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Class Action
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March 09, 2026
Md. Judge Orders ICE To Improve Detention Conditions
A Maryland federal judge has ordered U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to limit the number of people being detained in short-term holding facilities in Baltimore and provide better care due to "deplorable" and likely unconstitutional conditions.
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March 09, 2026
NC Eatery Took Unlawful Tip Credit, Ex-Worker Says
The operator of a North Carolina restaurant franchise that serves wings wrongfully retained employee tips, resulting in minimum wage violations, according to a new proposed class and collective action in federal court.
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March 09, 2026
Bitcoin Classes Should Be Modified, Judge Says In Opinion
A New York federal judge narrowed the class definitions in a suit accusing Tether and Bitfinex of rigging the cryptocurrency market and costing investors hundreds of billions of dollars, after finding that there is no "clear-cut" injury for some investors.
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March 09, 2026
Musicians Claim Google Stole Songs For AI Music Tool
A group of independent musicians from around the U.S. have sued Google in Chicago federal court, accusing it of copying millions of copyrighted songs and lyrics from YouTube and across the internet to build its AI music generator Lyria 3 — a product the plaintiffs say directly competes with human artists.
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March 09, 2026
Judge Won't Certify Class In Antero Gas Royalty Suit
An Ohio federal magistrate has refused to certify a class of oil and gas royalty owners accusing Antero Resources Corp. of underpaying natural gas royalties, saying individual reviews of the lease agreements are clearly required.
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March 09, 2026
NC Providers Sue UnitedHealth Over 'Devastating' Cyberattack
UnitedHealth Group Inc. and several of its subsidiaries are facing a proposed class action in North Carolina state court over a 2024 data breach that took its claims processing platform offline and allegedly delayed billions of dollars in reimbursements to providers.
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March 09, 2026
Mammogram Provider To Pay $2.5M Over Data Breach
A mobile mammogram provider has agreed to pay $2.5 million to settle a proposed class action on behalf of more than 357,000 patients whose personal information was leaked in a 2024 data breach, according to a filing in Massachusetts federal court.
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March 09, 2026
Cold Storage Co. Strikes Deal To End Data Breach Suits
Americold Logistics LLC has agreed to settle a pair of lawsuits that claimed lax cybersecurity at the cold storage giant led to two separate data breaches that allegedly impacted droves of employees and customers, according to a filing in Atlanta federal court.
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March 09, 2026
Meta's AI Smart Glasses Snoop On Users, Consumers Say
A California resident has brought a proposed class action accusing Meta and an eyewear company of misleading buyers by advertising the companies' artificial intelligence-powered smart glasses as "designed for privacy," saying personal video footage can be reviewed by human contractors overseas.
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March 09, 2026
Paul Hastings Adds A&O Shearman Securities Litigator Duo
Paul Hastings LLP announced Monday that it has hired two San Francisco-based securities litigation attorneys from Allen Overy Shearman Sterling as partners, including A&O Shearman's former managing partner of the California offices.
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March 09, 2026
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
The Delaware Chancery Court's docket last week featured disputes spanning alleged forged board approvals at a telecom startup, evidence-destruction claims tied to WWE's blockbuster merger with UFC and investor scrutiny of a multibillion-dollar deal between Intel and the U.S. government.
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March 09, 2026
Inspection Services Firm Settles Wage Suit For $530K
An inspection services company will pay $530,000 to end a collective action alleging it underpaid inspectors, according to a Pennsylvania federal judge's order.
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March 09, 2026
JPMorgan Trims But Can't Escape ERISA Drug Costs Suit
A New York federal judge pared claims Monday against JPMorgan Chase & Co. in a suit from workers who alleged they paid too much for prescription drugs, but opened discovery on allegations that the bank's contract with its pharmacy benefit manager caused transactions prohibited by federal benefits law.
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March 09, 2026
Cannabis Cos. Get THC Potency False Ad Suit Tossed
An Illinois federal judge has thrown out a proposed class action claiming that a group of cannabis companies mislabel their products as vapable oils to get around state possession and THC limits, saying at most, they alleged misrepresentations of law, not facts.
