Carolina and also agreed to establish a $1 million charity fund to settle claims from municipalities that it used contractual terms to thwart competition and raise prices.
-
August 14, 2025
Rising Star: Gibson Dunn's Wesley Sze
Wesley Sze of Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP has been representing a slew of major tech companies and helped them secure multimillion-dollar settlements, including a $310 million deal on behalf of Apple in multidistrict litigation claiming that software updates lowered older phones' battery life, earning him a spot among the class action practitioners under age 40 honored by Law360 as Rising Stars.
-
August 14, 2025
Anthropic Asks 9th Circ. To Halt AI Copyright Trial For Appeal
Artificial intelligence developer Anthropic has urged the Ninth Circuit to overturn a California federal judge's refusal to delay trial in a copyright lawsuit from authors who allege their works were illegally obtained to train the company's large language model, Claude.
-
August 14, 2025
Maryland Budtenders Win Class Cert. In Curaleaf Tip Suit
Budtenders who work for Curaleaf Inc.'s Maryland dispensaries scored conditional class certification in their lawsuit accusing the company of taking their tips and paying them to managers in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
-
August 14, 2025
DiDi Investors Get Partial Cert. In Ride-Hailing App IPO Suit
A New York federal judge adopted a magistrate judge's recommendation to partially grant class certification in an investor suit alleging DiDi Global Inc., a ride-hailing business based in China, hid enterprise-threatening regulatory risks during its initial public offering in 2021.
-
August 13, 2025
6th Circ. Clarifies Class Cert. Standard In FirstEnergy Suit
A class of FirstEnergy investors suing in the wake of a $1 billion bribery scandal should not have been certified, the Sixth Circuit ruled Wednesday, saying the district court applied the wrong standard, but indicated the class could be recertified on remand.
-
August 13, 2025
Fla. Detention Center Still Blocks Atty Access, Groups Say
Civil rights groups Wednesday urged a Florida federal court to grant attorneys access to detainees located at an Everglades-based immigrant detention center in a proposed class action complaint, saying people confined at the facility aren't able to petition for their release.
-
August 13, 2025
Dick's Sporting Goods Suit Should Be Trimmed, Judge Says
A Pennsylvania federal judge has recommended trimming a shareholder class action that claims Dick's Sporting Goods misled investors about inventory levels and losses because of theft after the COVID-19 pandemic, finding that some of the suit's challenged statements are forward-looking and inactionable, among other things.
-
August 13, 2025
Whoop's Health Tracker Accused Of Sharing Users' Data
Health and wellness company Whoop Inc., whose wearable devices track and collect users' heart rate, movement, blood pressure and other health metrics, is secretly sharing that data and other user information with an undisclosed third party, according to a proposed class action filed Wednesday in California federal court.
-
August 13, 2025
NYC Pot Shops Can't Revive Suit Over Marijuana Crackdown
A federal judge will not reconsider his decision to end a lawsuit filed by more than two dozen companies that claim their due process rights were violated when New York City closed some of their stores on claims they were unlicensed cannabis operations, saying they brought nothing new for the court to ponder.
-
August 13, 2025
Semtech Investor Sues Brass Over Copper Goods Sales Drop
The top brass of high-performance semiconductor company Semtech Corp. has been hit with a shareholder derivative suit in California federal court claiming that they misled investors about the performance and sales of the company's products and failed to disclose certain issues that led to the end of the company's partnership with Nvidia.
-
August 13, 2025
Labcorp Wins ERISA Trial As Judge Cites Stronger Witnesses
Medical testing chain Labcorp did not breach its duty of prudence to its multibillion-dollar employee retirement investment fund, a North Carolina federal judge ruled Tuesday after a trial, saying two plaintiffs' experts earned little credibility.
-
August 13, 2025
JPML Consolidates 11 Delta Crash Landing Suits In Minn.
