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Corporate
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January 13, 2026
Insurer Didn't Owe Defense To Telecom Co. In Merger Row
An insurer had no duty to defend a telecommunications company sued by a former board member in connection with a 2014 merger, a Wyoming federal court ruled, saying the suit is a single claim under its directors and officers policy and therefore falls under an "insured versus insured" exclusion.
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January 13, 2026
Medical Device Co. Faces New Derivative Suit In Delaware
A stockholder of digital health equipment business Butterfly Network Inc. launched a derivative suit in Delaware's Court of Chancery on Tuesday, seeking recovery for the company of "many millions" tied to allegedly misleading disclosures ahead of a special purpose acquisition company take-public merger in 2021.
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January 13, 2026
Emails Show Deceit In Medicare Advantage Deal, NC Court Told
Internal documents from Atrium Health Inc. show the company never intended to follow through on a partnership for a new Medicare Advantage health plan with a plan provider who spent tens of millions of dollars to get it off the ground, the providers' counsel told a North Carolina Business Court judge Tuesday.
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January 13, 2026
Chancery OKs $4.85M Deal To End Ed-Tech Acquisition Suit
The Delaware Chancery Court signed off Tuesday on a $4.85 million class settlement resolving stockholder claims over Sterling Partners' 2024 take-private acquisition of Australian education-technology company Keypath Education International Inc., finding that the deal fell within a reasonable range given the risks the investors faced in continuing to litigate their fiduciary-duty claims.
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January 13, 2026
AI Infrastructure Firm Exascale To Go Public Via $500M Deal
Exascale Labs Inc., an artificial intelligence computing infrastructure platform, has announced plans to go public through a $500 million merger with special purpose acquisition company D. Boral ARC Acquisition I Corp.
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January 13, 2026
Bath & Body Works Investor Sues Over Co.'s Growth Claims
Retail chain Bath & Body Works Inc. was hit with a proposed shareholder class action accusing it of misleading investors about the success of its product expansion strategy and leaning heavily on frequent promotions to drive unsustainable growth.
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January 13, 2026
REITs Say $787M Merger's Proxy Info Not Misleading
Real estate investment trusts Ready Capital Corp. and Broadmark Realty Capital Inc. urged a Washington federal court on Tuesday to toss a proposed shareholder class action accusing the companies of misleading shareholders to get votes for their $787 million merger, arguing the relevant proxy materials fully informed shareholders about the deal before they voted.
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January 13, 2026
Beasley Allen Talc Work Sends 'Bad Signal,' J&J Says
Johnson & Johnson's talc unit told a New Jersey appeals panel on Tuesday that a lower court's ruling permitting Beasley Allen Law Firm attorneys to represent plaintiffs in multicounty litigation over its talc-based baby powder "sends a very bad signal" to the state bar.
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January 13, 2026
Express Scripts Can't Impel FTC Atty Views On Insulin Makers
A Federal Trade Commission in-house judge has denied a bid from Express Scripts to force a commission attorney to sit for a deposition to discuss an investigation into insulin manufacturers as the pharmacy benefit manager defends against the agency's insulin pricing case.
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January 13, 2026
J&J Wins Partial Reversal Of $1B Merger Milestone Loss
Delaware's Supreme Court has partially reversed a vice chancellor's September 2024 ruling that Johnson & Johnson owes more than $1 billion for failing to prioritize regulatory approvals linked to "earnout" payments for robotic surgical device technology that J&J acquired from a developer.
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January 13, 2026
HVAC Supplier Says Ex-Shareholders Defected To Rivals
Two former shareholders in a Pittsburgh company supplying pumps, boilers and other commercial heating and cooling equipment violated a noncompetition agreement after selling their stakes and going to work in the same field, the company alleged in a Pennsylvania state court lawsuit.
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January 13, 2026
Eventbrite Stockholders Sue To Block $500M Take-Private Deal
A class of Eventbrite stockholders has sued in the Delaware Chancery Court seeking to upend a pending $500 million take-private deal, arguing that a voting agreement signed alongside the transaction automatically stripped the company's founder of her super-voting control under the company's own charter and rendered the merger proxy materially misleading.
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January 13, 2026
Chipotle Replaces Legal Chief Amid Leadership Moves
Chipotle Mexican Grill has promoted its chief human resources officer, announcing Monday that she is now also the restaurant chain's chief legal officer.
