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Class Action
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April 06, 2026
Tool Co. Can't Arbitrate Workers' Misclassification Suit
A California federal judge has blocked an Ohio-based tool company from pursuing arbitration in a suit alleging it misclassified its dealers as independent contractors, finding the franchise agreement's arbitration clause likely unenforceable.
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April 06, 2026
Justices Remand State Secrets Dispute In FBI Spying Case
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday sent back to the lower court a long-running putative class action over the FBI's alleged surveillance of Muslims in Southern California, a dispute the federal government has argued threatens to undermine vital protections for state secrets.
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April 03, 2026
YouTube Creators Say Amazon, OpenAI, Apple Scrape For AI
A group of YouTube creators say Amazon.com Inc., OpenAI and Apple Inc. have been scraping millions of copyrighted videos to feed, train and commercialize their text-to-video generative AI products by unlawfully circumventing the video platform's technological protection measures, in proposed class actions filed Friday in Seattle and California federal courts.
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April 03, 2026
Amazon Says Audible Intervenor Wants Info For Her Own Suit
Amazon urged a Seattle federal judge to deny a woman's motion to intervene in a putative class action accusing the retailer of wrongfully auto-enrolling customers in its Audible e-book service, arguing the woman should not be able to obtain discovery in the case to buttress her own recently dismissed complaint.
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April 03, 2026
Boeing Mechanic Wage Class Action Takes Off In Wash.
Boeing has been accused of shorting thousands of Washington state mechanics and other airplane assembly workers on break time and forcing them to work off the clock, according to a proposed class action the aerospace giant removed to Seattle federal court Friday.
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April 03, 2026
Anthem, Wells Fargo Say Patients Received All Benefits Owed
Insurers urged a Colorado federal judge to allow them to escape claims from a mental health and substance use treatment facilities operator's lawsuit, alleging the facility lacks standing to bring claims under federal benefits and mental health parity laws.
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April 03, 2026
Eatery Shorted Tipped Staff On Wages, Suit Says
A vegetarian restaurant in Cambridge, Massachusetts, made servers share their tips with ineligible co-workers and regularly miscalculated what tipped-wage staff was owed, a former employee alleged in a complaint filed Friday in state court.
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April 03, 2026
Hisense Says Claims In QLED False Ad Suit Are Fuzzy
Hisense USA Corp. is urging a California federal court to throw out a proposed class action alleging that its high-definition televisions don't have QLED technology as advertised, saying the articles the complaint cites are ambiguous at best, and in some cases actively contradict the claims.
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April 03, 2026
Delta Pay Range Suit Goes Back To Wash. State Court
A Delta Air Lines Inc. job applicant's proposed class action accusing the carrier of failing to include required pay information on job postings will return to Washington state court after a Seattle federal judge ruled Friday that the plaintiff didn't suffer the type of concrete harm necessary to have federal standing.
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April 03, 2026
Schneider Wallace Loses Bid For Bigger Piece Of $75M Fee
A California federal magistrate judge on Friday rejected Schneider Wallace Cottrell Kim LLP's bid to increase its cut of a $75.4 million fee award for representing plaintiffs in a $228.5 million Sutter Health antitrust deal, saying lead counsel Constantine Cannon LLP's allocation of $1.4 million to Schneider Wallace was fair.
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April 03, 2026
7th Circ. Says Ford Plant Drivers Fall Under OT Exemption
Shuttle truck drivers who hauled automobile parts between storage lots and a Ford Motor Co. assembly plant in Chicago were engaged in interstate commerce and thus exempt from federal overtime requirements, the Seventh Circuit has ruled, affirming a win for their employers in two consolidated class actions.
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April 03, 2026
Cox Forced Call Center Staff To Work Off The Clock, Suit Says
Cox Communications and its Arizona subsidiary required call center representatives to do substantial off-the-clock work without pay, a former employee told a Georgia federal court Friday.
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April 03, 2026
19 ByHeart Infant Formula Botulism Suits Centralized In NY
Nineteen proposed class actions accusing ByHeart Inc. of negligently selling contaminated baby formula that caused some infants to become seriously ill will be consolidated in the Southern District of New York, according to an order by the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation.
