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Competition
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November 07, 2025
Vegas Hotels Say 9th Circ. Shouldn't Rethink Price-Fixing Suit
Several Las Vegas hotel operators, two software companies and Blackstone all told the Ninth Circuit to reject a rehearing petition for its August decision for a proposed price-fixing class action that accused hotel operators and Blackstone of conspiring to use the software companies' GuestRev software to set prices for Las Vegas hotel rooms.
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November 07, 2025
NCAA Bans 6 More Basketball Players In Betting Probe
The NCAA permanently banned six Division 1 basketball players from universities in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arizona for their roles in either manipulating games or sharing information with bettors in three separate cases, the organization said Friday.
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November 07, 2025
Proskauer Hires White & Case Antitrust Partner In DC
Proskauer Rose LLP has brought on a White & Case LLP antitrust partner to its litigation department in Washington, D.C.
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November 07, 2025
Fed. Circ. Upholds PTAB Rulings Favoring Uber
The Federal Circuit on Friday refused to restore claims in a pair of patents used to track individuals, leaving in place Patent Trial and Appeal Board decisions that Uber showed the claims were invalid.
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November 07, 2025
Gov't Contractor Says Nuclear Lid Co.'s Drawings Not Secrets
A defense contractor has asked a North Carolina federal judge to toss a suit accusing it of using one company's design drawings for replacement container lids to award an Army purchase order to a rival, arguing that no trade secrets were involved or misused.
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November 07, 2025
UK Open To Fixes In Greencore's £1.2B Bakkavor Deal
The Competition and Markets Authority said Friday that it is likely to accept proposals by Greencore to sell its manufacturing plant for chilled sauces to get its £1.2 billion ($1.6 billion) deal for rival Bakkavor over the line.
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November 06, 2025
Egg Producers Blamed Bird Flu While Fixing Prices, Suit Says
A New York grocer filed a proposed class action Thursday in Indiana federal court against the nation's largest conventional egg producers and two industry publications accusing them of a price-fixing conspiracy they falsely blamed on years-old bird flu outbreak.
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November 06, 2025
Cal Poly Athletes Rip NIL Deal For Impact On Women's Sports
California Polytechnic State University athletes criticized the NCAA's $2.78 billion name, image and likeness settlement, telling a California federal judge during a hearing Thursday that it has harmed women's sports and caused inequitable cuts, while class counsel defended the deal, saying that it specifically preserves class members' Title IX rights.
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November 06, 2025
CareFirst Urges Ban On J&J Character Talk At Stelara Trial
Health insurer CareFirst is asking a Virginia federal judge to bar Johnson & Johnson from promoting its "good character" to a jury that will weigh class claims of anticompetitive conduct and patent fraud to extend market protection on the blockbuster autoimmune drug Stelara.
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November 06, 2025
PayPal Beats Antitrust Suit Over Merchant Rules Again
PayPal has for a second time beat a proposed class action accusing it of illegally boosting online retail prices with restrictive merchant agreements, but the consumers have one more chance to amend.
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November 06, 2025
Sinclair Says Disney-YouTube Blackout An Antitrust Problem
Sinclair's CEO expressed frustration about the ongoing blackout of Disney programming on YouTube TV, saying the dispute between media giants raises potential antitrust concerns because local broadcasters whose stations are affiliated with Disney's ABC broadcast network have no say over whether their content is getting distributed to viewers.
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November 06, 2025
Sutter Health Patients' Attys To Get Over $100M Fees, Costs
A California U.S. magistrate judge said Thursday that she is ready to grant final approval of a $228.5 million deal settling a 13-year case over claims that Sutter Health boosted costs by pushing all-or-nothing networks on insurers, which includes $75.4 million in attorney fees and over $28 million in litigation expenses.
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November 06, 2025
Ex-COO Says Yale New Haven Hospital Owes Him Nearly $1M
Yale New Haven Hospital owes its former chief operating officer more than $994,000 under a noncompete agreement that guarantees him regular payments, according to a Connecticut federal lawsuit claiming that the hospital is improperly withholding the money because he supposedly did not give enough notice of his resignation.
