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Compliance
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February 19, 2026
DOJ Shifts FCA Focus From Anti-DEI To Antidiscrimination
A U.S. Department of Justice deputy assistant attorney general said on Thursday that the Trump administration is not investigating federal contractors and grant recipients for their diversity, equity and inclusion programs but for potentially engaging in discrimination.
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February 19, 2026
Alleged $140M Ponzi Head Barred From Ga. Securities Sector
Georgia securities regulators have hit one of the leaders of an alleged $140 million Ponzi scheme that funneled contributions to right-wing politicians with an order barring him from doing further investment business in the Peach State and demanding a $500,000 fine.
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February 19, 2026
Xerox Whistleblower Deal Cut May Hinge On Public Disclosures
A Texas appellate court wanted to know Thursday whether a trio of whistleblowers is entitled to a $48 million cut of a Medicaid fraud settlement with Xerox, asking whether prior public disclosures of the wrongdoing helped or hurt their case.
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February 19, 2026
Washington Justices' Input Sought On Prosecutorial Immunity
A Seattle federal judge said he intends to send a certified question to the Washington Supreme Court as part of a lawyer's racial discrimination suit against Snohomish County judges and prosecutors, giving parties a week to weigh in on what exactly the question should be.
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February 19, 2026
Live Nation Says Judge Should Have Cut More Of DOJ's Case
Live Nation urged a New York federal court on Thursday to further pare down the government's antitrust case against the company, saying a ruling earlier in the week should have nixed additional allegations involving the promotion services it provides to major concert venues.
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February 19, 2026
FCC Floats Nearly $200K Fine On Dahua For Late Filing
The Federal Communications Commission will seek an almost $200,000 fine against Zhejiang Dahua Technology Co. for allegedly failing to file paperwork detailing its subsidiaries and affiliates going back three years under a U.S. national security program.
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February 19, 2026
UBS Whistleblower To Get Full Retrial On Long-Running Case
A New York federal judge on Thursday ordered a retrial over a fired UBS worker's whistleblower retaliation lawsuit, marking the latest development in a saga that saw the Second Circuit strike down his 2017 trial win twice, before and after the case was revived by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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February 19, 2026
Attys React To Test Of Free Speech At Winter Olympics
The Winter Olympics in Milan have delivered the expected drama of national and individual success and defeat, but for sports law experts, one Ukrainian athlete's expulsion stood as a test of the rules governing political protest and personal expression.
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February 19, 2026
JPMorgan Pans Trump's 'Woefully Inadequate' Debanking Suit
JPMorgan Chase on Thursday removed President Donald Trump's $5 billion "debanking" lawsuit to Florida federal court, saying it plans to fight for dismissal of the case as it rolled out a Jones Day legal team that includes Trump's former Solicitor General Noel Francisco.
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February 19, 2026
FERC Won't Restore Ban On Pipeline Work During Appeals
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on Thursday stood by its elimination of a rule barring construction activities on gas infrastructure projects when approvals are being challenged, saying that burgeoning U.S. energy demand justifies the move.
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February 19, 2026
NYC Pension Funds Sue AT&T Over Proxy Proposal Exclusion
Several New York City pension funds have sued AT&T over what they say is the illegal exclusion of their shareholder proposal requesting a corporate diversity report from the telecom giant's corporate ballot, following an indication that regulators would allow the exclusion.
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February 19, 2026
SEC's Peirce Calls For Crypto-Updated Liquidity Rule
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission member Hester Peirce, the leader of the agency's crypto task force, called Thursday for public feedback on how the agency might apply a rule on broker liquidity to firms that choose to keep stablecoins on hand.
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February 19, 2026
Ex-ComEd VP Turned Fed Witness Gets Probation For Bribery
An Illinois federal judge Thursday sentenced a former Commonwealth Edison executive to probation for his role in the utility's scheme to bribe ex-Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, saying a noncustodial sentence was justified as his undercover recordings and testimony helped win corruption convictions against Madigan and his former colleagues.
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February 19, 2026
Contractor, Insurer Must Defend Rubber Co. In Burn Suit
An industrial services contractor and its insurer must defend a synthetic rubber manufacturer in an underlying personal injury suit accusing the company of negligently maintaining a pipe that broke and severely burned the contractor's employee, a Texas federal court ruled.
