Corporate

  • January 05, 2026

    Groups Urge FCC To Deny $6.2B Nexstar-Tegna Merger Deal

    Public interest groups, labor organizations and satellite companies are asking the Federal Communications Commission not to grant TV station giant Nexstar's request to approve its $6.2 billion plan to merge with rival Tegna in a deal that would breach the agency's national ownership cap.

  • January 05, 2026

    OpenAI Sued Again Over ChatGPT's Role In Murder-Suicide

    A second lawsuit has been filed against OpenAI accusing it of negligently designing its artificial intelligence tool ChatGPT, which caused a man to murder his mother and commit suicide, according to the complaint in California federal court.

  • January 05, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Examines Timing Of $452M Trade Secrets Suit

    A Federal Circuit panel delved into the statute of limitations for trade secrets cases Monday, pressing an attorney for a South Korean company seeking to reverse a verdict that prompted a $452 million jury award to explain why the clock should start when a plaintiff suspects misappropriation rather than when it is actually discovered.

  • January 05, 2026

    Logistics Compliance Co. Seeks Order That It Owns Platform

    A Cleveland-based logistics compliance software firm has sued its former technology chief in Ohio federal court, looking to fend off claims that he owns the majority of the company's offerings.

  • January 05, 2026

    Quince Moves To Toss Williams Sonoma's False Ad Suit

    Quince urged a California federal court on Friday to dismiss Williams-Sonoma Inc.'s lawsuit that accuses the online retailer of trying to dupe consumers into believing its goods are the same as Williams Sonoma's products at discounted prices, saying Williams Sonoma's complaint cuts out "key context" regarding Quince's ads.

  • January 05, 2026

    Express Scripts Wants FTC Atty Views On Insulin Prices

    Express Scripts is seeking to force an attorney from the Federal Trade Commission to sit for a deposition in the agency's case accusing pharmacy benefit managers of inflating insulin prices, saying the commission's own attorneys acknowledge that manufacturers cause higher prices.

  • January 05, 2026

    Chancery Rejects BankUnited's Employee Poaching Claims

    The Delaware Chancery Court has denied BankUnited's attempt to block former executives and rival Customers Bank from recruiting employees and pursuing business in the title-services market, finding that the lender failed to show it was likely to win on any of its contract or fiduciary-duty claims.

  • January 05, 2026

    Md. Railway Distributor Exec Sued Over Alleged Asset Looting

    Chinese railway equipment manufacturer Anyang Railway Equipment Co. Ltd. has filed suit in Maryland federal court, claiming the sole executive and majority shareholder of a railway distribution company, in which Anyang is also a shareholder, looted corporate assets for personal gain and excluded Anyang from management decisions, among other things.

  • January 05, 2026

    Payment Co., Insurer End $6.8M Fraud Coverage Dispute

    An electronic payments company and its insurer have ended their dispute over whether the company's roughly $6.8 million loss from two fraud schemes fell within its policy's coverage for computer fraud, with an Iowa federal court agreeing Monday to dismiss the case.

  • January 05, 2026

    McGuireWoods Atty Fined Over Citation Errors In BoA Suit

    A Georgia federal judge has slapped a McGuireWoods LLP attorney with a $1,500 fine for using incorrect citations in a brief lodged in a recently dismissed mortgage suit against Bank of America.

  • January 05, 2026

    Call Center Co. ESOP Managers Ink $8.75M Settlement Deal

    A call center holding company's employee stock ownership plan managers, founders and other executives will fork over $8.75 million to end a dispute alleging the workers' ESOP was sold shares at an inflated price, according to the proposed deal filed in Pennsylvania federal court Monday.

  • January 05, 2026

    Airline Industry Group Challenges Michigan Sick Leave Law

    A national airline trade group is challenging a Michigan law requiring employers to provide workers with earned sick time, telling a Michigan federal court that the measure is preempted by federal law and weakens the airlines' collective bargaining agreements.

  • January 05, 2026

    Chancery Orders $25K Daily Sanction In Trump Media Dispute

    The blank-check company that took Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. public last year drew a $25,000 per-day sanction on Monday in Delaware's Court of Chancery after refusing an over $2 million legal fee advancement bill arising from litigation involving a former CEO in Florida.

