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May 04, 2026
The Federal Communications Commission must ensure that its drive to spur the drone industry's growth does not jeopardize air travel safety, the country's largest airline pilots' union has told the agency.
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May 04, 2026
Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing LLC, a professional stock car racing team, asked a North Carolina federal court Friday for final approval of a settlement in a data breach class action that will offer protection for fraud and identity theft.
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May 04, 2026
A panel of First Circuit judges on Monday seemed dubious of a challenge to a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ban on the import of dogs younger than 6 months old, saying the agency seems to have multiple bases for the new rule.
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May 04, 2026
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission agreed Monday to drop a lawsuit accusing Elon Musk of failing to timely disclose his buy up of Twitter shares ahead of a decision to take the company private, agreeing to a settlement through which a trust held by Musk will pay $1.5 million.
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May 04, 2026
The Federal Communications Commission is handing out a few extensions for companies that are struggling to meet their deadlines for the agency's "rip and replace" program, which funds the replacement of Chinese technology, but it said it won't shift any more deadlines.
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May 04, 2026
Prediction market KalshiEX may be facing long odds in its effort to convince Massachusetts' highest court that its sports-related offerings are governed by federal commodities regulators and not subject to state gaming laws, several justices suggested Monday.
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May 04, 2026
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins said Monday that the agency is investigating allegations of fraud in the private credit markets as default rates rise and investors are increasingly exiting the space.
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May 04, 2026
A Texas federal judge has largely allowed a Galveston County beach town to enforce its new short-term rental rules, finding them to be reasonably tied to safety and nuisance control.
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May 04, 2026
The Supreme Court of New Jersey rejected a bid from a data privacy firm to consolidate more than 100 cases alleging violations of the state's judicial privacy statute into multicounty litigation, according to a notice to the bar.
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May 04, 2026
Three former sales workers have sued a cloud software company in North Carolina federal court, alleging the company wrongly classified them as overtime-exempt and denied them time and a half pay for years.
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May 04, 2026
The First Circuit on Monday weighed a challenge to the Trump administration's policy of detaining unauthorized immigrants without bond during removal proceedings, even as one judge noted that the issue has already divided appellate panels and will likely need to be sorted out by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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May 04, 2026
The owners and managers of a Georgia apartment complex have agreed to a $750,000 deal that federal prosecutors say is the second-largest settlement the U.S. Department of Justice has ever scored in an individual housing discrimination case.
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May 04, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to review a pro se lawsuit brought by a man incarcerated in Florida against a nurse he accused of denying him medical care, leaving intact lower court rulings that dismissed his action as "malicious" and were later affirmed on separate grounds.
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May 04, 2026
New Mexico's attorney general urged a state court Monday to order Meta to pay $3.7 billion to address the "public nuisance" caused by its apps, after a jury previously found the social media giant misrepresented harms to underage users.
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May 04, 2026
Global oil giants and an industry group have said Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has no basis to allege they conspired to restrict renewable energy and delay the transition away from fossil fuels in violation of federal antitrust laws.
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May 04, 2026
A Los Angeles cannabis-infused edibles producer has agreed to pay $50,000 to end a Proposition 65 lawsuit accusing the company of deliberately hiding the state-required warning with a peel-back product label, with most of the money going to the plaintiff's lawyer.
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May 04, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday temporarily reinstated telehealth access for the abortion medication mifepristone, pausing a lower-court order that had blocked by-mail and remote prescriptions.
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May 04, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear BNSF Railway Co.'s challenge to a Minnesota business-registration law that the rail giant contends was improperly invoked to haul it into state court by an out-of-state plaintiff over alleged out-of-state harms.
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May 04, 2026
WilmerHale has added a former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission deputy director as a partner in its securities and financial services department, the firm announced on Monday.
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May 01, 2026
Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including a breakdown of federal and state efforts to expand affordable housing and how real estate attorneys are responding.
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May 01, 2026
Delta Dental has agreed to pay $2.25 million to resolve the New York financial regulator's claims that the insurer maintained inadequate cybersecurity and breach response measures that enabled hackers to obtain access to files sent through the MOVEit transfer tool containing its customers' personal information.
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May 01, 2026
A burgeoning campaign against the False Claims Act's whistleblower mechanism is suddenly center stage at the Ninth Circuit, where pharmaceutical companies say a momentous new ruling "illustrates perfectly" the constitutional concerns of U.S. Supreme Court justices regarding FCA enforcement.
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May 01, 2026
Former Exxon Mobil Corp. CEO Rex Tillerson testified Friday that the company followed rules dictating annual reports to investors when it came to detailing its Kearl Lake reserves, telling a jury in Texas federal court that the energy giant did not mislead investors.
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May 01, 2026
The Trump administration is asking a federal judge to force Virginia to turn over its statewide voter registration list, saying the new gubernatorial administration's refusal runs afoul of the Civil Rights Act of 1960, even as the NAACP says the data could be used to target political opponents.
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May 01, 2026
A Florida equestrian told the Federal Trade Commission on Friday that an administrative law judge has no authority to sanction him after a horseracing anti-doping agency alleged his thoroughbred tested positive for a banned substance, arguing he's still entitled to have a jury rule on the doping claim.