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Class Action
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April 08, 2026
Tupperware Investors Seal $21.8M Deal, Net $7.3M In Atty Fees
Former executives of Tupperware and the company's investors have received final approval of their $21.8 million deal to end claims the executives misleadingly represented that Tupperware was taking significant efforts to correct dwindling profit margins.
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April 08, 2026
Feds Call 3-Hour Notice In Immigrant Bond Case 'Unworkable'
The U.S. Department of Justice told a Massachusetts federal judge that part of her order requiring the government to provide immigrants in detention with timely, written notice of their rights to a bond hearing and appeal is too burdensome.
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April 08, 2026
StubHub Customer's Eras Tour Tickets Suit Sent To Arbitration
A StubHub customer must arbitrate her claims that the ticket reseller botched her order for $14,000 in tickets to Taylor Swift's Eras Tour, a Washington federal judge has said, agreeing with the company that the patron agreed to a mandatory arbitration pact when she logged onto the website and made her purchase.
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April 08, 2026
Magistrate Judge Allowed 'Gamesmanship,' Shipbuilders Say
Major shipbuilders have asked a Virginia federal court to override a magistrate judge's decision permitting a former naval engineer to amend her lawsuit alleging a conspiracy to suppress naval architect and engineer wages, arguing the plaintiff waited too long to add another engineer.
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April 08, 2026
3rd Time's The Charm For $7.85M PlayStation Antitrust Deal
A California federal court gave its initial approval for a $7.85 million settlement resolving antitrust claims from gamers over Sony's restriction of retail codes for PlayStation games, after rejecting two previous requests for approval.
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April 08, 2026
Fiat Chrysler Loses 'Absurd' Arb. Bid In Defect Suit At 9th Circ.
A Ninth Circuit panel has rejected Fiat Chrysler's request to send a certified class action over allegedly defective Jeep and Dodge headrests to arbitration, finding that FCA's theory would lead to "absurd" results in which third parties with "no connection whatsoever to the underlying arbitration agreement" could force arbitration.
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April 08, 2026
Veterans Say Citibank Arb. Ruling Is 'Anti-Military Readiness'
A group of service members urged a North Carolina federal court to keep in its sights claims that Citibank NA proffered misleading information about credit card account interest and fees, arguing a recent arbitration order erodes safeguards baked into the Military Lending Act.
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April 08, 2026
AstraZeneca Wants 25 Opt-Ins Axed From Pay Bias Suit
More than two dozen women refused to take part in required discovery and should be removed from a collective action accusing AstraZeneca of paying female pharmaceutical sales representatives less than men, the company told an Illinois federal court.
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April 08, 2026
Mercury Systems Investors Seek Final OK Of $32.5M Deal
Investors in aerospace and defense technology company Mercury Systems Inc. have asked a Boston federal judge to give the final nod to their $32.5 million deal to end claims the company mischaracterized certain integration processes amid a $1.4 billion acquisition spree, causing trading prices to slide as the company acknowledged financial fallout stemming from the integration woes.
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April 08, 2026
ERISA Recap: 6 Noteworthy Decisions From March
JPMorgan Chase & Co. narrowed but couldn't escape a suit from workers who said their health plan paid too much for prescription drugs, Genworth Financial Inc. unwound a class at the Fourth Circuit, and the Sixth Circuit breathed new life into proposed class actions against FedEx and Kellogg. Here, Law360 looks at these and three other notable decisions from March in ERISA cases.
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April 08, 2026
MatchaBar Sold Lower-Grade Tea As 'Ceremonial,' Suit Says
A matcha powder by MatchaBar Inc. is falsely marketed as "ceremonial grade" worthy of a Japanese tea ceremony despite independent testing by an expert showing the product actually exhibits "bitterness and astringency in taste," making it unlikely for formal ceremonies, according to a proposed class action by two consumers.
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April 08, 2026
NJ Car Dealer Accused Of Picking Pricey 401(k) Funds
Holman Automotive Group Inc. was slapped with a proposed class action in New Jersey federal court accusing the company and unidentified plan fiduciaries of breaching their duties under ERISA by saddling employees with unnecessarily expensive retirement plan investments that allegedly drained more than $1 million from workers' savings.
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April 08, 2026
Reed Smith Expands With 6-Atty K&L Gates Litigation Team
Reed Smith LLP announced Wednesday that six attorneys, including four partners, have joined the firm's Boston and Princeton, New Jersey, offices from K&L Gates LLP.
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April 08, 2026
Appeals Court Wipes Out PacifiCorp Wildfire Liability Verdict
A verdict that made power utility PacifiCorp liable to a class of property owners around Oregon from Labor Day 2020 wildfires must be overturned because of a faulty jury instruction, a state appeals court ruled Wednesday.
