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Compliance
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									October 28, 2025
									FERC Chair From V&E Taps Another Firm Atty As GCFederal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairwoman Laura Swett, a former Vinson & Elkins LLP energy attorney, has named another V&E energy lawyer based in the nation's capital as the agency's next general counsel. 
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									October 28, 2025
									Tax Software Co. Denies Poaching Rival's WorkersTax preparation software company Avalara asked a Pennsylvania federal court to deny claims by a competitor that it illegally lured workers with generous job offers, saying it did not unfairly compete or interfere with the competitor's contracts as it claimed. 
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									October 28, 2025
									Jones Day Bolsters Ranks With Another DOJ AttorneyJones Day has added another U.S. Department of Justice alum to its ranks, the firm announced Tuesday, welcoming the former attorney responsible for national security-related matters in the Office of the Deputy Attorney General. 
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									October 28, 2025
									Cognizant Can't Knock Out Suit Over 401(k) Roster, FeesCognizant Technology Solutions failed to shut down a proposed class action claiming the information technology company saddled its 401(k) plan with subpar investment options and steep recordkeeping fees, though a New Jersey federal judge said it's unclear whether the ex-workers behind the suit have standing. 
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									October 28, 2025
									US Partners With Westinghouse For $80B Nuke Plant BuildoutThe Trump administration on Tuesday announced it will partner with nuclear technology manufacturer Westinghouse Electric Co. to build at least $80 billion worth of new reactors in the U.S. to support and accelerate the development of data centers and artificial intelligence. 
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									October 28, 2025
									NY, Green Orgs. Say Feds Can't Block Climate Superfund LawThe state of New York and a group of environmental organizations on Tuesday pushed back on the federal government's motion for summary judgment in a suit challenging the state's new Superfund law, saying the court should reject the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's argument that New York's law is preempted. 
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									October 28, 2025
									Getting Grilled By FINRA 'Blows,' StraightPath Exec TextedA StraightPath co-founder on trial for an alleged $400 million investor fraud complained via text about a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority probe as he gave what prosecutors call false testimony, evidence before a Manhattan federal jury showed Tuesday. 
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									October 28, 2025
									Texas Accuses Tylenol Makers Of Hiding Autism DangerThe Texas Attorney General's Office on Tuesday sued the makers of Tylenol, alleging they hid the risk that the drug could lead to autism while marketing acetaminophen as the safest pain relief option for pregnant women and young children. 
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									October 28, 2025
									Google Liable Again As DOJ's Ad Tech Win Extends To MDLA New York federal judge held Google liable Tuesday for illegally monopolizing its advertising placement technology business, dramatically narrowing the scope of the multidistrict litigation from website publishers, advertisers and others by locking the technology giant into the Justice Department's win in a separate Virginia federal court case. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Tom Hayes Slaps UBS With $400M Malicious Prosecution SuitFormer UBS trader Tom Hayes has filed a $400 million suit against his old employer, claiming the company "maliciously" framed him as the "evil mastermind" behind the company's Libor scandal despite the fact that he was explicitly directed to try to influence Libor submissions while at UBS. 
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									October 27, 2025
									MIT Bros Go After 'Sandwichers' In $25M Crypto Heist TrialThe CEO of Savannah Technologies on Monday took the witness stand in the trial of two MIT-educated brothers accused of stealing $25 million from the Israeli cryptocurrency trading firm and others, and quarreled with defense counsel over the appropriateness of the company's use of a controversial strategy known as sandwich trading. 