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January 12, 2026
US Backs Tarnishment Provision Constitutionality At 9th Circ.
Jack Daniel's has urged the Ninth Circuit to affirm a district court's ruling that a company's poop-themed "Bad Spaniels" dog toy tarnished the whiskey maker's trademark, while the federal government separately opposed the toy maker's contention that the Lanham Act's tarnishment provision violates the First Amendment.
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January 12, 2026
Attorneys Chastened By Fed. Circ.'s ITC Mixed Deadline Ruling
A Federal Circuit decision concluding that certain mixed rulings from the U.S. International Trade Commission can generate different appeal deadlines, even when issued in the same document, is a reminder of just how strict courts can be when handling unclear appeal due dates, attorneys told Law360.
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January 12, 2026
8th Circ. Lifts Injunction On Advisory Firm's Rival, Ex-Staff
Investment advisory firm Choreo LLC improperly got a preliminary injunction after claiming that former employees and a competitor stole trade secrets, the Eighth Circuit found Monday, ruling that the injunction was unwarranted because relevant losses to Choreo are calculable and associated damage has already been done.
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January 12, 2026
Ex-Google Engineer Stole AI Secrets To Help China, Jury Told
Driven by greed, ex-Google engineer Linwei Ding stole thousands of confidential documents from the tech giant, launched his own startup and then offered Google's artificial intelligence trade secrets to China, a federal prosecutor told a California jury Monday at the start of Ding's high-profile economic espionage trial.
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January 12, 2026
Apple Cites Privacy To Avoid Reporting Child Porn, Victims Say
A proposed class of child abuse victims claiming Apple spread child sexual abuse materials has fired back against the company's latest attempt to dismiss their lawsuit in California federal court, saying it failed to implement safeguards for preventing the storage and dissemination of such materials over pretextual privacy concerns.
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January 12, 2026
Prime Capital Says Ex-Adviser Bungled His Exit In Poach Suit
A recruited financial adviser's changes of heart during a carefully structured transition to Prime Capital Investment Advisors LLC caused repeated delays and internal frustrations, eventually leading Prime to file a regulatory license in his name before he resigned from his old job, Prime's chief growth officer testified Monday.
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January 12, 2026
McDonald's 'Total Inaction' Contributed To Death, Suit Says
McDonald's Corp. is facing a suit in California state court that alleges employees at a California franchise failed to stop a foreseeable attack on a couple by a homeless man that occurred while the couple waited in the drive-thru line, leaving a woman fatally injured.
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January 12, 2026
Tesla Autopilot Failure Led To Motorcyclist's Death, Suit Says
The estate of a motorcyclist who was killed after being run over by a Tesla has sued the automaker, the driver and the driver's wife in Washington state court for wrongful death, alleging the car's autopilot feature failed and resulted in the motorcyclist being struck from behind.
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January 12, 2026
Chancery Tosses Repsol Claims Against Winston & Strawn
The Delaware Chancery Court on Monday dismissed counterclaims brought by Repsol Renewables North America Inc. against Winston & Strawn LLP and one of its partners, ruling that Delaware law does not permit contract-based aiding-and-abetting claims and that Winston & Strawn did not owe fiduciary duties to a minority member in a limited liability company.
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January 12, 2026
Adviser Claims REIT Stiffed It Over $2.1B Take-Private Deal
An advising firm has sued Plymouth Industrial REIT Inc. in Massachusetts state court, claiming the real estate investment trust is dodging its obligation to pay the adviser for helping the firm land a $2.1 billion acquisition offer.
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January 12, 2026
Ex-Goldman Exec Faces July FCPA Trial Over Ghana Deal
A Brooklyn federal judge Monday teed up a midsummer trial for a former Goldman Sachs banker accused of violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act by bribing Ghanaian officials to secure a power plant deal.
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January 12, 2026
Apple Hit With False Ad Suit Over Digital Content Sales
Apple customers have sued the company in California state court, alleging it deceptively "sells" popular Apple TV programs and films without informing them that the limited digital license to any of the content could be terminated at any time.
Expert Analysis
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SEC Fine Signals Crackdown On Security-Based Swap Dealers
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent fine against MUFG Securities is unique because it involves a non-U.S. security-based swap dealer complying with U.S. laws based on the election of substituted compliance, but it should not be dismissed as a one-off case, says Kelly Rock, formerly at the SEC.