  • January 05, 2026

    Insurer Drops Nonpayment Suit Against Colo. Data Center

    Zurich American Insurance Co. indicated Monday it plans to dismiss its claim that a Denver-based data management company failed to pay nearly half a million dollars for an additional premium for new construction projects.

  • January 05, 2026

    Forum Clause Keeps Holtec Consultant's Suit In Ohio

    Energy technology company Holtec International can't dismiss or move a former consultant's federal lawsuit from Ohio to New Jersey, after a judge ruled Monday that the doctrine of "forum non conveniens" generally doesn't apply to choosing between states, and the parties' contract had a valid forum selection clause choosing Ohio.

  • January 05, 2026

    2nd Circ. Gives Fired ConEd Atty New Shot At Bias Claim

    The Second Circuit revived Monday part of a former in-house Con Edison attorney's bias suit claiming she faced prejudice from her boss as an older woman, ruling the lower court may not have properly assessed a retaliation claim under New York City law's more liberal standards.

  • January 05, 2026

    Aviation Co. Wants Rosen To Pay For 'Abusive' Legal Tactics

    An aerospace company that successfully defeated a securities fraud suit is now seeking to recoup $580,000 in legal fees from Rosen Law Firm PA as punishment for its alleged "abusive tactics" in pursuing the litigation.

  • January 05, 2026

    Godfrey Shareholder Takes Real Estate Firm Irgens' GC Spot

    Milwaukee real estate firm Irgens Partners LLC said Monday it has appointed a general counsel and chief administrative officer from the investment management practice group at Godfrey & Kahn SC.

  • January 05, 2026

    Pierson Ferdinand Adds 3 Partners In NYC Area, California

    Pierson Ferdinand LLP announced Monday it has added three new partners in New York; Palo Alto, California; and Princeton, New Jersey, marking the 80th partner the fast-growing firm has hired since the start of 2025.

  • January 05, 2026

    The Top In-House Hires Of December

    Legal department hires during the last month of 2025 included high-profile appointments at Apple, Berkshire Hathaway and LPL Financial. Here, Law360 Pulse looks at some of the top in-house announcements from December.

  • January 05, 2026

    Ex-IBM Worker Fired At 61 Despite $7.8M In Sales, Court Told

    A 61-year-old former International Business Machines Corp. sales specialist who worked under multimillion-dollar quotas said his abrupt firing was motivated not by poor performance but by the company's systemic age bias, according to a lawsuit filed in North Carolina federal court.

  • January 05, 2026

    Ind. House Bill Floats Transfer Tax On Real Estate Investment

    Indiana would establish a transfer tax on entities that manage funds pooled from investors in single-family residences under a bill introduced Monday in the state House of Representatives.

  • January 02, 2026

    Ind. Judge's Chat With Tesla Crash Jurors Undoes $60M Verdict

    An Indiana state appellate panel has vacated a $60.7 million jury verdict against Tesla in a suit accusing its employee of negligently hitting a motorcyclist and causing a catastrophic brain injury, saying the trial court judge had an improper private conversation with the deadlocked jury regarding a potential mistrial.

  • January 02, 2026

    Insurer Says Colo. Data Center Co. Owes Nearly $500K

    A Denver-based data center management company failed to pay Zurich American Insurance Co. nearly half a million dollars for an additional premium for new construction projects, the insurer alleged in a complaint filed in Colorado federal court.

  • January 02, 2026

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    Delaware's Court of Chancery paddled through mostly calm waters at the year's end, with plenty of big hearings and decisions in its rearview mirror, including a recent Chancery reversal restoring Elon Musk's compensation package, earlier valued at $56 billion.

Expert Analysis

  • How Calif. High Court Is Rethinking Forum Selection Clauses

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    Two recent cases before the California Supreme Court show that the state is shifting toward greater enforcement of freely negotiated forum selection clauses between sophisticated parties, so litigators need to revisit old assumptions about the breadth of California's public policy exception, says Josh Patashnik at Perkins Coie.

