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Compliance
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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
Northrop Wants FTC To Nix Conditions For $9.2B Orbital Buy
Northrop Grumman Corp. has asked the Federal Trade Commission to remove the conditions enforcers placed on its $9.2 billion acquisition of defense technology services company Orbital ATK Inc., telling the agency the restrictions are no longer in the public interest.
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April 03, 2026
Patent Holder Says JetSuiteX Infringed Call Routing Patent
A patent holder told a Texas federal court that public charter operator JetSuiteX Inc. infringed its call routing and auction system patents, asking the court to find that JetSuiteX stole the intellectual property.
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April 03, 2026
Ameriprise To Pay $1.4M Over Annuity Supervision Claims
Ameriprise Financial Services LLC has agreed to pay nearly $1 million in restitution and a $450,000 fine to end allegations from the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority that the Minneapolis-based firm failed to properly supervise recommendations of certain variable annuity exchanges.
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April 03, 2026
Music Publishers Say X Finds Conspiracy In 1 Emailed 'We'
The National Music Publishers' Association and its members have told a Texas federal court that X Corp.'s antitrust suit fails to allege any conspiracy, with the best argument the company could muster being an "implausible" interpretation of a single word — "we" — in a single email.
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April 03, 2026
'Political' Deals Pit DOJ Against State AGs, And Not Just Dems
Controversial U.S. Department of Justice settlements with Hewlett Packard Enterprise and Live Nation, along with the approval of Nexstar's purchase of Tegna, are increasingly inspiring state attorneys general to strike out on their own as antitrust enforcers, often in direct challenge to a federal government that Democrats have cast as "corrupt."
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April 03, 2026
GSA Restores Anthropic Technology Post-Injunction
The U.S. General Services Administration said on Friday that it is restoring Anthropic's technology to the agency's multiple award schedule after a California federal judge blocked the Trump administration from requiring all federal agencies to stop using Claude.
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April 03, 2026
Judge Stands By Block Of DOJ Subpoenas In Powell Probe
A Washington, D.C., federal judge on Friday rejected a U.S. Department of Justice attempt to revive subpoenas from its investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, saying the government hadn't "come close" to giving him a reason to rethink blocking them.
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April 03, 2026
FCC Looks To Trim Next Year's Budget By 4.3%
The Federal Communications Commission asked Congress for an operating budget of just over $398 million next year, a 4.3% cutback from the current fiscal year.
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April 03, 2026
DOJ's New Corporate Enforcement Policy May Eclipse SDNY's
The U.S. Department of Justice has put to use for the first time its new corporate enforcement policy of declining prosecutions when companies self-report potential criminal violations, but experts say the new, department-wide initiative has rendered a more business-friendly approach by the Southern District of New York moot.
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April 03, 2026
NWMLS' Compass Counterclaims Point To Private Listing Ban
Northwest Multiple Listing Service hit back at Compass with counterclaims in an antitrust case over a policy to stop brokers from offering properties privately before posting them on the online home listing platform, a practice the group said will be banned in Washington starting in June.
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April 03, 2026
FDA Won't Stop Nicotine Pouch Sale During Court Battle
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has told a vape manufacturer that it won't stop the production or sale of its "Zone" nicotine pouches until the company's lawsuit accusing the agency of unlawfully sitting on its application has been resolved.
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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
GC Cheat Sheet: The Hottest Corporate News Of The Week
PayPal was hit with a proposed investor class action that claims the payments giant hid slowing growth for its critical branded checkout business. In the meantime, a Shopify lawyer encouraged his peers during a webinar to make sure their outside counsel have "met the moment" by leveraging artificial intelligence in smart ways. These are some of the stories in corporate legal news you may have missed in the past week.
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April 03, 2026
Aetna Escapes COVID Testing Payment Suit In Calif.
A Nebraska testing laboratory failed to prove that Aetna underpaid more than $53 million for COVID-19 testing services, a California federal judge has ruled, dismissing the lab's federal racketeering and state law claims against the insurer but leaving the door open to an amended suit.
