Class Action

  • March 04, 2026

    Workers Challenging Trump DEI Firings Seek Class Status

    Former federal workers who claimed they were illegally fired after President Donald Trump ordered the elimination of diversity, equity and inclusion positions in the government urged a D.C. federal judge to award them class certification, arguing the firings impacted thousands of employees.

  • March 03, 2026

    Breyer Rips Musk Atty For 'False Impression' To Twitter Jury

    U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer blasted Elon Musk's counsel Tuesday in a trial over Twitter investors' allegations that Musk intentionally tanked its stock, telling the lawyer she'd created a "false impression" with the jury by questioning an ex-Twitter attorney about her right to speak with plaintiffs' counsel while under oath.

  • March 03, 2026

    6th Circ. Weighs If Special Ed Suit Must Exhaust IDEA

    The Sixth Circuit wrestled Tuesday with whether a proposed class action accusing a Michigan school district and state education officials of widespread special education failures can move forward in federal court or must go through the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act's administrative process.

  • March 03, 2026

    Goldman, Former Execs Seek Early Win In 1MDB Bribery Suit

    Goldman Sachs and two of its former executives have asked a New York federal judge to grant them an early win in an investor suit claiming losses from the 1MDB bond bribery scandal, saying that what remains in the suit is an "incoherent, reverse-engineered theory of securities fraud that the factual record does not sustain."

  • March 03, 2026

    SCANA Investors' $34M Deal, Atty Fees Get Final OK

    Consulting giant Deloitte and investors in utility company SCANA Corp. have gotten a final nod for their $34 million settlement of proposed class action claims that Deloitte gave cover to SCANA as it hid delays and cost overruns for a $9 billion nuclear energy expansion project it eventually abandoned.

  • March 03, 2026

    EV Maker Lucid Investor Seeks Class Cert. In Production Suit

    An investor in electric-vehicle maker Lucid Group Inc. is seeking certification of its proposed class in litigation alleging the company misled investors about how many cars it could make in 2022, hurting investors when it disclosed months later it was on track to make about a third of its earlier estimate.

  • March 03, 2026

    11th Circ. Backs Dismissal Of Fee Dispute From BCBS MDL

    The Eleventh Circuit has affirmed the dismissal of an attorney fee dispute between two lawyers on the plaintiffs' side of a $2.8 billion Blue Cross Blue Shield multidistrict litigation, ruling Tuesday that neither an oral deal nor a letter between the two lawyers was binding on their payouts.

  • March 03, 2026

    Feds, State AGs And Biz Groups Back Monsanto At High Court

    The federal government, 15 state attorneys general and business groups, among others, urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to strike down a $1.25 million verdict in a suit over claims Monsanto's Roundup weed killer causes cancer, saying that "patchwork" labeling regulations would harm the nation's farmers.

  • March 03, 2026

    BioAge Investors Lose Last Bid At Obesity Drug-Linked Suit

    Biopharmaceutical company BioAge Labs Inc. has escaped a suit accusing it of damaging investors by unexpectedly halting a clinical trial for a weight loss drug, with a California federal judge finding that the court already dismissed the claim that BioAge's risk disclosures were lacking.

  • March 03, 2026

    Texas Eatery's 'Fatal' Shortfall Advances Servers' Tip Case

    A Texas federal judge ruled Tuesday that a Fort Worth restaurant illegally took a $1-per-shift fee directly from every server's tips and failed to show the tip pool was distributed solely among eligible employees, in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act.

  • March 03, 2026

    Jury Awards $34M In 16th PacifiCorp Wildfire Trial

    An Oregon jury awarded $34 million in noneconomic damages Tuesday in the 16th damages trial against PacifiCorp over the state's Labor Day 2020 fires.

  • March 03, 2026

    Produce Co. Employees' ESOP Suit Survives Early Exit Bid

    A North Carolina federal judge has largely kept intact a lawsuit alleging lawyers, private equity firms and their founders conspired to drain a produce company's employee stock ownership plan of its value, trimming just two of the 13 claims from the sweeping complaint.

  • March 03, 2026

    Hawaiian Electric Investors Get First OK Of $48M Wildfire Deal

    Hawaiian Electric Industries Inc. and its investors have received initial approval of their nearly $48 million deal settling a California federal suit blaming it for the downturn in its stock price following a deadly 2023 fire on Maui.