The U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation has consolidated 11 lawsuits against Delta Air Lines over a "violent crash" in Toronto, in which its plane caught fire after flipping upside down, in the District of Minnesota, where they may later be joined by eight additional suits.
-
August 13, 2025
Business Groups Fail To Halt Calif. Climate Reporting Rules
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups lost a bid to block new California state regulation requiring large companies to publicly disclose their greenhouse gas emissions and climate-related financial risks that they said violated their First Amendment rights, when a federal judge Wednesday denied them preliminary injunction.
-
August 13, 2025
Construction Equipment Antitrust Cases Centralized In Ill.
The U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation said Wednesday it has centralized the pretrial proceedings for a number of lawsuits accusing construction equipment rental companies of driving up prices nationwide by sharing sensitive data through software provided by Rouse Services.
-
August 13, 2025
High Court's Trans Ruling Doesn't Change Insurer's ACA Loss
A Washington federal judge has reaffirmed his finding that Premera Blue Cross' coverage policy for gender-affirming chest surgery violates the Affordable Care Act, rejecting the insurer's bid for a redo following the Supreme Court's decision in U.S. v. Skrmetti.
-
August 13, 2025
Chancery OKs $7.5M Atty Fee In $50M Lutnick Bonus Battle
Class attorneys who secured a $50 million derivative suit settlement fully offsetting a disputed bonus paid in 2021 to former Newmark Group Inc. controller and current Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick saw their proposed 25% attorney fee cut to 15% by a Delaware vice chancellor on Wednesday.
-
August 13, 2025
Cassava Investors Get Class Certified In Alzheimer's Drug Suit
Investors accusing Cassava Sciences Inc. of inflating its stock price with manipulated research data of its Alzheimer's drug can proceed with their claims as a class, with the court finding the suit's named plaintiffs are adequate representatives despite Cassava's claims they were only "out to make a quick buck."
-
August 13, 2025
Suit Claims UPPAbaby Car Seats Asphyxiate Infants
A grandmother is suing the company behind UPPAbaby infant products, alleging in New Jersey federal court that three of its infant car seats are dangerously defective in their design, which seats infants in a curled-up position that can restrict their airways.
-
August 13, 2025
Roomba-Maker Execs Sued Over Post-Amazon Deal Issues
The top brass of iRobot Corp., maker of the Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner, have been hit with a shareholder derivative suit in New York federal court claiming they exaggerated the effectiveness of the company's restructuring plan following the abandonment of a proposed $1.7 billion merger with Amazon.
-
August 13, 2025
OpenAI, Microsoft Beat Musk's RICO Claims In For-Profit Fight
OpenAI and Microsoft again beat Elon Musk's racketeering claims in his lawsuit challenging OpenAI's now-abandoned pivot to a for-profit enterprise, after a California federal judge said Tuesday the amended allegations do not provide details on how the companies ran the enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity.
-
August 13, 2025
5th Circ. Again Reverses Class Cert. In Kids' Medicaid Suit
The Fifth Circuit again on Tuesday instructed a Louisiana court to narrow the definition of a class of patients who allege that the state's health department has failed to provide mental health services for Medicaid-eligible children.
Expert Analysis
-
Yacht Broker Case Highlights Industry Groups' Antitrust Risk
The Eleventh Circuit recently revived class claims against the International Yacht Brokers Association, signaling that commission-driven industries beyond real estate are vulnerable to antitrust challenges after the National Association of Realtors settled similar allegations last year, says Miles Santiago at the Southern University Law Center and Alex Hebert at Southern Compass.
-
Opinion
4 Former Justices Would Likely Frown On Litigation Funding
As courts increasingly confront cases involving hidden litigation finance contracts, the jurisprudence of four former U.S. Supreme Court justices establishes a constitutional framework that risks erosion by undisclosed financial interests, says Roland Eisenhuth at the American Property Casualty Insurance Association.