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November 06, 2025
Edwards Defends $945M Heart Valve Deal From FTC Challenge
Edwards Lifesciences urged a D.C. federal court to reject the Federal Trade Commission's bid to put its planned $945 million acquisition of JenaValve on hold, saying the deal will increase innovation and save the lives of thousands of people with a form of heart valve disease.
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November 06, 2025
Judge Mehta 'Still Digging Out' From Google, Oath Keepers
U.S. District Judge Amit P. Mehta said Thursday he is still playing catch-up from a period during which his time was spent with virtually nothing but the Google search case and the prosecution of Oath Keepers charged with sedition and other crimes from the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol.
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November 06, 2025
Google-Epic Judge Raises Doubts About App Antitrust Deal
The California federal judge overseeing Epic Games' antitrust suit against Google expressed serious doubts Thursday about their recent deal to end their fight over Android app distribution, ordering an evidentiary hearing and warning he's not sure the proposed deal will correct Google's illegal conduct.
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November 06, 2025
Deutsche Börse And Nasdaq Face EU Derivatives Cartel Probe
The European Commission revealed Thursday that it is investigating Deutsche Börse and Nasdaq over possible collusion to avoid competing for the listing, trading and clearing of financial derivatives.
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November 05, 2025
DOJ Clears Google's $32B Deal To Buy Cybersecurity Co. Wiz
Google's plan to acquire Wiz for $32 billion and integrate the growing cloud security platform into Google Cloud has cleared the U.S. Department of Justice's antitrust review, the tech giant confirmed Wednesday.
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November 05, 2025
Helium Financial Says Fired Employees Nabbed Trade Secrets
Two former employees of Washington-based Helium Financial Group LLC stole trade secrets and used them to start their own wealth management firm after they were fired, allowing them to create "a 'clone' of Helium's business model in startup form," Helium claimed in a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Seattle federal court
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November 05, 2025
Mallinckrodt Faces Antitrust Suit Over Oxycodone Supply Halt
A generic-drug company has claimed in a lawsuit filed in Pennsylvania federal court that Mallinckrodt LLC and a subsidiary have cut off the supply of active ingredients necessary to make competing drugs that include oxycodone and acetaminophen.
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November 05, 2025
Pharmacy Groups Urge 8th Circ. To Back Ark. PBM Limits
A pair of pharmacy trade groups is urging the Eighth Circuit to allow Arkansas to enforce a law barring pharmacy benefit managers from owning pharmacies, arguing the law is a rational response to "abusive" PBM practices.
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November 05, 2025
AGs Defend Bid To Intervene In DOJ's HPE Merger Deal
More than a dozen Democratic attorneys general have assailed the Justice Department and Hewlett Packard Enterprise for fighting their bid to peek behind the controversial settlement clearing HPE's $14 billion purchase of Juniper Networks, telling a California federal judge that Congress created court oversight for deals just like this.
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November 05, 2025
Microsoft Wants To Weigh In On Google Search Fixes, Too
Microsoft is urging a D.C. federal court to make sure that the limits imposed on Google in the U.S. Department of Justice's search monopolization case prevent the search giant from inking multiyear default agreements and that they reach new types of generative artificial intelligence products.
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November 05, 2025
Mamdani Taps Ex-FTC Chief Lina Khan For NYC Transition
New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani on Wednesday named an all-woman transition team, including former Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan, who attracted the ire of tech giants and corporations by spearheading the Biden administration's aggressive antitrust enforcement.
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November 05, 2025
Apple, Google CEOs Can't Yet Be Deposed In Antitrust Suit
Consumers accusing Google of hatching a deal with Apple to make it the default search engine on the iPhone will not be allowed to depose Apple CEO Tim Cook and Google CEO Sundar Pichai as part of their antitrust case accusing Google of suppressing rival search engines.
Expert Analysis
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FTC's Consumer Finance Pivot Brings Industry Pros And Cons
An active Federal Trade Commission against the backdrop of a leashed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be welcomed by most in the consumer finance industry, but the incremental expansion of the FTC's authority via enforcement actions remains a risk, say attorneys at Hudson Cook.