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April 03, 2026
CFTC Appoints Deputy GCs For Regulation, Litigation
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission announced Friday that it has hired a former U.S. Senate staffer and a lawyer with experience at the Virginia Attorney General's Office as deputy general counsel overseeing regulation and litigation at the agency.
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April 03, 2026
Clean Energy Tax Credits Could Gain Ground In Tax Planning
Discounted pricing and risk-limiting contracts are driving large companies to buy clean energy tax credits to lower their IRS bills, a move experts said could become standard in corporate tax planning.
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April 03, 2026
Real Estate Recap: FIFA, Data Center Litigation
Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including a look at the groundwork hotels and real estate owners have laid for the upcoming FIFA Men's World Cup and five legal cases over data center projects.
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April 02, 2026
Conn. Senator Eyes May Passage For AI, Data Broker Bills
A Connecticut state senator behind a pair of legislative proposals regulating data brokers, surveillance pricing, chatbots and the use of artificial intelligence in the employment context told Law360 that he remains confident the measures will pass before the legislative session ends next month, although he acknowledged some provisions could drop out.
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April 02, 2026
Ex-Centerview Banker Inks DPA To End Insider Trading Case
A former Centerview Partners investment banker on Thursday secured a deferred prosecution agreement with Manhattan federal prosecutors that will likely resolve her U.S. legal troubles stemming from her alleged role in a global insider trading ring that made tens of millions of dollars in illicit profits.
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April 02, 2026
Cadillac Owners' Class Action Says GM Botched EV Design
Two Cadillac Lyriq owners sparked the ignition on a proposed class action against General Motors in Washington federal court on Thursday, claiming the automaker hid evidence of pervasive defects in the electric SUV's design that can trigger system failures and leave the vehicles completely inoperable.
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April 02, 2026
Ex-Rabobank Officer Pushes OCC Again For $4M In Fee Fight
Attorneys of a former Rabobank compliance officer told the Ninth Circuit that the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency should not be allowed to abandon a "ruinous" failed enforcement action without paying $4 million to cover the fees and expenses incurred during the litigation.
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April 02, 2026
Treasury Proposes State Stablecoin Rules Meet OCC Standard
The U.S. Department of the Treasury is seeking public feedback on a proposal that would counsel states to ensure their stablecoin regulatory regimes implement much of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's coming federal rules for issuers of the stable-value tokens.
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April 02, 2026
10th Circ. Agrees To Rehear Colo. Opt-Out Interest Rate Suit
The Tenth Circuit agreed Thursday to rehear en banc banking groups' request for the court to take another look at their challenge to a Colorado law intended to curb high-cost lending in the state, vacating a November ruling that restored the law.
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April 02, 2026
Baby Care Products Co. Hit With Greenwashing Class Action
The company behind the baby care product brand Dapple Baby has been hit with a proposed greenwashing class action in a California federal court for allegedly selling products containing synthetic and industrially processed ingredients, despite packaging that indicates the products are "plant-based" and contain no harsh chemicals.
Expert Analysis
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How Data Centers Can Prep For Legal Challenges Amid War
Amid conflict in the Middle East, data centers may now be exposed to state-level kinetic threats, creating significant legal, regulatory and contractual implications, so operators should update their legal and operational frameworks in order to withstand future disruptions and meet the regulator expectations, say attorneys at Baker Botts.
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Series
Coaching Soccer Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Coaching youth soccer for my 7-year-old son's team has sharpened how I communicate with clients, prepare witnesses, work within teams and think about leadership, making me a more thoughtful and effective lawyer in many ways, says Joshua Holt at Smith Currie.
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How Internal Reporting Could Benefit Antitrust Whistleblowing
As the Justice Department's new antitrust whistleblower program stands to raise questions over the interaction between rewards and corporate leniency, incentivizing internal reporting first could increase the likelihood that the Antitrust Division receives the high-quality evidence needed to successfully prosecute cartel cases, says Daniel Oakes at Axinn.