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Junior Attys Must Beware Of 5 Common Legal Brief Mistakes
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Junior law firm associates must be careful to avoid five common pitfalls when drafting legal briefs — from including every possible argument to not developing a theme — to build the reputation of a sought-after litigator, says James Argionis at Cozen O'Connor.
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Expect DOJ To Repeat 4 Themes From 2024's FCPA Trials
As two upcoming Foreign Corrupt Practice Act trials approach, defense counsel should anticipate the U.S. Department of Justice to revive several of the same themes prosecutors leaned on in trials last year to motivate jurors to convict, and build counternarratives to neutralize these arguments, says James Koukios at MoFo.
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How The SEC Has Subtly Changed Its Injunction Approach
For decades, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has relied on the obey-the-law injunction, but judicial deference to the SEC's desired language has fractured since 2012 — with the commission itself this year utilizing a more tailored approach to injunctions, albeit inconsistently, say attorneys at Hilgers Graben.
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Utilizing 6th Circ.'s Expanded Internal Investigation Protection
A recent Sixth Circuit decision in In re: FirstEnergy demonstrates one way that businesses can use a very limited showing to protect internal investigations from discovery in commercial litigation, while those looking to force production will need to employ a carefully calibrated approach, say attorneys at Brownstein Hyatt.
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Series
Power To The Paralegals: How And Why Training Must Evolve
Empowering paralegals through new models of education that emphasize digital fluency, interdisciplinary collaboration and human-centered lawyering could help solve workforce challenges and the justice gap — if firms, educators and policymakers get on board, say Kristine Custodio Suero and Kelli Radnothy.
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Evaluating The Current State Of Trump's Tariff Deals
As the Trump administration's ambitious tariff effort rolls into its ninth month, and many deals lack the details necessary to provide trade market certainty, attorneys at Adams & Reese examine where things stand.
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Series
Playing Softball Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My time on the softball field has taught me lessons that also apply to success in legal work — on effective preparation, flexibility, communication and teamwork, says Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty.
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5 Years In, COVID-19 Fraud Enforcement Landscape Is Shifting
As the government moves pandemic fraud enforcement from small-dollar individual prosecutions to high-value corporate cases, and billions of dollars remain unaccounted for, companies and defense attorneys must take steps now to prepare for the next five years of scrutiny, says attorney David Tarras.
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Analyzing AI's Evolving Role In Class Action Claims Admin
Artificial intelligence is becoming a strategic asset in the hands of skilled litigators, reshaping everything from class certification strategy to claims analysis — and now, the nuts and bolts of settlement administration, with synthetic fraud, algorithmic review and ethical tension emerging as central concerns, says Dominique Fite at CPT Group.
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IPO Suit Reinforces Strict Section 11 Tracing Requirement
A California federal court's recent dismissal of an investor class action against Allbirds in connection with the company's initial public offering cites the U.S. Supreme Court's 2023 Slack v. Pirani decision, reinforcing the firm tracing requirement for Section 11 plaintiffs — even at the pleading stage, say attorneys at Paul Weiss.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Time Management
Law students typically have weeks or months to prepare for any given deadline, but the unpredictability of practicing in the real world means that lawyers must become time-management pros, ready to adapt to scheduling conflicts and unexpected assignments at any given moment, says David Thomas at Honigman.
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Privacy Policy Lessons After Google App Data Verdict
In Rodriguez v. Google, a California federal jury recently found that Google unlawfully invaded app users' privacy by collecting, using and disclosing pseudonymized data, highlighting the complex interplay between nonpersonalized data and customers' understanding of privacy policy choices, says Beth Waller at Woods Rogers.
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Rare Del. Oversight Ruling Sends Governance Wake-Up Call
An unusual ruling from the Delaware Court of Chancery recently allowed Caremark oversight claims to proceed against former executives of a company previously known as Teligent, sending a clear reminder that boards and officers must actively monitor and document oversight efforts when addressing mission-critical risks, say attorneys at WilmerHale.
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How Hyperlinks Are Changing E-Discovery Responsibilities
A recent e-discovery dispute over hyperlinked data in Hubbard v. Crow shows how courts have increasingly broadened the definition of control to account for cloud-based evidence, and why organizations must rethink preservation practices to avoid spoliation risks, says Bree Murphy at Exterro.