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Compliance
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December 17, 2025
States, Groups Urge DC Circ. To Preserve EPA Soot Rule
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's request that the D.C. Circuit vacate a Biden-era soot rule is legally untenable and should be rejected, Democrat-led states and cities, along with health and environmental groups, told the court.
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December 17, 2025
SEC Again Flags Adviser Testimonials, Ratings In Marketing
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Division of Examinations has again flagged advisers' disclosures regarding their use of testimonials, endorsements and third-party ratings in advertisements, saying staff have observed noncompliance with commission rules in those areas.
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December 17, 2025
Lawmakers Raise Concerns Over Nexstar's $6.2B Tegna Deal
A group of Democratic lawmakers has urged federal enforcers to closely scrutinize Nexstar Media Group Inc.'s planned $6.2 billion purchase of rival broadcast company Tegna Inc. and to block the deal if they find it violates the law.
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December 17, 2025
DC Circ. Grants En Banc Hearing On CFPB Layoff Plan
Additional D.C. Circuit judges will get to weigh in on the Trump administration's bid to dismantle the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau through mass layoffs, after the appeals court granted the agency's employees' union an en banc rehearing on a lower court's injunction stopping the firings.
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December 17, 2025
Senate Dems, FCC Tangle Over Agency's 'Independent' Status
The Federal Communications Commission's Republican chair faced off Wednesday against Senate Democrats, who accused him of trying to muffle dissenting political views and gutting the telecommunications regulator's longstanding independence.
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December 17, 2025
10th Circ. Panel Restores $2.9M FINRA Award Against Adviser
A Tenth Circuit panel on Wednesday reinstated a $2.9 million Financial Industry Regulatory Authority arbitration award against a financial adviser who allegedly undermined a firm she worked for, ruling that she waived any objections she had to arbitrating with the plaintiffs before FINRA.
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December 17, 2025
20 States Back 10th Circ. Rehearing In Colo. Interest Rate Row
Utah has led a group of 20 states in backing a push by banking groups for a full Tenth Circuit rehearing of their challenge to a Colorado law intended to curb high-cost lending in the state, saying a recent panel decision upholding the law harms states' interests.
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December 17, 2025
Energy Dept. Orders Wash. Coal Plant To Remain Open
The U.S. Department of Energy has ordered Washington's sole coal-fired power plant to remain open through March 2026, despite a state law that requires utilities to stop using coal-fired electricity by year's end.
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December 17, 2025
SEC Sues Over Alleged $48M Bitcoin Mining Fraud
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filed a lawsuit on Wednesday, accusing the former CEO of a bitcoin mining company of misappropriating $48.5 million in investor funds before fleeing the country once he learned he was under SEC investigation.
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December 17, 2025
Calif. DMV Tells Tesla To Rename Autopilot Or Lose License
The California DMV has said Tesla violated state law when it marketed its vehicles' "autopilot" and "full self-driving capability," calling the phrases misleading because the technology doesn't actually enable autonomous driving and ordering the company to change its marketing or face a suspension of its permit to sell vehicles in the state.
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December 17, 2025
Ex-Atlanta Hawks Exec Pleads Guilty In $3.8M Fraud Case
A former finance executive with the NBA's Atlanta Hawks pled guilty to wire fraud Tuesday, striking a deal to resolve a case in which federal prosecutors accused him of embezzling more than $3.9 million from the team.
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December 17, 2025
Ex-Conn. Official Denied Hearing On Juror's Media Comment
A former Connecticut schools construction official did not provide enough justification to warrant a post-conviction hearing to probe whether jurors were forthcoming about their exposure to press coverage of his public corruption case, a federal judge ruled Wednesday.
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December 17, 2025
Amazon Charged Too Much Sales Tax, Tenn. Consumer Claims
Amazon has been hit with a proposed class action in Washington state court by a Tennessee customer who claims the e-commerce giant collected excessive sales tax on his purchases and then refused to refund him, in violation of Volunteer State tax law that holds "marketplace facilitators" responsible for charging the correct rate.
