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Compliance
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February 20, 2026
Kalshi Gets A Win In Tennessee Over Sports Contracts
Kalshi has secured a win against Tennessee regulators trying to stop it from offering sports wagers in the state, with a federal judge blocking a potential enforcement action against the prediction marketplace operator after finding it is likely to succeed on the merits of its claims that its contracts are federally regulated.
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February 20, 2026
Tesla Moves To Claw Back $7M, $10M Interest In Fee Fight
Tesla Inc. has asked the Delaware Chancery Court to force the lawyers who secured a massive derivative settlement over board pay to return more than $7 million in allegedly withheld fees and pay over $10 million in interest, arguing that they are defying a recent Delaware Supreme Court ruling that slashed their award.
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February 20, 2026
SEC Says Tech CEO Hid Criminal Convictions, Misused Funds
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has accused the developer of a purported audio technology company of defrauding nearly 50 investors out of $4.2 million with misrepresentations about the company's products and her criminal background.
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February 20, 2026
Reentry Supervision Needed In Gun Sentence, Pa. Panel Rules
The Pennsylvania Superior Court in a precedential ruling vacated a prison sentence given to a man convicted of illegal gun possession, ruling that the lower court's failure to follow proper procedure invalidated the sentence.
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February 20, 2026
DOJ Says Ohio Health System's Contracts Violate Antitrust
The U.S. Department of Justice and Ohio's attorney general's office sued OhioHealth Corp. Friday in federal court, accusing the healthcare system of using contractual restrictions to block insurers from offering plans that include lower-cost rivals.
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February 20, 2026
Meta Judge's Antitrust Dismissal 'Usurped' Jury, 9th Circ. Told
Facebook users urged the Ninth Circuit to revive their proposed class action accusing Meta Platforms Inc. of monopolizing personal social networking markets by misrepresenting its privacy and data practices, arguing that a trial judge misapplied antitrust law and "improperly usurped the jury's role" in deciding factual disputes.
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February 20, 2026
PVC Pipe Buyers Want To Get Price-Fixing Discovery Moving
Parties involved in price-fixing litigation over polyvinyl chloride pipe costs have offered differing solutions to an Illinois federal court, with defendants in the consolidated action pushing for dismissal as plaintiffs urged the court to start permitted discovery.
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February 20, 2026
NY AG's Zelle Fraud Suit Sent Back To State Court
A Manhattan federal judge has ruled that the New York attorney general's office may return to state court with its lawsuit accusing Zelle's parent company of failing to adequately protect against fraud on the digital payment platform, granting the state's bid for remand.
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February 20, 2026
Kaiser Sues Insurers To Tap $95M D&O Policy For Fraud Deal
Kaiser Foundation Health Plan sued Chubb and other insurers in California federal court Friday seeking to tap $95 million in directors and officers liability coverage for a recently settled whistleblower action that accused Kaiser of submitting false diagnoses for Medicare Advantage Plan enrollees.
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February 20, 2026
Treasury, IRS Lay Out Eligibility For Depreciation Allowance
The U.S. Treasury Department and Internal Revenue Service released interim guidance Friday on what production property is eligible for the special depreciation allowance under last summer's federal budget law and announced plans to float official regulations on the provision.
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February 20, 2026
2nd NJ Defendant Joins Bid To Disqualify US Atty Leadership
A second defendant in a New Jersey federal criminal case on Friday joined a pending bid to disqualify the three assistant U.S. attorneys overseeing the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of New Jersey, escalating a constitutional challenge to the office's leadership structure.
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February 20, 2026
Lack Of Standing Dooms GardaWorld Health Fees Suit
A North Carolina federal judge on Friday threw out a suit alleging that GardaWorld Cash Service violated federal employment law with surcharges on its employee health plan for those who use tobacco or refused COVID-19 vaccination after finding that the two named plaintiffs did not participate in the health plan.
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February 20, 2026
FCC Chief Yearns For Red, White And Blue Broadcasts
With the nation's 250th birthday fast approaching, the Federal Communications Commission urged broadcasters to line up behind a White House call for patriotic displays by touting July 4 over the public airwaves.
