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Corporate
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January 21, 2026
FedEx Dodges Claims It Owed OT, Was Drivers' Employer
Drivers who worked for FedEx through intermediary entities failed to support their arguments that the freight company was their joint employer or that they worked unpaid overtime under federal wage law, a Massachusetts federal judge ruled Wednesday.
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January 21, 2026
FTC Mulling Deal With Express Scripts In PBM Case
The Federal Trade Commission is considering a potential settlement with Express Scripts in the agency's case accusing the country's three largest pharmacy benefit managers of inflating insulin prices through rebate schemes.
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January 21, 2026
Jefferies Steered Feds To $200M Water Ponzi Case, Judge Told
Two men charged in connection with an allegedly massive water-vending Ponzi scheme were investigated after counsel for investment giant Jefferies — one defendant's former employer — walked the case into the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office, a federal judge heard Wednesday.
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January 21, 2026
O'Melveny Corporate Finance Chair Hops To Pillsbury In NY
Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP has boosted its debt finance capabilities by bringing on the former chair of O'Melveny & Myers LLP's corporate finance practice.
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January 21, 2026
2 Firms Guide $450M Deal For Coney Island Hot Dog Slinger
Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP and Akerman LLP are advising on a new deal for Smithfield Foods Inc. to buy Nathan's Famous Inc. at an enterprise value of approximately $450 million, the companies said Wednesday.
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January 21, 2026
Chancery Gives Solar Roof Co. One Week To Find In-State Atty
The Delaware Chancery Court on Wednesday declined to rule immediately on a request to hold a solar roofing company in contempt for defying a court order, instead pausing the case to give the company time to hire Delaware counsel, a prerequisite to allowing the company to be heard on the merits.
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January 21, 2026
Massachusetts Owes Developer $15M Tax Credit, Court Rules
Massachusetts' Department of Revenue owes a Boston Seaport developer a $15.3 million brownfields tax credit, a state judge said, finding that the tax agency was not entitled to second-guess the extent and cost of environmental remediation at the site to justify a smaller amount.
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January 20, 2026
FINRA Says Firms Ignored Red Flags About Overseas Biz
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has accused a pair of broker-dealers of failing to investigate red flags related to underwriting foreign customers' transactions and of not disclosing certain compensation, while the firms separately sued the regulator in Illinois federal court for overreach they claim blocked them from underwriting engagements.
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January 20, 2026
Adviser Can't Freeze Funds From $2.1B Plymouth REIT Buy
A Massachusetts state judge declined Tuesday to set aside $60 million from a pending $2.1 billion deal to take Plymouth Industrial REIT private, finding the criteria to escrow the funds as a "debt" to Plymouth's financial adviser were not met.
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January 20, 2026
Trump Media Investor Says Insider Trading Trial Was Flawed
A Florida trader sentenced to over two years in prison for insider trading on confidential plans to take President Donald Trump's media company behind Truth Social public urged the Second Circuit on Tuesday to reverse his conviction, saying the lower court wrongly excluded evidence at trial that backed his claims of acting in good faith.
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January 20, 2026
Lyft's 'Priority Pickup' Service Fails to Deliver, Suit Says
Lyft tells passengers they can get a faster pickup for a premium price but frequently fails to deliver on that promise, a customer says in a proposed consumer class action filed Tuesday in California federal court.
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January 20, 2026
Firms Clash Over Starbucks Derivative Suit Leadership
Plaintiffs in recent shareholder lawsuits against Starbucks Corp. leaders are challenging a Seattle federal judge's appointment of two New York law firms to co-lead similar litigation consolidated last year, arguing that the chosen firms are already "spread too thin" across hundreds of complex cases.
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January 20, 2026
XAI Seeks To Block Calif. GenAI Training Data Disclosure Law
XAI has urged a California federal court to block the Golden State from enforcing a new law imposing training data disclosure requirements on generative artificial intelligence system developers, saying the law unconstitutionally forces it to reveal its valuable trade secrets to its competitors.
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January 20, 2026
FINRA Fines Cetera $1.1M For Supervision Failures
Cetera Advisors LLC and its related companies have agreed to pay the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority $1.1 million to settle claims they had insufficient supervisory systems and suspicious transaction reporting procedures.
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January 20, 2026
Judge Mostly Rejects Discovery Requests In OpenAI MDL
A Manhattan federal magistrate judge largely rejected a series of requests from a group of authors and news publishers to expand discovery in a copyright infringement case against OpenAI, but directed the parties to confer on some topics to discuss production of certain materials.
