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Compliance
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November 14, 2025
Del. Lawmakers OK Pushing County's Property Tax Deadline
Delaware would extend a tax payment deadline for New Castle County property owners until the end of the year under a bill unanimously approved by state lawmakers and headed to the governor.
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November 14, 2025
La., Parishes Push To Keep Coastal Suits In State Court
Louisiana and a pair of its coastal parishes have told the U.S. Supreme Court that the Fifth Circuit correctly concluded that their pollution lawsuits against Chevron and Exxon stemming from their World War II-era oil production belong in state court.
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November 14, 2025
Cleary, K&L Gates Advise On Duravant's $230M Matthews Deal
Warburg Pincus-backed Duravant has agreed to purchase the warehouse automation business of Matthews International Corp. for $230 million, with Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP steering Duravant and K&L Gates LLP advising Matthews International.
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November 14, 2025
Tribe Fights Enforcement Of Casino Union Recognition Order
A California federal judge should forgo enforcing an arbitration award that requires a Native American tribe to work with UNITE HERE at a tribe-run casino, the tribe argued, saying the award is based on a flawed premise.
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November 14, 2025
NJ Sen. Seeks Fix For Daniel's Law Amid Legal Challenges
A New Jersey state senator has introduced legislation intended to rescue Daniel's Law from mounting constitutional challenges, saying the state's judicial-privacy statute has been weakened by 2023 amendments that have spawned confusion, lawsuits and compliance problems for businesses and public agencies.
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November 14, 2025
Frequent DEI Foe Takes Aim At Mich. Law Firm's Scholarships
American Alliance for Equal Rights, a group known for challenging diversity, equity and inclusion scholarships, has set its sights on Michigan personal injury firm Buckfire & Buckfire PC for alleged discrimination via the firm's scholarship programs for minorities.
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November 14, 2025
DC Circ. Urged To Block Trump Org. From IRS Leaker's Appeal
President Donald Trump's private business organization should not be allowed to intervene in a former IRS contractor's challenge to his prison sentence for leaking Trump's and other wealthy people's tax returns, the contractor told the D.C. Circuit, saying the organization's participation would unfairly bias the court.
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November 14, 2025
6 Firms Guide Warburg Pincus-Led $1.4B ECN Capital Buyout
Toronto-based ECN Capital Corp. announced that it has agreed to be taken private by an investor group led by Warburg Pincus, in an all-cash transaction valuing the specialty finance company at roughly 1.9 billion Canadian dollars ($1.4 billion).
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November 14, 2025
SEC's Atkins Turns A Critical Lens On BlackRock, Vanguard
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins said Friday morning that his agency is working to rein in large institutional asset managers like BlackRock and Vanguard that "get out of line" by trying to influence management decisions.
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November 14, 2025
Hartford Wants Ex-Murder Suspect's Civil Rights Suit Tossed
The city of Hartford, Connecticut, has urged a federal court to dismiss a lawsuit brought against it and its police detectives by a man who was falsely accused of murder, arguing the city cannot be liable for the alleged conduct of its employees and that statutory deadlines weren't met.
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November 14, 2025
GC Cheat Sheet: The Hottest Corporate News Of The Week
Experts say it will likely take at least a month for the thousands of SEC employees now back to work after the government shutdown to catch up with submissions for initial public offerings. Meanwhile, clean energy developers are increasingly looking to privately held investors amid a race to beat a July 2026 cutoff to maintain eligibility for clean electricity investment and production tax credits. These are some of the stories in corporate legal news you may have missed in the past week.
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November 14, 2025
Horizon BCBS To Pay $100M To End NJ AG's Overcharge Suit
Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey has agreed to pay the state $100 million to resolve allegations that it fraudulently secured a multibillion-dollar contract to administer public employee health plans and then systematically overcharged taxpayers for years, Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin announced Friday.
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November 13, 2025
BofA, BNY Slam 'Razor-Thin' Epstein Enabling Claims
Bank of America and the Bank of New York Mellon Corp. urged a Manhattan federal judge Thursday to toss lawsuits accusing them of enabling Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking enterprise and failing to timely report the late sex offender's suspicious transactions, saying "razor-thin allegations" don't connect the institutions to the crimes.
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November 13, 2025
'Gray Market' Indian Snack Imports Get Temporarily Banned
Indian snack food maker Haldiram's won a federal court order temporarily banning a food supplier in Washington state from importing or distributing its branded products over claims that the supplier repackaged and sold food not meant for sale in the U.S.
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November 13, 2025
As Backlogged SEC Reopens, Attys Jostle To 'Get In Line'
Thousands of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission employees who were sent home last month finally returned to their offices Thursday, and experts say it will likely take at least a month for them to catch up with a backlog of casework and submissions for initial public offerings.
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November 13, 2025
Trump To Pardon UK Billionaire Lewis For Insider Trading
President Donald Trump has agreed to pardon 88-year-old British billionaire Joseph Lewis, who was sentenced to three years of probation for feeding nonpublic stock tips to his girlfriend and private-jet pilots.
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November 13, 2025
Coinbase Counsel's DExit Letter Triggers Class Atty Pushback
A Grant & Eisenhofer PA principal has challenged Coinbase Global Inc.'s continued limiting of public disclosures in a Delaware Court of Chancery suit alleging insider trading ahead of a stock plunge, after the company told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Wednesday it will recharter in Texas.
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November 13, 2025
Clean Energy Cos. Tap Private Cash To Beat Tax Credit Clock
Clean energy developers are increasingly looking to privately held investors to ensure they can do enough work to keep their projects fully eligible for tax credits that start phasing out next year, energy development attorneys told Law360.