  • March 03, 2026

    Wealth Management Firm Sued Over 5.7M Record Breach

    A wealth management firm was hit with a proposed class action in Colorado federal court by a client who alleges that an extortion-driven cyberattack by the hacking group ShinyHunters exposed approximately 5.7 million individual records containing sensitive personal information.

  • March 03, 2026

    Wash., Cities Say Pandemic Eviction Moratoria Suit Is Too Late

    Washington and a host of municipal governments throughout the state urged a federal court to toss landlords' suit challenging several pandemic-era eviction moratoria, arguing the claims are barred by a three-year statute of limitations.

  • March 03, 2026

    Sanofi Gets Approval For Interlocutory Appeal In Taxotere MDL

    Pharmaceutical company Sanofi will get a chance to ask the Fifth Circuit to end multidistrict litigation claiming it failed to warn cancer patients about the risk of eye injuries caused by its chemotherapy drug Taxotere, arguing that a label ruling that allowed generic-drug makers out of the case should also apply to it.

  • March 03, 2026

    Wells Fargo Escapes Ex-Workers' Prescription Cost Suit

    Former Wells Fargo workers on the employer healthcare plan failed to show that the company violated federal benefits law by allowing them to overpay for prescription drugs, a Minnesota federal judge found Tuesday, tossing the proposed class action.

  • March 03, 2026

    Apollo Faces Class Action Over Alleged Epstein Business Ties

    Apollo Global Management and its billionaire co-founders Leon Black and Marc Rowan have been hit with a proposed class action in New York federal court alleging they misled investors about the firm's and their individual connections to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

  • March 03, 2026

    NC Guards' Pay Starts At Prison Entry, Judge Says

    North Carolina correctional officers are entitled to compensation under federal wage law for time spent inside prison facilities before and after their scheduled shifts, a federal judge ruled, granting a win to a class and collective accusing the state of violating said law.

  • March 03, 2026

    Another YouTuber Sues Runway AI Over Alleged Scraping

    A YouTuber is suing artificial intelligence video generator Runway AI, alleging that it bypassed YouTube's technological measures to download video files in order to train its systems.

  • March 03, 2026

    King & Spalding Adds 3 More Attys From Winston & Strawn

    King & Spalding LLP announced Tuesday that it is continuing to expand in Dallas by adding three more attorneys from Winston & Strawn LLP.

  • March 03, 2026

    4th Circ. Won't Revive Retired Miners' Health Fight

    The Fourth Circuit refused Tuesday to reopen a dispute over lifetime retirement health and life insurance benefits from a proposed class of retired coal miners, keeping in place a West Virginia federal court's judgment that broadly favored the company following a seven-day bench trial.

  • March 03, 2026

    Philadelphia Nonprofit Sued Over Employee Info Hack

    The Philadelphia Corporation for Aging has been hit with privacy claims by a prospective class of employees alleging the nonprofit's failure to properly safeguard their confidential information might have led to it being stolen by cybercriminals during a data breach in July.

  • March 03, 2026

    Curaleaf Says No Private Info Leaked In Buyers' Data Suit

    Curaleaf Inc. is asking a Florida federal court to throw out a suit alleging that its website failed to protect buyers' personal and health information, saying none of the information the site or its software collects is personal property or healthcare information.

  • March 03, 2026

    Renters Fight Yardi's Quick Win Bid In Antitrust Case

    A class of renters is urging a federal court in Washington state to reject property management software company Yardi Systems Inc.'s quick win bid against their rent price-fixing suit and to order the company to provide more information about how its employees allegedly pushed landlords to hike up their rents.

Expert Analysis

  • Aligning Microsoft Tools With NYC Bar AI Recording Guidance

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    The New York City Bar Association’s recently issued formal opinion, providing ethical guidance on artificial intelligence-assisted recording, transcription and summarization, raises immediate questions about data governance and e-discovery for companies that use Microsoft 365 and Copilot, say Staci Kaliner, Martin Tully and John Collins at Redgrave.

  • Social Media Trial Raises Key Product Safety Questions

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    The trial underway in a California state court against Meta and Google is unprecedented, because it marks the first time a jury has been asked to consider whether social media platforms' engagement-maximizing design can be treated as a product safety issue, or whether it is inseparable from protected expression, says Gary Angiuli at Angiuli & Gentile.