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What Texas Anti-Boycott Ruling Means For ESG Landscape
A Texas federal court's recent ruling in American Sustainable Business Council v. Hegar that Texas' anti-ESG law is unconstitutional on First Amendment grounds will likely embolden legal challenges to similar laws in other states that have adopted fossil fuel boycott statutes, say attorneys at ArentFox Schiff.
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How To Wield The Clarity Act As A Litigation Defense Tool
The Clarity Act is being discussed as a future compliance statute, but for litigators it can be used as a present-day defense tool to strengthen fair‑notice framing, argue for forward‑looking remedies rather than punitive ones and reprice settlement leverage as statutory clarity approaches, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: The Human Element
Law school teaches you to quickly apply intellect and logic when handling a legal issue, but every fact pattern also involves a person, making the ability to balance expertise with empathy critical to the growth of relationships with clients, colleagues and adversaries, says Rachel Adcox at Adcox Strategies.
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As Justices Mull Suncor, Cos. Face New Climate Suit Realities
Following the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision to hear Suncor Energy v. Boulder County — its first case analyzing the litigation impact of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's rescission of its 2009 greenhouse gas endangerment finding — companies must consider new preemption questions surrounding climate lawsuits after the rescission, say attorneys at Hollingsworth.
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Employer Strategies For Limiting Data Breach Litigation Risks
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Employers must invest in robust cybersecurity and incident response protocols to both prevent data breaches and position themselves favorably in potential litigation, as legal defenses will increasingly rely on demonstrating reasonable security measures, prompt breach notification and transparent response efforts, says Gerald Maatman at Duane Morris.
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4 Ways To Help CBP Curb Shell Co. Import Schemes
Shifting to a proactive rather than reactive enforcement posture in addressing shell companies set up to skirt tariffs requires equipping U.S. Customs and Border Protection with enhanced investigative authorities, better intelligence support, and mechanisms to identify and hold accountable the ultimate illicit actors, say attorneys at Kelley Drye.
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7 Steps For Gov't Contractors In Post-IEEPA Tariff Landscape
In response to U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision to strike down tariffs issued by the Trump administration under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, there are several actions federal contractors should take to preserve their place in any refund waterfall, and to manage audit, overpayment and False Claims Act risk, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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How DExit, Mandatory Arbitration Could Alter IPO Outlook
As companies continue to leave Delaware and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission begins allowing companies to implement mandatory arbitration provisions, these developments could have a major impact on the initial public offering, securities class action, and directors and officers insurance landscapes, says Walker Newell at Arthur J. Gallagher & Co.
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Get Smart: Navigating The Genius Act's Regulatory Gaps
While some recent Genius Act rulemaking has covered consumer protection issues within the stablecoin market, the context is generally narrow and the final outcome remains uncertain for financial institutions or companies in the evolving landscape, say attorneys at Paul Hastings.
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Human Diligence Crucial As AI Raises Real Estate Fraud Risks
A recent title fraud warning from Florida officials demonstrates that artificial intelligence has lowered the barrier to committing complex property scams, forcing real estate industry stakeholders and attorneys to prioritize contextual review in transactions, says Neil Cohen at Barsh and Cohen.
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Opinion
3rd Circ. Must Reject EEOC's Flawed Equal Pay Theory
To avoid illogical outcomes, the Third Circuit, in Cartee-Haring and Marinello v. Central Bucks School District, should refute the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s recently filed amicus brief in support of the plaintiffs’ bias claims based on pay compared with one single co-worker, say Allan King at Littler and Stephen Bronars at Edgeworth Economics.
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Why Prediction Market Regulation Is At Major Inflection Point
As prediction markets experience tremendous growth and rapid mainstream adoption, regulators have begun to exercise enforcement authority to ensure market integrity and protect participants, though forthcoming guidance will shed light on how aggressively the agencies will police the fast-changing landscape, say attorneys at Latham.