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February 19, 2026
Shkreli Again Tries To Add Wu-Tang Members To Album Fight
"Pharma Bro" Martin Shkreli filed a third-party complaint against two members of hip-hop group Wu-Tang Clan, seeking once again to bring them into litigation brought by a cryptocurrency community that claims Shkreli improperly retained copies of a Wu-Tang album the community had bought the rights to.
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February 19, 2026
Delta, Aeromexico Urge 11th Circ. To Void DOT Split Order
Delta Air Lines and Aeromexico urged the Eleventh Circuit to void a U.S. Department of Transportation order directing them to dismantle their joint venture, saying the agency had offered contrived reasoning and scant evidence for purported anticompetitive effects.
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February 19, 2026
Texas Panel Unsure Midwife Can Escape Abortion Order
A Texas appellate court pushed back on a midwife's assertion that a court order blocking her from providing abortions flouted the state's rules of civil procedure, saying Thursday she wasn't facing the lawsuit "for doing appendectomies."
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February 19, 2026
Pharma Group Asks 1st Circ. To Ax RI's 340B Drug Price Law
A pharmaceutical trade group has urged the First Circuit to overturn a district court's order siding with a Rhode Island law that bars drug manufacturers from blocking hospitals and clinics from contracting with outside pharmacies to dispense discounted drugs under the federal 340B Discount Drug Program.
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February 19, 2026
Live Nation Fights Uphill To Nix FTC Suit Over Ticket Scalping
Live Nation urged a California federal judge Thursday to reconsider her tentative decision refusing to dismiss the Federal Trade Commission's allegations it turned a blind eye to scalpers, arguing that the complaint doesn't identify specific tickets that scalpers were able to obtain by evading security measures that limit purchases.
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February 19, 2026
Native Villages Drop $70M Alaskan Broadband Grant Fight
After almost two years of battling it out in Alaska federal court, two Native Alaskan villages have come to terms with the U.S. Department of Agriculture to end their fight with the agency over $70 million in broadband funds.
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February 19, 2026
Feds Look To Revive Sex Abuse Ruling Over Native Status
The U.S. is asking the Tenth Circuit for an en banc rehearing on its decision to vacate the 30-year prison sentence of a New Mexico man convicted of sexually abusing an Indigenous girl, telling the court that its error is one of exceptional importance.
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February 19, 2026
Property Co. Denies Connection To Hawaii Temple Access Suit
A property management company is looking to escape a challenge by a group of Native Hawaiians over access to an ancient Indigenous temple, arguing its alleged wrongful conduct is not called out with any specificity in the complaint.
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February 19, 2026
Energy Startup Targets Binance, Banks In Loan Fraud Claims
Connecticut-based clean energy startup Palm Energy Systems LLC has filed a racketeering lawsuit against cryptocurrency exchange Binance Holdings Ltd., its once-imprisoned former CEO Changpeng Zhao and two banks, alleging they either enabled or failed to stop a cash and Bitcoin financing fraud scheme that drained $400,000 from its accounts.
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February 19, 2026
Warren Seeks Treasury, Fed Pledge Of No Bitcoin Bailout
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is asking the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve to provide a written pledge not to bail out cryptocurrency markets in the face of sliding bitcoin prices, saying such a move would disproportionately benefit billionaires.
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February 19, 2026
Electronics Cos. Fight 'Heavy-Handed' Next-Gen TV Mandate
As the Federal Communications Commission looks to coax the broadcast industry into adopting next-generation TV on a wider scale, a key electronics industry group has re-upped concerns that officials might move too fast.
Expert Analysis
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Tips For Banks Navigating AI Benefits, Risks And Regulation
To understand how artificial intelligence affects banks and is used in the products and services they offer, they must examine use cases, efficiencies, benefits, risks, vendor management and oversight, as well as consider how regulators can use AI and are monitoring its use in banking activity, says Doug Hiatt at Fredrikson & Byron.
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State And Int'l Standards May Supplant EPA's GHG Rule
The U.S. Environmental Protection agency's recent repeal of its 2009 finding that greenhouse gases endanger public health will likely increase regulatory uncertainty, as states attempt to fill the breach with their own regulatory regimes and some companies shift focus to international climate benchmarks instead, say attorneys at ArentFox Schiff.