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February 20, 2026
Compliance Group Of The Year: Morrison Foerster
Morrison Foerster LLP attorneys took on a remediation and compliance review for one of the world's largest banks and advised on a Dutch government initiative for developing a national digital platform for citizens' healthcare data, earning the firm a spot among the 2025 Law360 Compliance Groups of the Year.
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February 20, 2026
Milwaukee Accuses Fire Truck Giants Of Rigging The Market
The city of Milwaukee has alleged in a proposed class action that the country's largest fire truck makers and their trade group conspired to slow production so they could force cities and their departments to pay inflated prices.
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February 20, 2026
Native Policy Roundup: Sens. Try To Revive $350M Ed Funding
A bill that would allow for "Native American" markers on state-issued identification in New Mexico died this week despite bipartisan support, federal lawmakers called for the restoration of $350 million in minority education funding and Wisconsin lawmakers advanced a bill to allow online sports betting through the state's tribes.
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February 20, 2026
GC Cheat Sheet: The Hottest Corporate News Of The Week
Several pension funds in New York City sued AT&T, alleging the illegal exclusion of their shareholder proposal requesting a corporate diversity report from the telecom giant's corporate ballot. In the meantime, the DOJ said the Trump administration is investigating federal contractors and grant recipients for potentially engaging in discrimination, rather than for their DEI programs. These are among the stories in corporate legal news you may have missed in the past week.
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February 20, 2026
Trump Imposes Maximum Tariff After Supreme Court Rebuke
President Donald Trump imposed a temporary global tariff with several exemptions hours after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down tariffs imposed under the International Economic Emergency Powers Act, then announced that he would increase the duty to the 15% maximum.
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February 19, 2026
Ex-Google Engineers Took Trade Secrets To Iran, DOJ Says
Three Silicon Valley engineers exploited their employment at Google and other major tech companies in order to steal trade secrets and send the confidential information to personal devices that they then accessed in Iran, the U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday.
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February 19, 2026
Texas AG Launches Latest Suit Over Temu Data, China Ties
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Thursday accused online bargain app Temu of secretly stealing customer data and exposing it to the Chinese Communist Party, calling it "spyware disguised as a shopping app" in a suit filed in federal court.
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February 19, 2026
DOJ Atty Fined $500 A Day Over Withheld ICE Detainee ID
A Minnesota federal judge on Wednesday ordered a U.S. Department of Justice lawyer to pay $500 a day until an immigrant recently released from Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention gets his identification documents returned, according to the case docket.
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February 19, 2026
5th Circ. Pauses Order Scrapping FTC Merger Filing Overhaul
The Fifth Circuit on Thursday granted the Federal Trade Commission's emergency motion to pause a Texas federal judge's ruling that threw out the agency's overhaul of premerger reporting requirements.
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February 19, 2026
Judge Denies Mylan And Aurobindo's Bid To Escape Trial
A Connecticut federal judge has once again rejected generic-drug makers' bid to escape a multistate lawsuit accusing them of engaging in an overarching antitrust conspiracy, saying the evidence supports the need for a jury trial on whether the companies colluded to fix prices and divvy up markets for dozens of generic drugs.
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February 19, 2026
Calif. EV Waiver Fight Faces 'Significant' Hurdles, Judge Says
A California federal judge appeared open Thursday to tossing at least some claims by California and other states challenging the Trump administration's efforts to repeal Clean Air Act waivers, saying during a hearing that certain claims face "a significant challenge" following the Ninth Circuit's Center for Biological Diversity v. Bernhardt ruling.
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February 19, 2026
Feds Rest In Ex-Morgan Stanley Adviser's NBA Fraud Trial
Manhattan federal prosecutors on Thursday rested their case against a former Morgan Stanley investment adviser who's accused of defrauding NBA players out of millions of dollars by secretly profiting off their insurance investments and diverting client funds for his own use.
Expert Analysis
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Anticipating The SEC's Cybersecurity Focus After SolarWinds
While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent voluntary dismissal of its enforcement action against SolarWinds Corp. and its chief information security officer marks a significant victory for the defendants, it does not mean the SEC is done bringing cybersecurity cases, say attorneys at MoFo.