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December 17, 2025
Union, Voter Group Seek To Join DOJ Election Records Case
A union local, an affiliate and a Black voters advocacy group urged a federal court Tuesday to let them intervene in a U.S. Department of Justice suit seeking election records from Fulton County, Georgia, arguing the DOJ is trying to boost conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election.
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December 17, 2025
Braidwood Asks For Judgment In ACA Preventive Care Fight
Christian-owned, for-profit management company Braidwood Management Inc. asked a Texas federal judge Tuesday to end its challenge to an Affordable Care Act provision that requires coverage of lung cancer screenings and preexposure prophylaxis for HIV/AIDS, citing a U.S. Supreme Court finding upholding the provision.
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December 17, 2025
DOJ Says Live Nation Can't Avoid Jury In Antitrust Case
The Justice Department wants a New York federal judge to force Live Nation to face a jury next year on allegations it bought, coerced and leveraged its way to live performance dominance, arguing in a newly unsealed brief that there are too many factual disputes to upstage the lawsuit.
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December 17, 2025
CFTC's Pham Will Head To Crypto Co. MoonPay After Exit
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission's acting Chair Caroline Pham is set to join cryptocurrency payments firm MoonPay as its top lawyer following her impending departure from the commission, MoonPay announced Wednesday.
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December 17, 2025
NC Panel Revives Part Of Solar Co. Ex-Atty's Sex Bias Suit
A North Carolina attorney can proceed with a piece of her lawsuit alleging a solar company discriminated against her based on sex while she served in a senior legal role, after a state appeals court revived one of her claims Wednesday.
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December 17, 2025
Trump Admin's BEAD Redo Subject To Hill Review, GAO Says
The U.S. Government Accountability Office has ruled that Congress can review the Trump administration's sweeping revision of rules covering a $42.5 billion broadband deployment program.
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December 17, 2025
Full DC Circ. Blocks EPA From Freezing Grants
The D.C. Circuit on Wednesday reversed an order issued by a panel of its own judges and reinstated a federal district court's order that blocked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency from freezing grants designated for climate change projects.
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December 17, 2025
Mass. Court Orders GPS Monitoring Review For Sex Offender
A Massachusetts man sentenced to 10 years in prison and 10 years probation with location monitoring after sexually abusing his children has the right to challenge the reasonableness of the duration of his tracking, the state's highest court said Wednesday, vacating a lower court's denial of his request.
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December 17, 2025
Treasury Issues Final Rule On BEAT For Securities Lending
Taxpayers must determine and account for certain qualified derivative payments linked to securities-lending transactions when calculating payments covered by the base erosion and anti-abuse tax, according to a final rule released Wednesday by the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
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December 17, 2025
Nikola Founder's Suit Against CNBC Time-Barred, Panel Says
Nikola Corp. founder Trevor Milton's trade libel claims against CNBC and short‑seller Hindenburg Research are actually defamation claims and time-barred, a New Jersey appellate panel said in a decision tossing the suit and awarding the defendants attorney fees.
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December 17, 2025
Mich. Tribe Fights Feds' High Court Protest In Fishing Suit
The Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippewa Indians says four of its fellow Michigan tribes and the federal government are "conjuring vehicle problems" from a dispute over a decades-old Great Lakes fishing compact, telling the U.S. Supreme Court that none of their arguments warrant denying its petition.
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December 17, 2025
6th Circ. Revives NJ Drivers' Wage Action Against Hub Group
Two drivers alleging that logistics company Hub Group misclassified them as independent contractors have no connection to Tennessee, the Sixth Circuit ruled, departing from a Tennessee federal court's decision that found their suit under New Jersey law couldn't stand.
Expert Analysis
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Indiana Law Sets New Standard For Wage Access Providers
The recent enactment of a law establishing a comprehensive regulatory framework for earned wage access positions Indiana as one of the leading states to allow EWA services, and establishes a standard that employers must familiarize themselves with before the Jan. 1 effective date, say attorneys at Faegre Drinker.
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Series
Practicing Stoicism Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Practicing Stoicism, by applying reason to ignore my emotions and govern my decisions, has enabled me to approach challenging situations in a structured way, ultimately providing advice singularly devoted to a client's interest, says John Baranello at Moses & Singer.