  • 11th Circ. NextEra Ruling Broadens Loss Causation Standard

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    The Eleventh Circuit's recent Jastram v. NextEra Energy decision significantly expands the loss causation standard at the motion-to-dismiss stage and may lead to suits predicated on more tenuous connections between company disclosures and alleged misstatements, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: March Lessons

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    In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses four recent rulings from January and identifies practice tips from cases involving allegations of violations of consumer fraud regulations, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, employment law and breach of contract statutes.

  • Where 5th Circ. Ruling Fits In ERISA Arbitration Landscape

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    The Fifth Circuit's recent decision in Parrott v. International Bancshares, holding that an Employee Retirement Income Security Act plan may consent to arbitration, must be understood against the backdrop of a developing body of appellate authority addressing ERISA arbitration, say attorneys at Gibson Dunn.

  • 5 Different AI Systems Raise Distinct Privilege Issues

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    A New York federal court’s recent U.S. v. Heppner decision, holding that a defendant’s use of Claude was not privileged, only addressed one narrow artificial intelligence system, but lawyers must recognize that the spectrum of AI tools raises different confidentiality and privilege questions, says Heidi Nadel at HP.

  • Why Meme Coin Ruling May Amplify Crypto Legislation Push

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    A Florida federal court's recent decision in De Ford v. Koutolas, declining to rule definitively whether LGBCoin is a security, is notable for how it refused to give deference to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission guidance on meme coins, which may strengthen the ongoing industry push for clear rules-based regulatory frameworks, say attorneys at Goodwin.

  • Opinion

    AI-Assisted Arbitration Needs Safeguards To Ensure Fairness

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    As tribunals and arbitral institutions increasingly use artificial intelligence tools in their decision-making processes, ​​​​​​​clear disclosure standards and procedural safeguards are necessary to ensure that efficiency gains do not erode the fairness principles on which arbitration depends, says Alexander Lima at Wesco International.

  • What Recent Dataset Suits Signal For AI Training Litigation

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    Plaintiffs are moving away from abstract debates about artificial intelligence at large and toward dataset provenance, and three filings illustrate how provenance is pled using public dataset documentation, archives and discovery‑ready allegations about copying, retention and downstream handling, says Yulia Leshchenko at Name & Fame.

  • How Del. High Court's Moelis Reversal Fits Into DExit Debate

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    By declining to decide the facial validity of the provisions at issue in Moelis & Co. v. West Palm Beach Firefighters Pension Fund, the Delaware Supreme Court's recent reversal of the Court of Chancery's 2024 ruling highlights broader implications for the ongoing debate over whether companies should incorporate elsewhere, say attorneys at Akin.

  • Series

    Playing Piano Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Playing piano and practicing law share many parallels relating to managing complexity: Just as hearing an entire musical passage in my head allows me to reliably deliver the message, thinking about the audience's impression helps me create a legal narrative that keeps the reader engaged, says Michael Shepherd at Fish & Richardson.

  • 3 Cases Highlight SEC Distinction Between Exec, Co. Liability

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    Three recent enforcement actions against Spero Therapeutics, Lottery.com and Archer-Daniels-Midland demonstrate that while public companies are subject to liability for misrepresentations, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is focused on individual liability when disclosure violations involve so-called half-truths, say attorneys at Cooley.

  • AI-Generated Doc Ruling Guides Attys On Privilege Risks

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    A New York federal court's ruling, in U.S. v. Heppner, that documents created by a defendant using an artificial intelligence tool were not privileged, can serve as a guide to attorneys for retaining attorney-client or work-product privilege over client documents created with AI, say attorneys at Sher Tremonte.

  • The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Leadership Strategy After Day 1

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    For law firm leaders, ensuring a newly combined law firm lives up to its promise, both in its first days of operation and well after, includes tough decisions, clear and specific communication, and cheerleading, says Peter Michaud at Ballard Spahr.

  • Calif.'s Civility Push Shows Why Professionalism Is Vital

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    The California Bar’s campaign against discourteous behavior by attorneys, including a newly required annual civility oath, reflects a growing concern among states that professionalism in law needs shoring up — and recognizes that maintaining composure even when stressed is key to both succeeding professionally and maintaining faith in the legal system, says Lucy Wang at Hinshaw.

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