Corporate

  • March 09, 2026

    Edison Dodges Investors' Wildfire Mitigation Suit, For Now

    A California federal judge tossed a proposed class action alleging the parent company of Southern California Edison misled investors about the effectiveness of the public utility company's wildfire-mitigation measures in the lead-up to last January's devastating fires north of Los Angeles, but allowed investors to rework part of the suit.

  • March 09, 2026

    Turkey's Halkbank Reaches Deal To Exit Iranian Sanctions Case

    U.S. authorities and Turkey's Halkbank have agreed to end the long-running criminal case accusing the state-backed lender of scheming to launder billions of dollars in sanctioned Iranian oil proceeds, in a no-fine deal that's explicitly tied to Turkey's diplomatic efforts in the Israel-Hamas war.

  • March 09, 2026

    Social Media Plaintiff Not Diagnosed With Addiction, Jury Told

    A therapist who treated a bellwether plaintiff alleging Instagram and YouTube are harmful to children testified she never diagnosed the plaintiff with any social media addiction during five years of treatment but believed social media contributed to her mental health struggles, according to a video deposition a California jury watched Monday.

  • March 09, 2026

    Kate Hudson's Activewear Co. Sued For Tariff Refunds

    Fabletics, the activewear company cofounded by actress Kate Hudson, faces a proposed class action from customers who say the company passed the cost of President Donald Trump's illegal 2025 tariffs onto customers and should be forced to refund those overages.

  • March 09, 2026

    9th Circ. Won't Rethink Revival Of Price-Fixing Claim

    The Ninth Circuit has refused a rehearing bid from Japanese manufacturer NHK Spring for a ruling that revived a number of Seagate Technologies' antitrust claims against it in a case concerning hard drive component prices.

  • March 09, 2026

    2nd Circ. Says COVID Policy Saves Argentine Creditors' Case

    The Second Circuit on Monday revived a $5.5 million contractual dispute against Argentina, ruling that a New York state COVID-19 policy saved some bondholder claims from being time-barred.

  • March 09, 2026

    5th Circ. Revives Fraud Case Against Lockheed Martin

    A split Fifth Circuit panel gave a former auditor at Lockheed Martin Corp. another shot at pursuing claims alleging that her erstwhile employer defrauded the government, with the majority ruling Monday that her lawsuit had enough differences from an earlier suit to go forward.

  • March 09, 2026

    Receiver Enters Conspiracy Plea For Par Funding's Parent Co.

    The receiver for a Philadelphia company behind the $405 million Par Funding merchant cash advance Ponzi scheme reached a plea deal Monday, where the company pled guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and securities fraud, prosecutors said.

  • March 09, 2026

    Abbott Formula Linked To 'Horrible' Gut Disease, Ill. Jury Told

    Abbott Laboratories' preterm baby formula was a contributing factor that caused four premature infants born in Illinois to develop a "devastating and painful intestinal disease," and the company has failed to warn parents and physicians that the cow's milk-based formula is a risk factor for the condition, a Cook County jury heard Monday.

  • March 09, 2026

    Mich. County Sues 3M And DuPont Over Airport PFAS

    A county in northern Michigan is the latest municipality to join the sprawling multidistrict litigation against 3M, Corteva Inc., Tyco Fire Products and other chemical manufacturers over claims firefighting foam they made and sold contained harmful forever chemicals, according to a complaint filed in federal court.

  • March 09, 2026

    DOJ Official Calls Live Nation Deal Win-Win As AGs Press On

    The Justice Department's midtrial settlement with Live Nation on Monday created an instant rift with more than two dozen state attorneys general who vowed to press forward instead of accepting a deal that requires online ticketing technology to be open-sourced and forces the company to divest control over at least 13 amphitheaters.

  • March 09, 2026

    Novo, Hims & Hers Make Up, Agree To Sell GLP-1s Together

    Novo Nordisk A/S will start selling its GLP-1 medications on Hims & Hers Health Inc.'s platform as part of a deal that resolves the pharmaceutical company's patent infringement lawsuit against the telehealth provider, the companies announced Monday.

  • March 09, 2026

    Musicians Claim Google Stole Songs For AI Music Tool

    A group of independent musicians from around the U.S. have sued Google in Chicago federal court, accusing it of copying millions of copyrighted songs and lyrics from YouTube and across the internet to build its AI music generator Lyria 3 — a product the plaintiffs say directly competes with human artists.