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Adapting To Enforcement Focus On Wound Care Fraud
As federal agencies target wound care industry fraud as a top enforcement priority, attorneys advising industry stakeholders should evaluate business relationships for Anti-Kickback Statute violations, emphasize appropriate product use and documentation, and use internal data analytics to monitor billing patterns, say David Tarras at Tarras Defense and Jay McCormack at Verrill Dana.
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Texas, One Year In
A year after the Texas Business Court's first decision, it's clear that Texas didn't just copy Delaware and instead built something uniquely its own, combining specialization with constitutional accountability and creating a model that looks forward without losing touch with the state's democratic and statutory roots, says Chris Bankler at Jackson Walker.
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AI Product Safety Insights May Expand Foreseeability
Product liability law has long held that companies are responsible for risks they knew about or should have known about — and with AI systems now able to assess and predict hazards during the design process, companies should expect that courts will likely treat such hazards as foreseeable, says Donald Fountain at Clark Fountain.
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AG Watch: Illinois A Key Player In State-Level Enforcement
Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul has systematically strengthened his office to fill federal enforcement gaps, oppose Trump administration mandates and advance state policy objectives, particularly by aggressively pursuing labor-related issues, say attorneys at Troutman.
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Border Czar Bribery Probe Spotlights 'Public Official' Scope
Reports that border czar Tom Homan allegedly accepted cash from a federal agent prior to his appointment raise important questions for government contractors about when a private citizen can be prosecuted as a public official under federal bribery laws, say Gregory Rosen at Rogers Joseph and Jason Manning at Levy Firestone.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Educating Your Community
Nearly two decades prosecuting scammers and elder fraud taught me that proactively educating the public about the risks they face and the rights they possess is essential to building trust within our communities, empowering otherwise vulnerable citizens and preventing wrongdoers from gaining a foothold, says Roger Handberg at GrayRobinson.
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Organ Transplant System Reforms Mark Regulatory Overhaul
Recent oversight, enforcement and operational developments in the U.S. organ procurement and transplantation system, alongside challenges like the federal shutdown, highlight heightened regulatory scrutiny and the need for compliance to maintain public trust, say attorneys at Hall Render.
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Federal Grantees May Soon Face More Limitations On Speech
If courts accept the administration’s new interpretation of preexisting case law, which attempts to graft onto grant recipients the existing limitations on government contractors' free speech, a more deferential standard may soon apply in determining whether an agency’s refusal or termination of a grant was in violation of the First Amendment, say attorneys at Venable.
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Strategies For Merchants As Payment Processing Costs Rise
As current economic pressures and rising card processing costs threaten to decrease margins for businesses, retail merchants should consider restructuring how payments are made and who processes them within the evolving legal framework, says Tom Witherspoon at Stinson.
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7 Areas To Watch As FTC Ends Push For A Noncompete Ban
As the government ends its push for a nationwide noncompete ban, employers who do not want to be caught without protections for legitimate business interests should explore supplementing their noncompetes by deploying elements of seven practical, enforceable tools, including nondisclosure agreements and garden leave strategies, say attorneys at Seyfarth.
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Shifting Crypto Landscape Complicates Tornado Cash Verdict
Amid shifts in the decentralized finance regulatory landscape, the mixed verdict in the prosecution of Tornado Cash’s founder may represent the high-water mark in a cryptocurrency enforcement strategy from which the U.S. Department of Justice has begun to retreat, say attorneys at Venable.
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Opinion
NYC Landlords Should Fight Unlawful Occupancy With 2 Laws
New York City property owners should proactively use the Multiple Dwelling Law and Administrative Code to maintain the integrity of the city's housing market, safeguard tenant safety and keep unlawful occupancy disputes out of the already overwhelmed New York City Housing Court, say attorneys at Rosenberg & Estis.
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5 Crisis Lawyering Skills For An Age Of Uncertainty
As attorneys increasingly face unprecedented and pervasive situations — from prosecutions of law enforcement officials to executive orders targeting law firms — they must develop several essential competencies of effective crisis lawyering, says Ray Brescia at Albany Law School.