Compliance

  • January 22, 2026

    Google Moves To Toss Privacy Suit Alleging AI Spying

    Google urged a California federal judge on Wednesday to dismiss a proposed class action claiming it secretly enabled artificial intelligence tools to scan users' Gmail, Chat and Meet communications, arguing the plaintiffs don't allege their data was accessed or if they suffered any harm.

  • January 22, 2026

    Designer Akris Settles FCA Claim Over Pandemic Loan

    The U.S. subsidiary of Swiss designer Akris AG has agreed to pay $1.8 million to settle a False Claims Act complaint alleging the company improperly obtained a pandemic relief loan for which it was not eligible, the U.S. attorney's office in Boston announced Thursday.

  • January 22, 2026

    Drugmakers May Dodge Disgorgement In States' Antitrust Suit

    A Connecticut federal judge probed the limits of his equitable powers Thursday in a sprawling generic drug antitrust enforcement action, expressing doubt that he could order the drugmaker defendants to hand over their profits while also awarding multiplied damages and imposing civil penalties.

  • January 22, 2026

    FERC Commissioners Back Fed-State Push For PJM Changes

    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on Thursday backed plans from the Trump administration, state governors and PJM Interconnection to address escalating power prices amid data center-fueled increases in electricity demand, and encouraged the nation's largest grid operator to promptly submit policy proposals.

  • January 22, 2026

    2nd Circ. Stays Nielsen's National-Local Data Tying Block

    The Second Circuit temporarily paused a New York federal judge's order blocking Nielsen from tying access to its nationwide radio ratings data to the purchase of local market data.

  • January 22, 2026

    FTC Cites 'Serious Concerns' With Epic-Google Play Deal

    A settlement resolving Epic Games' antitrust lawsuit against Google that would replace the injunction Epic won against Google's Play Store controls has drawn pushback from the Federal Trade Commission, which is urging strict scrutiny of the agreement currently under the eye of an already skeptical California federal judge.

  • January 22, 2026

    Google Can't Duck Case Over Paid Search, Privacy Claims

    A California federal court has refused to toss a proposed consumer class action alleging Google's default search agreements block competition from rival search engines that could provide more privacy or even pay users to search.

  • January 22, 2026

    Sentencing Judge Blasts Ex-Mars Exec's 'Entitlement'

    A former Mars Inc. risk executive was sentenced on Thursday to 63 months in prison and ordered to pay the candy company more than $28.4 million in restitution after pleading guilty to two counts of wire fraud and one count of tax evasion surrounding a decadelong fraud scheme.

  • January 22, 2026

    10th Amtrak Worker Cops To Role In $11M Fraud Scheme

    A former Amtrak employee has admitted to participating in a scheme that prosecutors claim defrauded the rail carrier out of $11 million in health benefits, making him the 10th defendant in a year to plead guilty in the case, the U.S. attorney's office in New Jersey said on Thursday.

  • January 22, 2026

    Ga. Financial Firm CEO Cops To $380M Ponzi Scheme

    The CEO of an Atlanta-area financial advisory group has pled guilty to conducting a $380 million Ponzi scheme, which is likely the largest in Georgia history, according to prosecutors.

  • January 22, 2026

    AGs Target Investor Advocacy Group As 'Climate Cartel'

    A group of state attorneys general led by Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier issued a warning letter Wednesday to climate advocacy organization Ceres claiming concerns about violations of antitrust and consumer protection laws.

  • January 22, 2026

    Amazon Says IP Lawyer Can't Dodge Trademark Suit

    Amazon is pushing back against an intellectual property lawyer's effort to escape a lawsuit accusing him of conspiring with a Chinese company to sidestep a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office rule, arguing the claims were properly pled and that the Seattle federal court is the proper venue.

  • January 22, 2026

    Marketers Who Sold Fraudulent StraightPath Funds Plead Out

    Two New York men who hawked pre-initial public offering shares for fraud-ridden vendor StraightPath from "boiler room" sales floors pled guilty Thursday to fraud charges, after Manhattan federal prosecutors charged them with raising $185 million by duping customers.

  • January 22, 2026

    Trump Sues JPMorgan For $5B Over Account Closures

    President Donald Trump on Thursday sued JPMorgan Chase in Florida state court for at least $5 billion in damages, alleging it unlawfully "debanked" him and an array of his business ventures shortly after the end of his first term.