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Bid Protest Data Contradicts Claims That System Is Inefficient
Recently released data debunks the narrative that the federal procurement system is overwhelmed by excessive or meritless bid protests, revealing instead that the process is healthy and functioning as intended, says Joshua Duvall at Duvy Law.
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Opinion
Congress Should Lead On AI Policy, Not The States
There needs to be some limits on how far federal agencies go in regulating artificial intelligence systems, but Congress must not abdicate its responsibility and cede control over this interstate market to state and local officials, say Kevin Frazier at the University of Texas School of Law and Adam Thierer at the R Street Institute.
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Breaking Down Expense Allocation In Mixed-Use Properties
Rapid increases in condominium fees and special assessments, driven by multiple factors such as rising insurance costs and expanded safety requirements, are contributing to increased litigation, so equitable expense allocation in mixed-use properties requires adherence to the governing documents, says Mike Walden at FTI Consulting.
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4 Lessons From FTC's Successful Bid To Block Edwards Deal
The Federal Trade Commission's recent victory in blocking Edwards Lifesciences' acquisition of JenaValve offers key insights for deals in life sciences and beyond, including considerations around nonprice dimensions and clear skies provisions, say attorneys at Orrick.
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Limiting Worker Surveillance Risks Amid AI Regulatory Shifts
With workplace surveillance tools becoming increasingly common and a recent executive order aiming to preempt state-level artificial intelligence enforcement, companies may feel encouraged to expand AI monitoring, but the legal exposure associated with these tools remains, say attorneys at MoFo.
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Can OCC State Banking Law Preemption Survive The Courts?
While two December proposals from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency seek to foreclose pending consumer litigation against national banks related to residential mortgage lending, it's unclear whether this aggressive approach will withstand judicial scrutiny under the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 rulings in Cantero and Loper Bright, say attorneys at Davis Wright.
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How Selig May Approach CFTC Agricultural Enforcement
As the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission begins a new chapter under recently confirmed Chairman Michael Selig's leadership, a look back at the agency's actions in agricultural markets over the past six years sheds light on what may lie ahead for enforcement in the area, say attorneys at Latham.
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Traditional FCA Enforcement Surges Amid Shifting Priorities
The U.S. Department of Justice’s January report on False Claims Act enforcement in fiscal year 2025 reveals that while the administration signaled its intent to expand FCA enforcement into new areas such as tariffs, for now the greatest exposure remains in traditional areas like healthcare — in which the risk is growing, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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How 3 CFTC Letters Overhauled Digital Asset Guidance
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission recently issued three letters providing guidance for the use of digital assets in derivatives markets, clarifying the applicability of CFTC regulations across numerous areas of digital asset activities and leading to the development of standards to allow market participants to post digital assets as collateral, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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5th Circ. Ruling Clarifies Tax Rules For Limited Partners
The Fifth Circuit’s Jan. 16 decision in Sirius Solutions v. Commissioner provides greater tax planning certainty by adopting a bright-line test for determining when partners in limited liability companies are exempt from self-employment tax, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
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FTC Focus: Testing Joint Enforcement Over Loyalty Programs
The Federal Trade Commission's case against Syngenta can be understood both as a canary for further scrutiny over loyalty-discount practices and a signal of the durability of joint federal-state antitrust enforcement, with key takeaways for practitioners and those subject to regulatory antitrust scrutiny alike, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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NYC Bar Opinion Warns Attys On Use Of AI Recording Tools
Attorneys who use artificial intelligence tools to record, transcribe and summarize conversations with clients should heed the New York City Bar Association’s recent opinion addressing the legal and ethical risks posed by such tools, and follow several best practices to avoid violating the Rules of Professional Conduct, say attorneys at Smith Gambrell.
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Ruling Helps Clarify FERC's Post-Jarkesy Enforcement Power
A North Carolina federal court's recent ruling in American Efficient v. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission may be a step in providing clarity on FERC's enforcement authority under the Federal Power Act in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 decision in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Dispatches From Utah's Newest Court
While a robust body of law hasn't yet developed since the Utah Business and Chancery Court's founding in October 2024, the number of cases filed there has recently picked up, and its existence illustrates Utah's desire to be top of mind for businesses across the country, says Evan Strassberg at Michael Best.