Compliance

  • November 05, 2025

    Disney Can Try Another SLAPP At Village People's $20M Suit

    A California appellate court has revived The Walt Disney Company's anti-SLAPP motion against a lawsuit claiming the entertainment giant fraudulently banned the Village People from performing at Disney Venues, saying Disney's musical act selection is conduct protected by the First Amendment.

  • November 05, 2025

    Kalshi, Robinhood Say Tribes' Gaming Law Case Lacks Merit

    Kalshi and Robinhood have told a California federal judge that Native American tribes in the state can't bring claims that the trading platforms ran a criminal racket and flouted laws protecting tribal gaming by offering their sports event contracts, since the wagers are ultimately overseen by federal commodity laws.

  • November 05, 2025

    UPS Crash Probe Begins, FAA Plans For 10% Cut In Air Traffic

    A UPS cargo plane that crashed in Louisville, Kentucky, appeared to have an engine on fire that detached from the aircraft during takeoff, the National Transportation Safety Board said Wednesday as investigators began collecting and examining evidence from a fiery crash that left 11 people dead.

  • 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.

  • November 05, 2025

    Dems Nab PSC Spots As Georgians React To High Utility Bills

    Georgia Democrats rolled to victory Tuesday over two Republican members of the state's utility oversight board, breaking the GOP's monopoly on the Public Service Commission and opening the door for shakeups in Peach State energy policy, experts say.

  • November 05, 2025

    Ethiopian Air Crash Warrants Substantial Award, Jury Hears

    The estate of a United Nations environmental worker who died in the 2019 crash of the Boeing jet flying Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 should be awarded substantial damages for her experience in the flight and how the crash affected her husband, both Boeing and the estate told Illinois federal jurors Wednesday.

  • 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.  

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • November 05, 2025

    Quantum Again Faces Investor Suit Over Reporting Errors

    A Quantum Corp. shareholder has filed a federal lawsuit against the Colorado-based data storage company, alleging its leadership made false and misleading statements about its accounting practices that have and will continue to cost the company millions.

  • November 05, 2025

    Cypriot Firm Challenges OFAC Sanctions In DC Court

    A Cypriot tech investment company is suing the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, claiming it should be removed from a list of entities under U.S. sanctions brought following the invasion of Ukraine.

  • November 05, 2025

    Jones Day Hires Ex-Coinbase Associate GC In San Diego

    Jones Day has added to its San Diego cybersecurity practice a former member of Coinbase's commercial litigation team, the firm announced.

  • November 05, 2025

    9th Circ. Won't Rehear Biotronik Whistleblower Revival

    The Ninth Circuit has rejected a petition to send its September ruling reviving a whistleblower suit against Biotronik Inc. before the full court, rejecting Biotronik's petition for a rehearing en banc.

  • November 05, 2025

    Hollywood Studios Merge Copyright Suits Against AI Startup

    Two suits brought by a group of major Hollywood studios alleging artificial intelligence startup Midjourney used copyrighted material to train its video-generation model have been merged into a single case in California federal court.

  • November 05, 2025

    NTIA Rule Creates 'Impossible Choice,' Group Says

    The Trump administration's plan to make BEAD recipients promise they will not need federal operational subsidies if they take money from the massive broadband infrastructure program is a bad one, says a broadband advocacy group.

  • November 05, 2025

    FTC Wants 'Tainted' Drs. Testimony Barred From Merger Case

    The Federal Trade Commission wants a D.C. federal judge to bar a pair of outside doctors and consultants from vouching for Edwards Lifesciences' planned JenaValve acquisition, arguing in a filing made public Tuesday that claims of minimal communication between the physicians' counsel and the companies were "at best, misleading."

  • November 05, 2025

    Trump Taps Former GOP Congressman To Lead BLM

    President Donald Trump on Wednesday nominated former New Mexico Republican congressman Steve Pearce to lead the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Department of the Interior office that oversees energy development on federal lands.

  • November 05, 2025

    American Airlines Workers' Attys Seek $8M In ESG Battle

    Class counsel representing American Airlines workers who prevailed on claims their employer violated federal benefits law by allowing an unchecked emphasis on environmental, social and governance factors in their employee retirement plan asked a Texas federal court for $7.9 million in fees.

  • November 05, 2025

    Texas Justices Mull Pro Se Atty's Contact With Opposite Party

    Texas' justices appeared skeptical that a lawyer deserved to get suspended for five years after he contacted members of the Commission for Lawyer Discipline, asking Wednesday whether the rule barring attorneys from directly contacting a party represented by counsel applies to lawyers representing themselves.

  • November 05, 2025

    Justices Skeptical About Trump's Emergency Tariff Authority

    Several U.S. Supreme Court justices asked the government to defend why well-established judicial doctrines shouldn't limit President Donald Trump's tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act during oral arguments Wednesday, casting doubt on whether they believe the law provides that kind of authority.

  • November 05, 2025

    Atty Owes More Than $1M For Note Default, Ga. Bank Says

    An attorney and his companies defaulted on a promissory note for more than $1.1 million, as well as interest, fees and costs, a Georgia-based bank alleges in a complaint filed Tuesday in Louisiana federal court.