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									October 27, 2025
									$HAWK Buyers Get Suits Over Coin Flop ConsolidatedA New York federal court on Monday granted two groups of buyers of the viral "Hawk Tuah" meme-themed cryptocurrency to combine their securities suits against the meme coin's promoters and developers. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Whistleblower 'Horrified' By Novo Nordisk Drug Sales TacticsThe whistleblower behind a federal lawsuit accusing Novo Nordisk of paying kickbacks to doctors and patients as part of a scheme to drive sales of its hemophilia drug NovoSeven took the witness stand Monday, telling jurors she was "horrified" at how the drugmaker's marketing team targeted doctors. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Kalshi Sues NY Regulator Over Cease-And-Desist LetterTrading platform Kalshi on Monday accused the New York State Gaming Commission of intruding into the federal government's regulatory authority over derivatives trading, in a lawsuit following a cease-and-desist letter it received from the state regulator for allegedly illegal sports wagering. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Dems Say $6.2B Nexstar-Tegna Deal Breaches Ownership CapNexstar's $6.2 billion plan to merge with rival broadcast company Tegna will create a behemoth that will breach the FCC's national ownership cap that limits how many stations any one company can own in a given market, say two federal lawmakers from Colorado. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Trump Taps Ex-Willkie Atty For 2nd Shot At Filling CFTC ChairPresident Donald Trump has chosen a former Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP partner and top attorney on the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's cryptocurrency task force to head the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, tapping the crypto industry advocate to lead an agency struggling with a leadership void. 
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									October 27, 2025
									2nd Circ. Tosses Ex-Iconix CEO's Fraud ConvictionThe Iconix Brand Group founder who was convicted of falsely inflating revenue by $11 million had his conviction overturned Monday by a Second Circuit panel that said he was subjected to double jeopardy. 
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									October 27, 2025
									CFPB Says States Can't Enact Medical Debt Reporting BansThe Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said Monday that it now believes federal law blocks efforts by states to ban medical debt from credit reports or enact most other credit reporting rules of their own, breaking sharply from its Biden-era stance on the topic. 
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									October 27, 2025
									FINRA Fines Conn. Broker-Dealer Over Underfunded ReservesA Connecticut brokerage will pay a $250,000 fine to end Financial Industry Regulatory Authority claims it underfunded its reserves and subsequently kept inaccurate records during a recent two-and-a-half year period. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Delta, Aeromexico Ask 11th Circ. To Halt Feds' JV Split OrderDelta Air Lines and Aeromexico have asked the Eleventh Circuit to freeze a Trump administration order directing them to scuttle their joint venture by Jan. 1, saying their legal challenge should first run its course and that unwinding their complex networks would be "tremendously burdensome." 
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									October 27, 2025
									5th Circ. Presses Texas County Over Redistricting PlanA Fifth Circuit panel pushed a Texas county to explain how a politician's comment that Black people tend to vote for Democrats should weigh on whether a redistricting plan disenfranchises minority voters, asking Monday whether the county acknowledges that race played a factor in the redistricting. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Epstein Docs From JPMorgan Case To Be Largely UnsealedA New York federal judge agreed Friday to unseal the "great majority" of documents sought by The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal in since-settled litigation alleging JPMorgan Chase aided Jeffrey Epstein's sex-trafficking activity, finding the names of individuals who discussed Epstein with bank executives must be unsealed. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Judge OKs $2.4M PeopleFacts Background Checks DealA Michigan federal judge Monday approved a $2.4 million settlement that PeopleFacts reached with a class of job-seekers whose criminal history was disclosed to potential employers, after those prospective workers had accused the background check company of making such disclosures without providing necessary notice. 
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									October 27, 2025
									AGs Call Landlord Deals In RealPage MDL 'Weak'A quartet of state attorneys general urged a Tennessee federal judge to hold off on approving $141.8 million in class settlements resolving claims that major landlords used RealPage to fix rent prices, arguing the "weak injunctive terms" and "meager monetary relief" interferes with their own cases. 
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									October 27, 2025
									Ex-Startup CFO's Crypto Wire Fraud Trial Begins In SeattleFederal prosecutors told a Seattle jury on Monday that the former chief financial officer of a Seattle-based startup committed wire fraud by funneling $35 million into his fintech venture that was wiped out during a subsequent cryptocurrency collapse, with defense counsel countering that "losing money with a bad investment is not a crime." 
Expert Analysis
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								State Paid Leave Laws Are Changing Employer Obligations  A wave of new and expanded state laws covering paid family, medical and sick leave will test multistate compliance systems, marking a fundamental operational shift for employers that requires proactive planning, system modernization and policy alignment to manage simultaneous state and federal obligations, says Madjeen Garcon-Bonneau at PrestigePEO. 