  • March 09, 2026

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court's docket last week featured disputes spanning alleged forged board approvals at a telecom startup, evidence-destruction claims tied to WWE's blockbuster merger with UFC and investor scrutiny of a multibillion-dollar deal between Intel and the U.S. government.

  • March 09, 2026

    JPMorgan Trims But Can't Escape ERISA Drug Costs Suit

    A New York federal judge pared claims Monday against JPMorgan Chase & Co. in a suit from workers who alleged they paid too much for prescription drugs, but opened discovery on allegations that the bank's contract with its pharmacy benefit manager caused transactions prohibited by federal benefits law.

  • March 09, 2026

    DOJ Deal With Live Nation Throws Antitrust Trial Into Disarray

    U.S. Department of Justice lawyers told a Manhattan federal judge Monday that the government is settling its claims that Live Nation engaged in unlawful monopolization by tying ticket sales to the use of its venues, throwing an ongoing trial involving dozens of states into an uncertain posture.

  • March 06, 2026

    Breyer Urges Attys In Heated Twitter Investor Trial To Cool Off

    The judge overseeing a California federal trial over Twitter investors' allegations that Elon Musk intentionally tanked the company's stock urged lawyers to cool down over the weekend and "gain composure," after a heated fight in which a lawyer for the investors called a Musk attorney's conduct disgraceful.

  • March 06, 2026

    Meta, Google Begin Defense As Mental Harm Plaintiff Rests

    Attorneys for the plaintiff in a landmark bellwether California trial in a suit accusing Instagram and YouTube of harming children's mental health rested their case Friday, opting not to call the plaintiff's mother to testify live despite the defense portraying her as the potential cause of the plaintiff's mental health struggles.

  • March 06, 2026

    Employment Authority: 6th Circ. EFAA Ruling Reach

    Law360 Employment Authority covers the biggest employment cases and trends. Catch up this week with coverage on how a Sixth Circuit's decision that the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act shields from arbitration a suit alleging sex harassment and disability bias claims could have an impact on other courts, how the U.S. Department of Labor could return to an earlier version of a Fair Labor Standards Act joint employer test and how the recent changes the National Labor Relations Board general counsel rolled out could ease the path to settlement and rein in the investigation of alleged rules violations.

  • March 06, 2026

    Real Estate Recap: Big Data, C-PACE, Mamdani's Planners

    Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including a look at the evolution of big data in real estate transactions, C-PACE financing growth according to Nuveen's head counsel, and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's recent picks to lead the city's planning department.

  • March 06, 2026

    EisnerAmper Settles SEC Allegations Over Infinity Q Audit

    Audit firm EisnerAmper LLP will not have to pay a fine to resolve U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations tied to its 2020 audit of an Infinity Q Capital Management LLC mutual fund at the center of a criminal overvaluation case.

  • March 06, 2026

    Google's $135M Deal To End Data Use Suit Gets Initial Nod

    A California federal magistrate judge preliminarily approved Google's $135 million settlement to resolve a proposed class action alleging Google surreptitiously consumed Android users' mobile data, finding the deal is fair despite Google agreeing to pay nearly three times more to settle similar claims by a smaller Golden State-consumer class.

  • March 06, 2026

    Judge Says Palantir Noncompete Language Is Too Restrictive

    A Manhattan federal judge who ruled last month that three former Palantir employees could keep working at a rival artificial intelligence business has said in his unsealed opinion that while evidence showed the defendants may have solicited colleagues and mishandled company files, Palantir's noncompete restrictions were overbroad.

  • March 06, 2026

    Amazon Wage Decision Resisted Policy Pressure, Experts Say

    The Connecticut Supreme Court's opinion requiring Amazon to pay warehouse workers for time spent awaiting and undergoing post-shift security screenings used basic statutory interpretation tools, not policy arguments, to reach conclusions aligned with other pro-labor laws passed by the state legislature, experts told Law360.

  • March 06, 2026

    NC Biz Court Won't Take On Insurer's $20M Judgment Dispute

    An insurer's suit seeking to collect an outstanding $20 million judgment entered against a North Carolina businessman will be heard in superior court, a state business court judge ruled, finding that the dispute did not meet the statutory requirements for designation as a mandatory complex business case.

Expert Analysis

  • Opinion

    A Uniform Federal Rule Would Curb Gen AI Missteps In Court

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    To address the patchwork of courts’ standing orders on generative artificial intelligence, curbing abuses and relieving the burden on judges, the federal judiciary should consider amending its civil procedure rules to require litigants to certify they’ve reviewed legal filings for accuracy, say attorneys at Shook Hardy.