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November 13, 2025
Bank Regulators Preview Timelines For Planned Fintech Rules
Federal banking regulators say they're focused on executing their fintech rulemaking agendas in the coming months, with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. planning to circulate a stablecoin licensing regime by year's end and the Federal Reserve intending to provide fintechs easier access to its payment rails by the close of next year.
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November 13, 2025
2nd Circ. Upholds NY's Ban On Selling Diet Pills To Minors
The Second Circuit on Thursday rejected a trade group's bid to block a New York law that bars companies from selling weight loss and muscle-building supplements to minors, finding the group likely won't win its First Amendment challenges and retailers' "speculative predictions" of lost sales aren't enough to show irreparable harm.
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November 13, 2025
Fla. Hospitals Didn't Prove Opioid Conspiracy, Jurors Told
Walgreens told a state court jury on Thursday that Florida hospitals haven't proven that the company conspired with Walmart, CVS and pharmaceutical manufacturers to illegally dispense opioids through their pharmacies, arguing that the corporations shouldn't be liable for $1.5 billion in damages for contributing to an epidemic of opioid-addicted patients.
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November 13, 2025
Hemp Policy At Crossroads After Government Reopening Bill
Hemp industry advocates are pledging to use the one-year gap between enactment and implementation of the government funding agreement, which effectively recriminalized most hemp-derived THC products, to craft new regulatory legislation that stops short of a full ban.
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November 13, 2025
FCC Looks To Avoid 'Red Flag' Reg Hurdles In Space
The Federal Communications Commission says it envisions a framework for the fast-growing space industry that rejects heavy-handed regulations, which a top official on Thursday likened to British 19th-century "red flag laws" putting the brakes on the early auto industry.
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November 13, 2025
OCC Must Deny Sony Bank's Crypto Charter Bid, Critics Say
Banking and community interest groups are urging the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to reject Sony Bank's bid to charter a cryptocurrency-focused offshoot, warning it could exceed the agency's authority and risk skirting longstanding banking system safeguards.
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November 13, 2025
Texas Court Says Landowner Doesn't Have To Sell $22M Plot
A Texas Business Court judge ruled that a landowner doesn't have to go forward with a previously planned $22.5 million sale of 20.8 acres of land because the buyer terminated the deal.
Expert Analysis
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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.
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Blockchain May Offer The Investor Protection SEC Seeks
As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission moves to control the ballooning costs of the consolidated audit trail and attempts to finally give regulators a unified, real-time picture of trading, blockchain demonstrates what it looks like when that kind of transparency is a baseline feature, not an aspirational overlay, says Tuongvy Le at Veda Tech Labs.
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Del. Dispatch: Chancery Expands On Caremark Red Flags
The Delaware Court of Chancery’s recent Brewer v. Turner decision, allowing a shareholder derivative suit against the board of Regions Bank to proceed, takes a more expansive view as to what constitutes red flags, bad faith and corporate trauma in Caremark claims, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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Opinion
It's Time For The Judiciary To Fix Its Cybersecurity Problem
After recent reports that hackers have once again infiltrated federal courts’ electronic case management systems, the judiciary should strengthen its cybersecurity practices in line with executive branch standards, outlining clear roles and responsibilities for execution, says Ilona Cohen at HackerOne.
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Prepping For Website Automatic Opt-Out Signal Mandates
Maryland's Online Data Privacy Act, which, along with a growing number of U.S. states, requires businesses to offer mechanisms in their privacy policies or online interfaces to allow individuals to opt out of data collection, marks a new frontier in consumer privacy, raising both technical and legal risks, say attorneys at Baker Donelson.
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Tips For Cos. Crafting Enforceable Online Arbitration Clauses
Recent rulings from the Ninth Circuit and the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California indicate that courts are carefully examining the enforceability of online arbitration clauses, so businesses should review the design of their websites and consider specific language next to the "purchase" button, say attorneys at DTO Law.
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Who Will Regulate Insider Trading In Prediction Markets?
The possibilities for insider trading have greatly expanded in the brave new world of prediction markets, and both the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and U.S. Department of Justice could bring enforcement actions in the space, so businesses should revisit their insider trading and confidential information policies, say attorneys at Fenwick.
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Opinion
Crypto Bills' Narrow Scope Guarantees Continued Uncertainty
The Digital Asset Market Clarity Act and Responsible Financial Innovation Act aim to make the $4 trillion crypto market more transparent and less susceptible to fraud, but their focus on digital assets sold in investment contract transactions promises continued uncertainty for the industry, says Joe Hall at Davis Polk.
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Rules Of Origin Revamp May Be Next Big Trade Development
The rules of origin for determining what tariff applies to any given import appear to be on the cusp of an important rethink, and it seems likely that the administration will try to align the rule with its overall tariff strategy in one of three ways, says Ted Posner at Baker Botts.
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7 Lessons From The Tractor Supply CCPA Enforcement Action
The California Privacy Protection Agency's recent enforcement action targeting Tractor Supply for alleged violations of the California Consumer Privacy Act provides critical insights into the compliance areas that remain a priority for the California regulator, including businesses with significant consumer interactions, say attorneys at Troutman.
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Considering Judicial Treatment Of The 2023 Merger Guidelines
Courts have so far primarily cited the 2023 merger guidelines for propositions that do not differ significantly from prior versions of the guidelines, leaving it unclear whether the antitrust agencies will test the guidelines’ more aggressive theories, and how those theories will be treated by federal judges, say attorneys at Covington.
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Key Lessons From Youths' Suit Against Trump Energy Orders
A Montana federal court's recent decision in Lighthiser v. Trump, dismissing a challenge by a group of young plaintiffs to President Donald Trump's executive orders promoting fossil fuels, indicates that future climate litigants must anchor their suits in discrete, final agency actions and statutory text, say attorneys at ArentFox Schiff.