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January 20, 2026
Plaintiffs Atty Who Disclosed Uber MDL Docs On 'Thin Ice'
A California federal magistrate judge warned plaintiffs attorney Bret Stanley of Johnson Law Group during a hearing Tuesday that he's on "thin ice" after Uber argued he should be sanctioned for allegedly repeatedly using discovery in multidistrict litigation over sexual assault liability to litigate other cases against Uber.
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January 20, 2026
Law360 Names Firms Of The Year
Eight law firms have earned spots as Law360's Firms of the Year, with 48 Practice Group of the Year awards among them, achieving milestones such as high-profile litigation wins at the U.S. Supreme Court and 11-figure merger deals.
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January 20, 2026
Microsoft Warns Google Play Store Deal Invites Antitrust Harm
Microsoft Corp. urged a California federal judge to reject the proposed Android app distribution settlement in Epic Games' antitrust suit against Google, arguing that the deal would essentially erase the court's injunction requiring Google to open up its Play Store to Microsoft and other competitors.
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January 20, 2026
Texas AG Says State Diversity Initiatives Breach Constitution
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton took aim at a plethora of state diversity initiatives in a Monday opinion, declaring that several minority-owned business assistance programs and private hiring practices run afoul of the Texas Constitution.
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January 20, 2026
Jewish Google Worker Says Boss Harassed Him Out Of A Job
A former Google salesperson was forced to quit his job after his boss began waging a "campaign of hostility" against him upon learning that he is Jewish and diagnosed with mental health disorders, according to a new bias and retaliation suit filed against the tech giant.
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January 20, 2026
Delaware Supreme Court Reverses Moelis Governance Ruling
The Delaware Supreme Court on Tuesday reversed a Chancery Court ruling that had invalidated key provisions of Moelis & Co.'s stockholder agreement, holding that the challenged governance provisions were not void but merely voidable, and that a stockholder challenge brought nearly nine years later was time-barred.
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January 20, 2026
Ex-Mars Exec Deserves 'Substantial' Fraud Sentence, Feds Say
A former Mars Inc. risk executive who admitted to pulling off a $28.4 million fraud scheme should spend a "substantial" amount of time in prison, prosecutors told a Connecticut federal judge, noting that the parties agreed to a guidelines range of around seven to 11 years.
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January 20, 2026
Snapchat Inks Deal To Avoid 1st Social Media Bellwether Trial
Attorneys for Snapchat and the plaintiff in a bellwether trial starting next week over claims social media harms young users' mental health told a Los Angeles judge Tuesday they have reached a settlement in the plaintiff's suit, which is slated to be the first such case to go to trial.
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January 20, 2026
CorMedix Investors Seek First OK Of Governance Reform Deal
Investors in CorMedix Inc. have told a New Jersey federal judge that company directors have agreed to implement several corporate governance reforms to resolve a consolidated shareholder derivative lawsuit accusing the executives of making misleading statements about delays in the regulatory approval of the company's lead drug candidate.
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January 20, 2026
Senior DOJ Fraud Atty Joins Akin Amid Surge In FCA Cases
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP has expanded its bench of former public servants, announcing Tuesday the hire of a senior trial counsel from the U.S. Department of Justice's Civil Fraud Section, shortly after the agency revealed last week a record $6.8 billion in False Claims Act judgments and settlements in the most recent fiscal year.
Expert Analysis
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Series
Calif. Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q3
The third quarter of 2025 brought legislative changes to state money transmission certification requirements and securities law obligations, as well as high-profile accounting and anti-money laundering compliance enforcement actions by the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.
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9th Circ. Ruling May Help Pharma Cos. Avert Investor Claims
The Ninth Circuit's recent decision affirming the dismissal of a securities fraud class action alleging that Talphera deceived investors by marketing a drug with a misleading slogan should give plaintiffs pause before filing similar complaints where snappy slogans are accompanied by copious clarifying information, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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What Ethics Rules Say On Atty Discipline For Online Speech
Though law firms are free to discipline employees for their online commentary about Charlie Kirk or other social media activity, saying crude or insensitive things on the internet generally doesn’t subject attorneys to professional discipline under the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, says Stacie H. Rosenzweig at Halling & Cayo.
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2 Rulings Highlight IRS' Uncertain Civil Fraud Penalty Powers
Conflicting decisions from the U.S. Tax Court and the Northern District of Texas that hinge on whether the IRS can administratively assert civil fraud penalties since the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2024 decision in SEC v. Jarkesy provide both opportunities and potential pitfalls for taxpayers, says Michael Landman at Bird Marella.
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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.