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Opinion
Federal Preemption In AI And Robotics Is Essential
Federal preemption offers a unified front at a decisive moment that is essential for safeguarding America's economic edge in artificial intelligence and robotics against global rivals, harnessing trillions of dollars in potential, securing high-skilled jobs through human augmentation, and defending technological sovereignty, says Steven Weisburd at Shook Hardy.
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Coinbase Ruling Outlines Litigation Committee Conflict Risks
The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent rejection in Grabski v. Andreessen of a special litigation committee's motion to terminate or settle — its first such decision in over a decade — over conflict concerns highlights why the independence of SLC counsel matters just as much as that of committee members, says Joel Fleming at Equity Litigation Group.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: What Cross-Selling Truly Takes
Early-career attorneys may struggle to introduce clients to practitioners in other specialties, but cross-selling becomes easier once they know why it’s vital to their first years of practice, which mistakes to avoid and how to anticipate clients' needs, say attorneys at Moses & Singer.
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OCC Mortgage Escrow Rules Add Fuel To Preemption Debate
Two rules proposed in December by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which would preempt state laws requiring national banks to pay interest on mortgage escrow accounts, are a bold new federal gambit in the debate over how much authority Congress intended to hand state regulators under the Dodd-Frank Act, says Christian Hancock at Bradley Arant.
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CFIUS Initiative May Smooth Way For Some Foreign Investors
A new program that will allow certain foreign investors to be prevetted and admitted to fast-track approval by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States will likely have tangible benefits for investors participating in competitive M&A, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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How Cos. Can Prepare For Calif. Recycling Label Challenges
California's S.B. 343 turns recycling labels from marketing shorthand into regulated claims that must stand up to scrutiny with proof, so companies must plan for the Oct. 4 compliance deadline by identifying every recyclability cue, deciding which ones they can support, and building the record that defends those decisions, says Thierry Montoya at FBT Gibbons.
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When Tokenized Real-World Assets Collide With Real World
The city of Detroit's ongoing case against Real Token, alleging building code and safety violations across over 400 Detroit residential properties, highlights the brave new world we face when real estate assets are tokenized via blockchain technology — and what happens to the human tenants caught in the middle, say Biying Cheng and Cornell law professor David Reiss.
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How AI Data Centers Are Elevating Development Risk In 2026
As thousands of artificial intelligence data center constructions continue to pop up across the U.S., such projects must be treated not as simple real estate developments, but as infrastructure programs where power, supply chains and technology integration all drive both schedule and risk, say attorneys at Cozen O’Connor.
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Strategies For Effective Class Action Email Notice Campaigns
Recent cases provide useful guidance on navigating the complexities of sending email notices to potential class action claimants, including drafting notices clearly and effectively, surmounting compliance and timing challenges, and tracking deliverability, says Stephanie Fiereck at Epiq.
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Mass. Ruling Raises Questions About Whistleblower Status
In Galvin v. Roxbury Community College, Massachusetts' top appellate court held that an individual was protected from retaliation as a whistleblower, even though he engaged in illegal activity, raising questions about whether whistleblowers who commit illegal acts are protected and whether trusted employees are doing their job or whistleblowing, say attorneys at Littler.
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How Lenders Can Be Ready For Disparate Impact Variabilities
Amid state attorneys general's and regulators' mixed messaging around disparate impact liability, financial institutions can take several steps to minimize risk, including ensuring compliance management aligns with current law and avoiding decisions that impede growth in business and service, says Elena Babinecz at Baker Donelson.
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Wage-Based H-1B Rule Amplifies Lottery Risks For Law Firms
Under the wage-based H-1B lottery rule taking effect Feb. 27, law firms planning to hire noncitizen law graduates awaiting bar admission should consider their options, as the work performed by such candidates may sit at the intersection of multiple occupational classifications with differing chances of success, says Jun Li at Reid & Wise.
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Series
Judges On AI: Practical Use Cases In Chambers
U.S. Magistrate Judge Allison Goddard in the Southern District of California discusses how she uses generative artificial intelligence tools in chambers to make work more efficient and effective — from editing jury instructions for clarity to summarizing key documents.