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April 03, 2026
GPB Investors Get $67.7M, Eye 2 More Settlements
A New York federal judge on Thursday allowed the receiver of GPB Capital Holdings to enter into a $67.7 million settlement with investors over the private equity firm's collapse, one day after investors sought approval for separate deals with a Deloitte unit and Morrison Brown Argiz & Farra LLC over those companies' alleged work providing valuation services for GPB.
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April 03, 2026
Cross River Bank Beats Suit Over Alleged Solar Loan Scheme
New Jersey-based Cross River Bank has, for now, escaped a proposed class action from an investor in solar technology company Sunlight Financial who accused the bank of overlending to risky borrowers in Sunlight's solar loan program as its financial partner.
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April 03, 2026
Crypto Co. Hit With Investor Class Action Over Merger
A Florida-based bitcoin mining company and its leaders netted over $2 million from selling stocks at inflated prices, bolstering a "rosy picture" of an upcoming merger that led to sinking stock prices, according to a proposed investor class action alleging executives engaged in a "pump-and-dump" scheme.
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April 03, 2026
Northwestern Can't Escape ERISA Fight Over Health Offerings
An Illinois federal court refused to toss a proposed class action against Northwestern University alleging excessive employee healthcare costs violated federal benefits law, concluding ex-workers had sufficiently backed up their allegations that an expensive plan option breached fiduciary duties.
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April 03, 2026
Law360 Announces The Members Of Its 2026 Editorial Boards
Law360 is pleased to announce the formation of its 2026 Editorial Advisory Boards.
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April 03, 2026
$9.5M FedEx Security Screening Pay Deal Gets Initial OK
A Connecticut federal judge gave preliminary approval to a $9.5 million settlement between FedEx and workers at eight of its facilities in the state over unpaid time spent going through security screening before and after their shifts.
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April 03, 2026
Ill. Businesses Score Win In 7th Circ. BIPA Retroactivity Ruling
The Seventh Circuit's holding that a liability-limiting amendment to Illinois' biometric privacy law applies retroactively to all cases pending before the change took effect is a major victory for businesses facing potentially enormous damages in those lawsuits, and offers important clarity for the lawyers handling them and negotiating settlements, attorneys told Law360.
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April 03, 2026
NY Guards Say Security Cos. Labeled Them Contractors
Two related New York security companies and their owner misclassified guards as "self-contractors," denying them full wages, according to a proposed class and collective action filed in federal court.
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April 03, 2026
NYC Fights Sanctions Over Discovery In IVF Sex Bias Dispute
New York City urged a federal judge to reject a gay couple's sanctions bid in their suit claiming a municipal health plan blocked them from receiving in vitro fertilization coverage out of discrimination, calling their concerns with the city's sluggish discovery production in the case premature.
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April 03, 2026
Caterpillar Worker's Bankruptcy Dooms Genetic Privacy Claim
An Illinois federal judge has thrown out a Caterpillar Inc. employee's proposed class genetic privacy suit over allegedly illegal medical history probes, saying the worker's midcase Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing means the claims now belong to his bankruptcy estate and not to him personally.
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April 03, 2026
Mortgage Co. In Settlement Talks On NC Phone-Pay Fee Suit
A certified class of North Carolina borrowers are working to settle claims over excessive fees charged by their mortgage servicer for paying bills by phone, with a judge agreeing to a stay in the case.
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April 03, 2026
4 Argument Sessions Benefits Attys Should Watch In April
Cigna retirees will ask the Second Circuit to revive a 24-year-old pension dispute, and the Seventh Circuit will hear a company's withdrawal liability fight with the Teamsters. Here, Law360 looks at those and two other argument sessions that benefits attorneys should have on their radar.
Expert Analysis
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State Of Insurance: Q4 Notes From Illinois
In 2025's last quarter, Illinois’ appellate courts weighed in on overlapping homeowners coverages for water-related damages, contractual suit limitation provisions in uninsured motorist policies, and protections for genetic health information in life insurance underwriting, while the Department of Insurance sought nationwide homeowners' insurance data from State Farm, says Matthew Fortin at BatesCarey.
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How 2 Tech Statutes Are Being Applied To Agentic AI
The application of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and the California Invasion of Privacy Act to agentic artificial intelligence is still developing, but recent case law, like Amazon's lawsuit against Perplexity in California federal court, provides some initial guidance for companies developing or deploying these technologies, say attorneys at Weil.