  • January 22, 2026

    NCAA Tells 4th Circ. Appeal Of Eligibility Ruling Should Go On

    The NCAA has urged the Fourth Circuit to keep hearing its appeal of a preliminary injunction letting four West Virginia University football players compete in a season that is now over, arguing that similar challenges to its eligibility rules are inevitable.

  • January 22, 2026

    Shareholder Says $2.3B Take-Private Deal Hid Blackstone Ties

    Board members of Hawaii-based commercial real estate investment trust Alexander & Baldwin obscured their connections to Blackstone Real Estate in securities filings preceding a proposed $2.3 billion take-private deal, an investor claimed in an Illinois federal lawsuit.

  • January 22, 2026

    Salvation Army Pulls NLRB Challenge After Case Dropped

    The Salvation Army dropped a suit seeking a court's declaration that its rehab centers are outside the National Labor Relations Board's jurisdiction after agency prosecutors, who had defended their power over the group, dropped their underlying administrative complaint.

  • January 22, 2026

    Washington Drops $9M Climate Fund Suit Against NOAA

    Washington state dropped its lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Commerce after a federal judge temporarily blocked the Trump administration from withholding more than $9 million meant to shore up the state's resiliency to climate change.

  • January 22, 2026

    EEOC Chair Decries 'Fearmongering' Amid Guidance Repeal

    The Republican members of the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission voted Thursday to retract comprehensive harassment guidelines issued during the Biden administration after the agency's chair panned warnings from Democrats and civil rights advocates that the move erodes key worker protections.

  • January 22, 2026

    Ethanol Biz Loses Bid To Overturn €48M Price-Fixing Fine

    A Swedish ethanol producer failed on Thursday to overturn a €47.7 million ($55.9 million) fine for colluding to maintain high prices by market manipulation after a European appeals court ruled that a competition watchdog did not presume it was guilty.

  • January 21, 2026

    NJ Justices Wrestle With Cases Complicated By ICE Custody

    The New Jersey Supreme Court wondered Wednesday how to manage case flow when detained or deported defendants are prevented by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from attending their proceedings, lamenting the difficult choice of options including letting matters languish, conducting criminal trials virtually or issuing bench warrants that could complicate immigration cases.

  • January 21, 2026

    Holmes Seeks Trump Clemency For Theranos Fraud Sentence

    Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes has asked President Donald Trump to commute an 11-year prison sentence she's been serving for defrauding investors with bogus blood-testing technology, according to the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of the Pardon Attorney.

  • January 21, 2026

    Senate Agriculture Unveils Crypto Bill Without Dem Backing

    The chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee released the text of a proposal to expand the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission's authority over crypto Wednesday evening, despite failing to reach a bipartisan agreement on the text ahead of a markup slated for next week.

  • January 21, 2026

    CVS, UnitedHealth, Express Scripts Duck PBM Antitrust Suit

    A Missouri federal judge has thrown out a proposed class action accusing the country's three largest pharmacy benefit managers — owned by CVS, UnitedHealth Group and Cigna Group — of inflating prescription costs through their rebating practices.

  • January 21, 2026

    Ex-TD Bank Worker Cops To Taking Money Laundering Bribes

    A former New Jersey-based TD Bank NA employee pled guilty on Wednesday to accepting bribes and leveraging his position to facilitate the movement of over $26 million to Colombia through TD Bank accounts.

Expert Analysis

  • How 2nd Circ. Decision Extends CFTC's Extraterritorial Reach

    Author Photo

    The Second Circuit recently concluded in U.S. v. Phillips that the Commodity Exchange Act extends to entirely foreign conduct if a victim of the conduct is based in the U.S., suggesting there is a heightened risk that foreign swap transactions will be susceptible to U.S. regulation when U.S. counterparties are involved, say attorneys at Skadden.

  • AG Watch: Ohio's Prediction Market Preemption Battle

    Author Photo

    Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost is playing a significant part in two cases involving Kalshi before the Third Circuit and the Southern District of Ohio, the latest in a growing string of court battles regarding which regulations govern prediction markets that will have notable consequences on sports gambling nationwide, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.

  • How Banks Can Pilot Token Services As Fed Mulls Reforms

    Author Photo

    While the Federal Reserve explores streamlined payment accounts and other reforms aimed at digital asset infrastructure, banks and payment companies seeking to launch stablecoin services must apply the same rigor they use for cards or automated clearinghouse, says Christopher Boone at Venable.