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								How Crypto Embrace Will Affect Banks And Credit Unions  The second Trump administration has moved aggressively to promote crypto-friendly reforms and initiatives, and as the embrace of stablecoins and distributed ledger technology grows, community banks and credit unions should think strategically as to how they might use these innovations to best serve their customers, says Jay Spruill at Woods Rogers. 
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								Navigating The SEC's Evolving Foreign Private Issuer Regime  As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reevaluates foreign private issuer eligibility, FPIs face not only incremental compliance costs but also a potential reshaping of listing strategies, capital access, enforcement exposure and global regulatory coordination, potential unintended effects that deserve further exploration, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher. 
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								How Calif. Law Cracks Down On Algorithmic Price-Fixing  Gov. Gavin Newsom signed two laws this month significantly expanding state antitrust enforcement and civil and criminal penalties for the use or distribution of shared pricing algorithms, as the U.S. Department of Justice has recently wielded the Sherman Act to challenge algorithmic pricing, say attorneys at Pillsbury. 
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								New Conn. Real Estate Laws Will Reshape Housing Landscape  With new legislation tackling Connecticut's real estate landscape, introducing critical new requirements and legal ambiguities that demand careful interpretation, legal counsel will have to navigate a significantly altered and more complex regulatory environment, say attorneys at Harris Beach. 
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								Opinion Expert Reports Can't Replace Facts In Securities Fraud Cases  The Ninth Circuit's 2023 decision in Nvidia v. Ohman Fonder — and the U.S. Supreme Court's punt on the case in 2024 — could invite the meritless securities litigation the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act was designed to prevent by substituting expert opinions for facts to substantiate complaint assertions, say attorneys at A&O Shearman. 
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								Iran Sanctions Snapback Raises Global Compliance Risks  The reimplementation of U.N. sanctions targeting Iran’s nuclear program, under a Security Council resolution's snapback mechanism, and related actions in Europe and the U.K., may change U.S. due diligence expectations and enforcement policies, particularly as they apply to non-U.S. businesses that do business with Iran, says John Sandage at Berliner Corcoran. 
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								Glimmers Of Clarity Appear Amid Open Banking Disarray  The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's vacillation over data rights rules has created uncertainty, but a recent proposal is a strong signal that open banking regulations are here to stay, making now the ideal time for entities to take action to decrease compliance risk, says Adam Maarec at McGlinchey Stafford. 
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								Opinion High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal  As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. 
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								FTC's Consumer Finance Pivot Brings Industry Pros And Cons  An active Federal Trade Commission against the backdrop of a leashed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be welcomed by most in the consumer finance industry, but the incremental expansion of the FTC's authority via enforcement actions remains a risk, say attorneys at Hudson Cook. 
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								How A New BIS Rule Greatly Expands Export Restrictions  The newly effective affiliates rule from the U.S. Department of Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security restricts exports to foreign companies that are 50% or more owned by entities listed on the BIS entity list and the military end-user list — a major shift in U.S. export control enforcement, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher. 
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								Amazon Ruling Marks New Era Of Personal Liability For Execs  A Washington federal court's recent decision in FTC v. Amazon extended personal liability to senior executives for design-driven violations of broad consumer protection statutes, signaling a fundamental shift in how consumer protection laws may be enforced against large public companies, say attorneys at Orrick. 
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								What Cross-Border Task Force Says About SEC's Priorities  The formation of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's cross-border task force, focused on investigating U.S. federal securities law violations overseas, underscores Chairman Paul Atkins' prioritization of classic fraud schemes, particularly involving foreign entities, say attorneys at Cleary. 
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								How Gov't Reversals Are Flummoxing Renewable Developers  The Trump administration has reversed numerous environmental and energy policies, some of which have then been reinstated by the courts, making it difficult for renewable energy project developers to navigate the current regulatory environment, says John Watson at Spencer Fane. 
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								Series Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer  Traveling by myself has taught me to assess risk, understand tone and stay calm in high-pressure situations, which are not only useful life skills, but the foundation of how I support my clients, says Lacey Gutierrez at Group Five Legal.