  • November 05, 2025

    Ex-Startup Exec Who Helped Defraud JPMorgan Gets 68 Mos.

    A Manhattan federal judge hit an Israeli businessman with 68 months in prison Wednesday for joining with Frank founder Charlie Javice to trick JPMorgan into buying their failed financial aid startup for $175 million by using faked customer data.

  • November 05, 2025

    JPMorgan Latest Big Bank To Disclose 'Fair Banking' Scrutiny

    JPMorgan Chase & Co. has disclosed that it is responding to government inquiries tied to President Donald Trump's "fair banking" executive order targeting alleged political and religious discrimination by financial institutions, following a similar disclosure from Bank of America Corp.

  • November 05, 2025

    Native Hawaiians Sue Over Blocked Access To Sacred Temple

    A group of Native Hawaiians are asking a federal court to bar a homeowners' association from blocking their access to an ancient Indigenous temple located within the community, alleging their requests have repeatedly been denied and they are being harassed by residents with entrance rights to the property.

  • November 05, 2025

    Texas Tech Prof Seeks High Court Review Of Free Speech Suit

    A Texas Tech University professor urged the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Fifth Circuit's ruling that a former business school dean didn't have to face his retaliation lawsuit over the professor's anti-tenure views, arguing the appeals court applied the wrong qualified immunity standard.

Expert Analysis

  • How Crypto Embrace Will Affect Banks And Credit Unions

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    The second Trump administration has moved aggressively to promote crypto-friendly reforms and initiatives, and as the embrace of stablecoins and distributed ledger technology grows, community banks and credit unions should think strategically as to how they might use these innovations to best serve their customers, says Jay Spruill at Woods Rogers.

  • Navigating The SEC's Evolving Foreign Private Issuer Regime

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    As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reevaluates foreign private issuer eligibility, FPIs face not only incremental compliance costs but also a potential reshaping of listing strategies, capital access, enforcement exposure and global regulatory coordination, potential unintended effects that deserve further exploration, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • How Calif. Law Cracks Down On Algorithmic Price-Fixing

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    Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two laws this month significantly expanding state antitrust enforcement and civil and criminal penalties for the use or distribution of shared pricing algorithms, as the U.S. Department of Justice has recently wielded the Sherman Act to challenge algorithmic pricing, say attorneys at Pillsbury.

  • New Conn. Real Estate Laws Will Reshape Housing Landscape

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    With new legislation tackling Connecticut's real estate landscape, introducing critical new requirements and legal ambiguities that demand careful interpretation, legal counsel will have to navigate a significantly altered and more complex regulatory environment, say attorneys at Harris Beach.

  • Opinion

    Expert Reports Can't Replace Facts In Securities Fraud Cases

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    The Ninth Circuit's 2023 decision in Nvidia v. Ohman Fonder — and the U.S. Supreme Court's punt on the case in 2024 — could invite the meritless securities litigation the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act was designed to prevent by substituting expert opinions for facts to substantiate complaint assertions, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.

  • Iran Sanctions Snapback Raises Global Compliance Risks

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    ​The reimplementation of U.N. sanctions targeting Iran’s nuclear program​, under a Security Council resolution​'s snapback mechanism, and​ related actions in Europe and the U.K., may change U.S. due diligence expectations and enforcement policies, particularly as they apply to non-U.S. businesses that do business with Iran, says John Sandage at Berliner Corcoran.

  • Glimmers Of Clarity Appear Amid Open Banking Disarray

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    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's vacillation over data rights rules has created uncertainty, but a recent proposal is a strong signal that open banking regulations are here to stay, making now the ideal time for entities to take action to decrease compliance risk, says Adam Maarec at McGlinchey Stafford.

  • Opinion

    High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal

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    As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

  • FTC's Consumer Finance Pivot Brings Industry Pros And Cons

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    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.

  • How A New BIS Rule Greatly Expands Export Restrictions

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    The newly effective affiliates rule from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security restricts exports to foreign companies that are 50% or more owned by entities listed on the BIS entity list and the military end-user list — a major shift in U.S. export control enforcement, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • Amazon Ruling Marks New Era Of Personal Liability For Execs

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    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.

  • What Cross-Border Task Force Says About SEC's Priorities

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    The formation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's cross-border task force, focused on investigating U.S. federal securities law violations overseas, underscores Chairman Paul Atkins' prioritization of classic fraud schemes, particularly involving foreign entities, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • How Gov't Reversals Are Flummoxing Renewable Developers

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    The Trump administration has reversed numerous environmental and energy policies, some of which have then been reinstated by the courts, making it difficult for renewable energy project developers to navigate the current regulatory environment, says John Watson at Spencer Fane.

  • Series

    Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    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.

  • Opinion

    DOJ's Tracing Rule For Pandemic Loan Fraud Is Untenable

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    In conducting investigations related to COVID-19 relief fraud, the government's assertion that loan proceeds are nonfungible and had to have been segregated from other funds is unsupported by underlying legislation, precedent or the language establishing similar federal relief programs, say Sharon McCarthy, Jay Nanavati and Lasya Ravulapati at Kostelanetz.

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