  • Series

    The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Making The Case To Combine

    Author Photo

    When making the decision to merge, law firm leaders must factor in strategic alignment, cultural compatibility and leadership commitment in order to build a compelling case for combining firms to achieve shared goals and long-term success, says Kevin McLaughlin at UB Greensfelder.

  • Key Risks For Cos. As MAHA Influences Food Regulation

    Author Photo

    As the Make America Healthy Again movement alters state and federal legislative and regulatory priorities, measures targeting ultra-processed foods, front-of-package labeling requirements and restrictions on schools are creating new compliance and litigation risks for food and beverage manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, retailers and digital advertisers, say attorneys at Kelley Drye.

  • State AGs May Extend Their Reach To Nat'l Security Concerns

    Author Photo

    Companies with foreign supply-chain risk exposure need a comprehensive risk-management strategy to address a growing trend in which state attorneys general use broadly written state laws to target conduct that may not violate federal regulations, but arguably constitutes a national security threat, say attorneys at Wiley.

  • What To Know As Rulings Limit NLRB's Expanded Remedies

    Author Photo

    Two recent appellate decisions strongly rebuke the National Labor Relations Board's expansion of remedies beyond reinstatement and back pay under Thryv, which compensated employees for all direct or foreseeable pecuniary harms, signaling increased judicial skepticism toward the board's broadened remedial authority, says Shay Billington at CDF Labor.

  • Global Net-Zero Shipping Framework Faces Rough Waters

    Author Photo

    The decision of the International Maritime Organization's Marine Environment Protection Committee to delay its proposal for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from ships, in the face of strenuous U.S. objections, highlights the importance of proactive engagement with policymakers and strategic planning for different compliance scenarios, say attorneys at Blank Rome.

  • 5 Bonus Plan Compliance Issues In Financial Services

    Author Photo

    As several legal constraints — including a new California debt repayment law taking effect in January — tighten around employment practices in the fiercely competitive financial services sector, the importance of compliant, well-drafted bonus plans has never been greater, say attorneys at Jackson Lewis.

  • What To Watch As NY LLC Transparency Act Is Stuck In Limbo

    Author Photo

    Just about a month before it's set to take effect, the status of the New York LLC Transparency Act remains murky because of a pending amendment and the lack of recent regulatory attention in New York, but business owners should at least prepare for the possibility of having to comply, says Jonathan Wilson at Buchalter.

  • 1st Trial After FCPA Pause Offers Clues On DOJ Priorities

    Author Photo

    After surviving a government review of Foreign Corrupt Practices Act enforcement, the U.S. v. Zaglin case reveals the U.S. Department of Justice still appears willing to prosecute individuals for conduct broadly consistent with classic priorities, despite the agency's new emphasis on foreign policy priorities, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Opinion

    Despite Deputy AG Remarks, DOJ Can't Sideline DC Bar

    Author Photo

    Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche’s recent suggestion that the D.C. Bar would be prevented from reviewing misconduct complaints about U.S. Department of Justice attorneys runs contrary to federal statutes, local rules and decades of case law, and sends the troubling message that federal prosecutors are subject to different rules, say attorneys at HWG.

  • Key Strategies For Supplement Cos. Facing Lead Risks

    Author Photo

    In the wake of a recent Consumer Reports article detailing dangerously high levels of lead in many popular protein powders, supplement companies face increased litigation, rising enforcement risks and reputational harm — underscoring the need to monitor supply chains, test ingredients and understand labeling standards, say attorneys at Husch Blackwell.

  • How AI Tech Suppliers Can Address IP Lawyers' Concerns

    Author Photo

    While artificial intelligence tools can help intellectual property lawyers be more productive and effective, AI tech providers must address issues of privilege, data privacy and confidentiality to make their technology viable and useful for IP law, say Tom Colson at Colson Law and Kevin Bronson at Simpson & Simpson.

  • From Bank Loans To Private Credit: Tips For Making The Shift

    Author Photo

    The relationship between private credit and syndicated bank deals will evolve as the private market continues to grow, introducing new challenges for borrowers comparing financing options, particularly pertaining to loan documentation and working capital, say attorneys at Haynes Boone.

Want to publish in Law360?


Submit an idea

Have a news tip?


Contact us here
Can't find the article you're looking for? Click here to search the Compliance archive.