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April 08, 2026
HIV, AIDS Patients End Disability Bias Suit With CVS
CVS Pharmacy Inc. and a group of HIV and AIDS patients have agreed to wrap up a suit claiming the company made it harder for them to get their medication in violation of disability discrimination law, according to a California federal court filing.
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April 08, 2026
GEO Seeks Immunity Appeal In Forced Labor Class Action
Prison operator GEO Group Inc. has asked a Colorado federal judge to pause a forced labor class action brought by former immigrant detainees and certify an appeal for the Tenth Circuit to weigh a question about government contractor immunity that could end the case.
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April 08, 2026
Securities And M&A Litigator Rejoins Latham From Cooley
Latham & Watkins LLP has announced that a New York litigator has rejoined its ranks after a decade-long stint with Cooley LLP.
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April 08, 2026
Teamsters, United Defeat Bid To Revive Suit Over Pay Formula
A memorandum alleging union misconduct and claims that a union representative may have simultaneously worked for United Airlines do not justify reopening a lawsuit accusing the airline and the Teamsters of underpaying workers, a California federal judge ruled.
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April 07, 2026
Musk Wants Altman Out, Not To Boost 'Himself Personally'
Elon Musk said Tuesday he wants OpenAI CEO Sam Altman stripped of his title and "all equity and other personal financial benefits" to be awarded to OpenAI's nonprofit if Musk wins his case claiming OpenAI duped him, saying he isn't after "a remedy directed to benefiting himself personally."
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April 07, 2026
NCAA Asks 9th Circ. To Revive 5-Year Eligibility Cap On Player
The NCAA urged a Ninth Circuit panel Tuesday to reverse an injunction that allowed a college baseball player to pitch beyond the five-year window the organization normally limits players to, saying his antitrust suit doesn't establish a relevant market or explain any anticompetitive effects of the five-year rule.
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April 07, 2026
LinkedIn Users Sue Over Secret Browser Extension Tracking
LinkedIn is facing two proposed class actions in California federal court alleging the networking platform has touted its anti-fraud and anti-data scraping efforts as cover for its surreptitious scanning of users' browser extensions, which often contain sensitive information, before sharing that data with third parties.
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April 07, 2026
11th Circ. Urged To Revive Fla. Suit Over Prepaid College Plan
Florida parents who paid for their kids' university educations in advance through a state-administered program urged the Eleventh Circuit to revive their proposed class claiming they were deprived of their full benefits, arguing Tuesday that the officials who implemented an additional fee aren't immune from the complaint.
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April 07, 2026
Keurig's K-Cup Pods Are Largely Unrecyclable, Suit Says
Keurig Dr Pepper was hit with a proposed class action in California federal court Tuesday alleging that it misleads consumers into believing that its single-serve plastic coffee pods are recyclable despite the fact that most recycling centers in the country don't accept them due to their size, irregular shape and other characteristics.
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April 07, 2026
USA Today Escapes Website User Tracking Suit, For Now
A California judge has shut down a proposed class action accusing USA Today of deploying tracking technology that illegally transmits information about website visitors' browsing activities to third parties, finding that the plaintiffs had failed to allege the type of concrete injury necessary to sustain their claims, while leaving the door open for their pleadings to be amended.
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April 07, 2026
Wash. Panel Nixes Insurer's Gordon Rees Malpractice Claims
A Washington Court of Appeals panel said a Great American insurance unit can't inherit an equipment manufacturer's legal malpractice claims against Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani LLP and Sinars Slowikowski LLC because of "potential conflict" between the insurer and manufacturer in the underlying dispute over a climber's fall.
Expert Analysis
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Social Media Trial Raises Key Product Safety Questions
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.
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11th Circ. NextEra Ruling Broadens Loss Causation Standard
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.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: March Lessons
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.
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Where 5th Circ. Ruling Fits In ERISA Arbitration Landscape
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.
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5 Different AI Systems Raise Distinct Privilege Issues
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.
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Why Meme Coin Ruling May Amplify Crypto Legislation Push
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.
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Opinion
AI-Assisted Arbitration Needs Safeguards To Ensure Fairness
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.
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What Recent Dataset Suits Signal For AI Training Litigation
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.
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How Del. High Court's Moelis Reversal Fits Into DExit Debate
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.
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Series
Playing Piano Makes Me A Better Lawyer
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.
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3 Cases Highlight SEC Distinction Between Exec, Co. Liability
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.
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AI-Generated Doc Ruling Guides Attys On Privilege Risks
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.
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The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Leadership Strategy After Day 1
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.
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Calif.'s Civility Push Shows Why Professionalism Is Vital
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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Del. Dispatch: Workplace Sexual Misconduct Liability In Flux
Following the Delaware Court of Chancery's recent contradictory rulings in sexual misconduct cases involving eXp World, Credit Glory and McDonald's, it's now unclear when directors' or officers' fiduciary duties may be implicated in cases of their own or others' sexual misconduct against employees, say attorneys at Fried Frank.