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Amazon Ruling Marks New Era Of Personal Liability For Execs
A Washington federal court's recent decision in FTC v. Amazon extended personal liability to senior executives for design-driven violations of broad consumer protection statutes, signaling a fundamental shift in how consumer protection laws may be enforced against large public companies, say attorneys at Orrick.
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Series
Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Traveling by myself has taught me to assess risk, understand tone and stay calm in high-pressure situations, which are not only useful life skills, but the foundation of how I support my clients, says Lacey Gutierrez at Group Five Legal.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Client Service
Law school teaches you how to interpret the law, but it doesn't teach you some of the key ways to keeping clients satisfied, lessons that I've learned in the most unexpected of places: a book on how to be a butler, says Gregory Ramos at Armstrong Teasdale.
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How The FTC Is Stepping Up Subscription Enforcement
Despite the demise of the Federal Trade Commission's click-to-cancel rule in July, the commission has not only maintained its regulatory momentum, but also set new compliance benchmarks through recent high-profile settlements with Match.com, Chegg and Amazon, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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How Trump Admin. Is Shifting Biden's Antitrust Merger Enforcement
Antitrust enforcement trends under the Trump administration have included a moderation in the agencies' approach to merger enforcement as compared to enforcers compared to the prior administration, but dealmakers should still expect aggressive enforcement when the agencies believe consumers will be harmed and they expect to win in court, say attorneys at Rule Garza.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: 3 Tips On Finding The Right Job
After 23 years as a state and federal prosecutor, when I contemplated moving to a law firm, practicing solo or going in-house, I found there's a critical first step — deep self-reflection on what you truly want to do and where your strengths lie, says Rachael Jones at McKool Smith.
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Strategies For Defending Banks In Elder Abuse Cases
Several recent cases demonstrate that banks have plenty of tools to defend against claims they were complicit in financial abuse of older adults, but financial institutions should also continue to educate customers about third-party scams before they happen, say attorneys at Troutman.
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Mich. Ruling Narrows Former Athletes' Path To NIL Recovery
A federal judge's recent dismissal of a name, image and likeness class action by former Michigan college football players marks the third such ruling this year, demonstrating how statutes of limitation and prior NIL settlements are effectively foreclosing these claims for pre-2016 student-athletes, say attorneys at Venable.
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Series
Painting Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Painting trains me to see both the fine detail and the whole composition at once, enabling me to identify friction points while keeping sight of a client's bigger vision, but the most significant lesson I've brought to my legal work has been the value of originality, says Jana Gouchev at Gouchev Law.
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What's At Stake At High Court For Presidential Removal Power
Two pending U.S. Supreme Court cases —Trump v. Slaughter and Trump v. Cook — raise fundamental questions about the constitutional separation of powers, threaten the 90-year-old precedent of Humphrey's Executor v. U.S. and will determine the president's authority to control independent federal agencies, says Kolya Glick at Arnold & Porter.
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Courts Are Still Grappling With McDonnell, 9 Years Later
The Seventh and D.C. Circuits’ recent decisions in U.S. v. Weiss and U.S. v. Paitsel, respectively, demonstrate that courts are still struggling to apply the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2016 ruling in McDonnell v. U.S., which narrowed the scope of “official acts” in federal bribery cases, say attorneys at Quinn Emanuel.
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Hybrid Claims In Antitrust Disputes Spark Coverage Battles
Antitrust litigation increasingly includes claims for breach of warranty, product liability or state consumer protection violations, complicating insurers' reliance on exclusions as courts analyze whether these are antitrust claims in disguise, says Jameson Pasek at Caldwell Law.
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Protecting Sensitive Court Filings After Recent Cyber Breach
In the wake of a recent cyberattack on federal courts' Case Management/Electronic Case Files system, civil litigants should consider seeking enhanced protections for sensitive materials filed under seal to mitigate the risk of unauthorized exposure, say attorneys at Redgrave.
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DOJ Settlement Offers Guide To Avoiding Key Antitrust Risks
The U.S. Justice Department's settlement with Greystar Management shows why parties looking to acquire companies that use pricing recommendation software should carefully examine whether the software algorithm and how it is used in the market create antitrust dangers, say attorneys at Fried Frank.