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Defense Strategy Takeaways From Recent TCPA Class Actions
Although recent Telephone Consumer Protection Act decisions do not establish any bright-line tests for defeating predominance based on an argument that class members provided consent for the calls, certain trends have emerged that should inform defense strategies at class certification, say attorneys at Womble Bond.
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NYC Bar Opinion Warns Attys On Use Of AI Recording Tools
Attorneys who use artificial intelligence tools to record, transcribe and summarize conversations with clients should heed the New York City Bar Association’s recent opinion addressing the legal and ethical risks posed by such tools, and follow several best practices to avoid violating the Rules of Professional Conduct, say attorneys at Smith Gambrell.
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Dispatches From Utah's Newest Court
While a robust body of law hasn't yet developed since the Utah Business and Chancery Court's founding in October 2024, the number of cases filed there has recently picked up, and its existence illustrates Utah's desire to be top of mind for businesses across the country, says Evan Strassberg at Michael Best.
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4 Quick Emotional Resets For Lawyers With Conflict Fatigue
Though the emotional wear and tear of legal work can trap attorneys in conflict fatigue — leaving them unable to shake off tense interactions or return to a calm baseline — simple therapeutic techniques for resetting the nervous system can help break the cycle, says Chantel Cohen at CWC Coaching & Therapy.
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Privacy Ruling Shows How CIPA Conflicts With Modern Tech
A California federal court's recent holding in Doe v. Eating Recovery Center that Meta is not liable for reading, or attempting to read, the pixel-related transmission while in transit reflects a mismatch between the California Invasion of Privacy Act's 1967 origins and modern encrypted, browser‑driven communications, says David Wheeler at Neal Gerber.
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Series
Playing Tennis Makes Me A Better Lawyer
An instinct to turn pain into purpose meant frequent trips to the tennis court, where learning to move ahead one point at a time was a lesson that also applied to the steep learning curve of patent prosecution law, says Daniel Henry at Marshall Gerstein.
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Justices' BDO Denial May Allow For Increased Auditor Liability
The Supreme Court's recent denial of certiorari in BDO v. New England Carpenters could lead to more actions filed against accounting firms, as it lets stand a 2024 Second Circuit ruling that provided a road map for pleading falsity with respect to audit certifications, says Dean Conway at Carlton Fields.
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How Generative AI Cos. Can Navigate Product Liability Claims
Increasingly, plaintiffs are aggregating disputes over generative artificial intelligence and pursuing them through mass-tort-style proceedings, borrowing tactics from litigation involving social media, pharmaceuticals and other consumer-facing products — but there are approaches that AI companies can use to narrow claims and manage long-term exposure, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.
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NY Securities Class Action Ruling Holds Rare Timing Insights
A New York federal court's recent decision in Leone v. ASP Isotopes adopted the unusual posture of simultaneously denying a motion to dismiss and certifying claims to proceed as a class action, and its unique scheduling carries certain procedural and substantive implications, say attorneys at Labaton Keller.
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And Now A Word From The Panel: MDL Year In Review
2025 was a roller coaster for the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation, with the panel canceling one hearing session due to the absence of new MDL petitions, yet also issuing rulings on more new MDL petitions than in 2024 — making it clear that MDLs are still thriving, says Alan Rothman at Sidley Austin.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: January Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses five rulings from October and November, and identifies practice tips from cases involving consumer fraud, oil and gas leases, toxic torts, and wage and hour issues.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Judicial Use Informs Guardrails
U.S. Magistrate Judge Maritza Dominguez Braswell at the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado discusses why having a sense of how generative AI tools behave, where they add value, where they introduce risk and how they are reshaping the practice of law is key for today's judges.
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State Of Insurance: Q4 Notes From Pennsylvania
Last quarter in Pennsylvania, a Superior Court ruling underscored the centrality of careful policy drafting and judicial scrutiny of exclusionary language, and another provided practical guidance on the calculation of attorney fees and interest in bad faith cases, while a proposed bill endeavored to cover insurance gaps for homeowners, says Todd Leon at Marshall Dennehey.