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March 09, 2026
Bus Contractor Can't Trim Lookback Period In Wage Suit
A bus attendant plausibly alleged that a school transportation company willfully violated federal wage law, an Ohio federal judge ruled, allowing her claims to reach back three years rather than two.
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March 06, 2026
Failed Fintech Synapse Is Sued Over Missing Customer Funds
Collapsed fintech middleware firm Synapse Financial Technologies, its brokerage subsidiary and its former executives have caught a proposed class action seeking to take the firm to task over alleged misrepresentations and mismanagement that left $85 million in customer funds unaccounted for.
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March 06, 2026
Meta Witness Says Spotty Audits Show Commitment To Safety
A trust and safety expert witness for Meta defended the company Friday over shortcomings laid out in internal audits, telling a jury that the audits' existence refutes the New Mexico attorney general's claims that Meta did not take user safety seriously.
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March 06, 2026
Breyer Urges Attys In Heated Twitter Investor Trial To Cool Off
The judge overseeing a California federal trial over Twitter investors' allegations that Elon Musk intentionally tanked the company's stock urged lawyers to cool down over the weekend and "gain composure," after a heated fight in which a lawyer for the investors called a Musk attorney's conduct disgraceful.
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March 06, 2026
Meta, Google Begin Defense As Mental Harm Plaintiff Rests
Attorneys for the plaintiff in a landmark bellwether California trial in a suit accusing Instagram and YouTube of harming children's mental health rested their case Friday, opting not to call the plaintiff's mother to testify live despite the defense portraying her as the potential cause of the plaintiff's mental health struggles.
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March 06, 2026
Atty Should've Checked Docket, Says Philips CPAP Judge
An attorney and his client have no one but themselves to blame for the permanent end to a product liability lawsuit over a recalled Philips sleep breathing machine, a Pennsylvania federal judge said on Friday, saying it was on them to monitor the docket.
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March 06, 2026
Wash. Antispam Penalties Near Cut From $500 Down To $100
Washington lawmakers passed a bill Friday that would cut damages available to plaintiffs under the state's antispam law from $500 per offending message to just $100, significantly reducing Commercial Electronic Mail Act penalties for companies that send offending emails or text messages.
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March 06, 2026
Disney To Pay $50M To End YouTube, DirecTV Stream Claims
The Walt Disney Co. will pay $50 million in its settlement with YouTube TV and DirecTV Stream users in antitrust litigation alleging Disney drove up the cost of streaming live pay television by forcing its pricey ESPN sports channel on streaming platforms, the plaintiffs have told a California federal judge.
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March 06, 2026
Google's $135M Deal To End Data Use Suit Gets Initial Nod
A California federal magistrate judge preliminarily approved Google's $135 million settlement to resolve a proposed class action alleging Google surreptitiously consumed Android users' mobile data, finding the deal is fair despite Google agreeing to pay nearly three times more to settle similar claims by a smaller Golden State-consumer class.
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March 06, 2026
Drugmaker Nektar Faces Suit Over Hair Loss Drug Trial Claims
Pharmaceutical company Nektar Therapeutics on Friday was hit with a proposed class action accusing it of harming investors by failing to disclose the risks associated with its failure to follow protocol for enrolling participants in an unsuccessful trial for its hair loss treatment.
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March 06, 2026
Kalshi Is Sued Over 'Death Carveout' For Khamenei Trades
Prediction market Kalshi defrauded traders who bet that Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would leave office before March 1, 2026, by invoking an improperly disclosed "death carveout" and refusing to pay full winnings to traders when Khamenei was killed in recent U.S. and Israeli military strikes, according to a suit in California federal court.
Expert Analysis
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FTC's Reseller Suit Highlights Larger Ticket Platform Issues
Taken together, the recent Federal Trade Commission lawsuit and Ticketmaster's recent antitrust woes demonstrate that federal enforcers are testing the resilience of antitrust and consumer-protection frameworks in an evolving, tech-driven marketplace, says Thomas Stratmann at George Mason University.