-
What To Know About Bill Aiming To Curb CIPA
A bill pending in the California Assembly would amend the California Invasion of Privacy Act to allow for the use of website tracking technologies for commercial business purposes, limiting class actions seeking damages under the act for industry standard practices, say Katherine Alphonso and Avazeh Pourhamzeh at Kaufman Dolowich.
-
State Law Challenges In Enforcing Arbitration Clauses
In recent cases, state courts in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New Jersey have considered or endorsed heightened standards for arbitration agreements, which can mean the difference between a bilateral arbitration and a full-blown class action in court, says Fabien Thayamballi at Shapiro Arato.
-
How Attys Can Use AI To Surface Narratives In E-Discovery
E-discovery has reached a turning point where document review is no longer just about procedural tasks like identifying relevance and redacting privilege — rather, generative artificial intelligence tools now allow attorneys to draw connections, extract meaning and tell a coherent story, says Rose Jones at Hilgers Graben.
-
How McKesson Ruling Will Inform Interpretations Of The TCPA
Amid the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in McLaughlin Chiropractic Associates v. McKesson, we can expect to see both plaintiffs and defendants utilizing the decision to revisit the Federal Communications Commission's past Telephone Consumer Protection Act interpretations and decisions they did not like, says Jason McElroy at Saul Ewing.
-
Navigating Court Concerns About QR Codes In FLSA Notices
As plaintiffs attorneys increasingly seek to include QR codes as a method of notice in Fair Labor Standards Act collective actions, counsel should be prepared to address judicial concerns about their use, including their potential to be duplicative and circumvent court-approved language, say attorneys at Shook Hardy.
-
Examining TCPA Jurisprudence A Year After Loper Bright
One year after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Chevron deference in Loper Bright v. Raimondo, lower court decisions demonstrate that the Telephone Consumer Protection Act will continue to evolve as long-standing interpretations of the act are analyzed with a fresh lens, says Aaron Gallardo at Kilpatrick.
-
Gauging The Risky Business Of Business Risk Disclosures
With the recent rise of securities fraud actions based on external events — like a data breach or environmental disaster — that drive down stock prices, risk disclosures have become more of a sword for the plaintiffs bar than a shield for public companies, now the subject of a growing circuit split, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.
-
Series
Playing The Violin Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Playing violin in a string quartet reminds me that flexibility, ambition, strong listening skills, thoughtful leadership and intentional collaboration are all keys to a successful legal practice, says Julie Park at MoFo.
-
State, Fed Junk Fee Enforcement Shows No Signs Of Slowing
The Federal Trade Commission’s potent new rule targeting drip pricing, in addition to the growing patchwork of state consumer protection laws, suggest that enforcement and litigation targeting junk fees will likely continue to expand, says Etia Rottman Frand at Darrow AI.
-
Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Practicing Self-Care
Law schools don’t teach the mental, physical and emotional health maintenance tools necessary to deal with the profession's many demands, but practicing self-care is an important key to success that can help to improve focus, manage stress and reduce burnout, says Rachel Leonard at MG+M.
-
Birthright Opinions Reveal Views On Rule 23(b)(2) Relief
The justices' multiple opinions in the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 27 decision in the birthright citizenship case, Trump v. CASA, shed light on whether Rule 23(b)(2) could fill the void created by the court's decision to restrict nationwide injunctions, says Benjamin Johns at Shub Johns.
-
ABA Opinion Makes It A Bit Easier To Drop A 'Hot Potato'
The American Bar Association's recent ethics opinion clarifies when attorneys may terminate clients without good cause, though courts may still disqualify a lawyer who drops a client like a hot potato, so sending a closeout letter is always a best practice, say attorneys at Thompson Hine.
-
Latest Influencer Marketing Class Actions Pinpoint 5 Themes
Several recent deceptive marketing class actions against both brands and influencers attempt to transform arguably routine business practices into a new focus area for consumer complaints, suggesting a coordinated approach to test what could become an increasingly popular area of litigation, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.