  • 9th Circ. Ruling Clarifies Auditor Liability For IPO Errors

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    The Ninth Circuit's recent decision in Hunt v. PricewaterhouseCoopers elucidates the legal standard for claims against auditors in connection with a company's initial public offering, confirming that audit opinions are subjective and becoming the first circuit to review this precise question since the U.S. Supreme Court's 2015 Omnicare ruling, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Series

    The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Integrating Practice Groups

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    Enacting unified leadership and consistent client service standards ensures law firm practice groups connect and collaborate around shared goals, turning a law firm merger into a platform for growth rather than a period of disruption, says Brian Catlett at Fennemore Craig.

  • Opinion

    Supreme Court Term Limits Would Carry Hidden Risk

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    While proposals for limiting the terms of U.S. Supreme Court justices are popular, a steady stream of relatively young, highly marketable ex-justices with unique knowledge and influence entering the marketplace of law and politics could create new problems, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

  • Navigating A Sea Change In Rent Algorithm Regulation

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    The U.S. Department of Justice's proposed settlement of the RealPage lawsuit represents a pivotal moment in the regulation of algorithmic rent-setting, restraining use of these tools amid a growing trend of regulatory limits on use of algorithmic data and methodologies in establishing housing rental prices. say attorneys at Wilson Elser.

  • The SEC Whistleblower Program A Year Into 2nd Trump Admin

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's whistleblower program continues to operate as designed, but its internal cadence, scrutiny of claims and operational structure reflect a period of recalibration, with precision mattering more than ever, say attorneys Scott Silver and David Chase.

  • Key Crypto Class Action Trends And Rulings In 2025

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    As the law continued to take shape in the growing area of crypto-assets, this year saw a jump in crypto class action litigation, including noteworthy decisions on motions to compel arbitration and class certification, according to Justin Donoho at Duane Morris.

  • Calling The AI Witness In 2026's Merger Reviews

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    Organizations that anticipate facing a second request or merger clearance review in 2026 should collect artificial intelligence artifacts as part of discovery, and distinguish between human-generated and machine-generated materials, says Sean McDermott at FTI Consulting.

  • How New SEC Policies Shift Shareholder Proposal Landscape

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    U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins' recent remarks provide a road map for public companies to exclude nonbinding shareholder proposals from proxy materials, which would disrupt the mechanism that has traditionally defined how shareholders and companies engage on governance matters, say attorneys at Gunderson.

  • Series

    Knitting Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Stretching my skills as a knitter makes me a better antitrust attorney by challenging me to recalibrate after wrong turns, not rush outcomes, and trust that I can teach myself the skills to tackle new and difficult projects — even when I don’t have a pattern to work from, says Kara Kuritz at V&E.

  • How 11th Circ.'s Qui Tam Review Could Affect FCA Litigation

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    On Dec. 12, the Eleventh Circuit will hear arguments in U.S. ex rel. Zafirov v. Florida Medical Associates, setting the stage for a decision that could drastically reduce enforcement under the False Claims Act, and presenting an opportunity to seek U.S. Supreme Court review of the act's whistleblower provisions, say attorneys at Epstein Becker.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: Welcome To Miami

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    After nearly 20 years in operation, the Miami Complex Business Litigation Division is a pioneer upon which other jurisdictions in the state have been modeled, adopting many innovations to keep its cases running more efficiently and staffing experienced judges who are accustomed to hearing business disputes, say attorneys at King & Spalding.

  • Recent Proposals May Spell Supervision Overhaul For Banks

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    A slew of rules recently proposed by the federal banking agencies with approaching comment deadlines would rewrite supervision standards to be further tailored to banks' size and activities, while prioritizing financial risks over process, documentation and other nonfinancial risks, say attorneys at Davis Wright.

  • What US Can Learn From Brazil's Securities Arbitration Model

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    To allay investor concerns about its recent approval of mandatory arbitration clauses in public company registration statements, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should look to Brazil's securities arbitration model, which shows that clear rules and strong institutions can complement the goals of securities regulation, say arbiters at the B3 Arbitration Chamber.

  • Navigating The New Patchwork Of Foreign-Influence Laws

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    On top of existing federal regulations, an expanding wave of state legislation — placing new limits on foreign-funded political spending and new registration requirements for foreign agents — creates a confusing compliance backdrop for corporations that demands careful preplanning, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.

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