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Agentic AI Puts A New Twist On Attorney Ethics Obligations
As lawyers increasingly use autonomous artificial intelligence agents, disciplinary authorities must decide whether attorney responsibility for an AI-caused legal ethics violation is personal or supervisory, and firms must enact strong policies regarding agentic AI use and supervision, says Grace Wynn at HWG.
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Resilience Planning Is New Key To Corporate Sustainability
While the current wave of deregulation may reduce government enforcement related to climate issues, businesses still need to evaluate how climate volatility may affect their operations and create new legal risks — making the apolitical concept of resilience increasingly important for companies, says J. Michael Showalter at ArentFox Schiff.
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FDA Transparency Plans Raise Investor Disclosure Red Flags
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s recently announced intent to publish complete response letters for unapproved drugs and devices implicates certain investor disclosure requirements under securities laws, making it necessary for life sciences and biotech companies to adopt robust controls going forward, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.
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Series
Being A Professional Wrestler Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Pursuing my childhood dream of being a professional wrestler has taught me important legal career lessons about communication, adaptability, oral advocacy and professionalism, says Christopher Freiberg at Midwest Disability.
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2 Calif. Cases Could Reshape Future Of Trap-And-Trace Suits
A California federal judge's recent dismissal of two California Invasion of Privacy Act cases demonstrates an inherent contradiction in pen register and trap-and-trace claims, teeing up a Ninth Circuit appeal that could either breathe new life into such claims or put an end to them outright, says Matthew Pearson at Womble Bond.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Adapting To The Age Of AI
Though law school may not have specifically taught us how to use generative artificial intelligence to help with our daily legal tasks, it did provide us the mental building blocks necessary for adapting to this new technology — and the judgment to discern what shouldn’t be automated, says Pamela Dorian at Cozen O'Connor.
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Ch. 11 Ruling Voiding $2M Litigation Funding Sends A Warning
A recent Texas bankruptcy court decision that a postconfirmation litigation trust has no obligations to repay a completely drawn down $2 million litigation funding agreement serves as a warning for estate administrators and funders to properly disclose the intended financing, say attorneys at Kleinberg Kaplan.
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Demystifying The Civil Procedure Rules Amendment Process
Every year, an advisory committee receives dozens of proposals to amend the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, most of which are never adopted — but a few pointers can help maximize the likelihood that an amendment will be adopted, says Josh Gardner at DLA Piper.
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7th Circ. FLSA Notice Test Adds Flexibility, Raises Questions
In Richards v. Eli Lilly, the Seventh Circuit created a new approach for district courts to determine whether to issue notice to opt-in plaintiffs in Fair Labor Standards Act collective actions, but its road map leaves many unanswered questions, says Rebecca Ojserkis at Cohen Milstein.
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Plaintiffs Bar Can Level Up With Strategic Use Of AI
As artificial intelligence adoption among legal professionals explodes, the question for the plaintiffs bar is no longer whether AI will reshape the practice of law, but how it can be integrated effectively and strategically to level the playing field against well-funded corporate defense teams, says Tyler Schneider at TorHoerman Law.
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Parenting Skills That Can Help Lawyers Thrive Professionally
As kids head back to school, the time is ripe for lawyers who are parents to consider how they can incorporate their parenting skills to build a deep, meaningful and sustainable legal practice, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: September Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses seven decisions pertaining to attorney fees in class action settlements, the predominance requirement in automobile insurance cases, how the no mootness exception applies if the named plaintiff is potentially subject to a strong individual defense, and more.
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Series
Teaching Trial Advocacy Makes Us Better Lawyers
Teaching trial advocacy skills to other lawyers makes us better litigators because it makes us question our default methods, connect to young attorneys with new perspectives and focus on the needs of the real people at the heart of every trial, say Reuben Guttman, Veronica Finkelstein and Joleen Youngers.
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As Product Recalls Rise, So Do The Stakes For The Bar
Recent recall announcements affecting over 800,000 Ford vehicles highlight how product recalls have become more frequent, complex and safety-critical than ever, raising key practice questions for counsel, and raising the stakes in product liability litigation, says Ken Fulginiti at Fulginiti Law.