  • AI Litigation Tools Can Enhance Case Assessment, Strategy

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    Civil litigators can use artificial intelligence tools to strengthen case assessment and aid in early strategy development, as long as they address the risks and ethical considerations that accompany these uses, say attorneys at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • Attys Beware: Generative AI Can Also Hallucinate Metadata

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    In addition to the well-known problem of AI-generated hallucinations in legal documents, AI tools can also hallucinate metadata — threatening the integrity of discovery, the reliability of evidence and the ability to definitively identify the provenance of electronic documents, say attorneys at Law & Forensics.

  • How 9th Circ. Ruling Deepens SEC Disgorgement Circuit Split

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    The Ninth Circuit's recent decision in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Sripetch creates opposing disgorgement rules in the two circuits where the SEC brings a large proportion of enforcement actions — the Second and Ninth — and increases the likelihood that the U.S. Supreme Court will step in, say attorneys at Cahill Gordon.

  • When Atty Ethics Violations Give Rise To Causes Of Action

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    Though the Model Rules of Professional Conduct make clear that a violation of the rules does not automatically create a cause of action, attorneys should beware of a few scenarios in which they could face lawsuits for ethical lapses, says Brian Faughnan at Faughnan Law.

  • A Shift To Semiannual Reporting May Reshape Litigation Risk

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    While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's proposed change from quarterly to semiannual reporting may reduce the volume of formal filings, it wouldn't reduce litigation risk, instead shifting it into less predictable terrain — where informal disclosures, timing ambiguities and broader materiality debates will dominate, says Pavithra Kumar at Advanced Analytical Consulting Group.

  • TikTok Divestiture Deal Revolves Around IP Considerations

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    The divestiture deal between the U.S. and China to resolve a security dispute over TikTok's U.S. operations is seen as a diplomatic breakthrough, but its success hinges on the treatment of intellectual property and may set a precedent in the global contest over digital sovereignty and IP control, say attorneys at Brownstein Hyatt.

  • How Gov't May Use FARA To Target 'Domestic Terrorism'

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    After the Trump administration’s recent memo directing law enforcement to use the Foreign Agents Registration Act to prosecute domestic terrorism, nonprofit organizations receiving funding from foreign sources must assess their registration obligations under the statute, say attorneys at Pillsbury.

  • What CFTC Push For Tokenized Collateral Means For Crypto

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    The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's recent request for comment on the use of tokenized products as collateral in derivatives markets signals that it is expanding the scope and form of eligible collateral, and could broaden the potential use cases for crypto-assets held in tokenized form, say attorneys at Dechert.

  • H-1B Fee Guidance Is Helpful But Notable Uncertainty Persists

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    Recent guidance narrowing the scope of the $100,000 entry fee for H-1B visas will allow employers to plan for the hiring season, but a lack of detail about the mechanics of cross-agency payment verification, fee exemptions and other practical matters still need to be addressed, say attorneys at Klasko Immigration Law Partners.

  • Justices' LabCorp Punt Leaves Deeper Class Cert. Circuit Split

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    In its ruling in LabCorp v. Davis, the U.S. Supreme Court left unresolved a standing-related class certification issue that has plagued class action jurisprudence for years — and subsequent conflicting decisions among federal circuit courts have left district courts and litigants struggling with conflicting and uncertain standards, say attorneys at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Lessons From Del. Chancery Court's New Activision Decision

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    The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in AP-Fonden v. Activision Blizzard, declining to dismiss certain fiduciary duty claims at the pleading stage, offers takeaways for boards considering a sale, including the importance of playing an active role in the merger process and documenting key board materials, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • Series

    Practicing Stoicism Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Practicing Stoicism, by applying reason to ignore my emotions and govern my decisions, has enabled me to approach challenging situations in a structured way, ultimately providing advice singularly devoted to a client's interest, says John Baranello at Moses & Singer.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: Texas, One Year In

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    A year after the Texas Business Court's first decision, it's clear that Texas didn't just copy Delaware and instead built something uniquely its own, combining specialization with constitutional accountability and creating a model that looks forward without losing touch with the state's democratic and statutory roots, says Chris Bankler at Jackson Walker.

  • AG Watch: Illinois A Key Player In State-Level Enforcement

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    Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul has systematically strengthened his office to fill federal enforcement gaps, oppose Trump administration mandates and advance state policy objectives, particularly by aggressively pursuing labor-related issues, say attorneys at Troutman.

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