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March 23, 2026
J&J Amici Seek Clarity On Goldman Precedent For Class Cert.
Four groups of amici have urged the U.S. Supreme Court to take up Johnson & Johnson's challenge to a Third Circuit decision allowing a securities class action over its talc products to proceed, warning the ruling could reshape how shareholder suits are litigated nationwide.
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March 23, 2026
FTC Stays Focused On Healthcare, Launches Task Force
The Federal Trade Commission announced it is launching a new task force with staff from across the agency to coordinate healthcare policy approaches and initiate investigations meant to help protect patients, healthcare workers and American taxpayers.
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March 23, 2026
New Wash. Law Cuts Antispam Penalties Amid Multiple Suits
Statutory penalties for emails sent in violation of Washington state's Commercial Electronic Mail Act, which bars messages with false or misleading subject lines, will fall from $500 per email to $100 under a measure signed into law by Gov. Bob Ferguson on Monday.
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March 23, 2026
Semiconductor Co. Can't End Suit Over Key Witness's Reversal
An investor's securities fraud suit accusing STMicroelectronics of failing to acknowledge pandemic-related declines in demand will proceed after a New York federal judge rejected the semiconductor manufacturer's bids for dismissal and reconsideration.
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March 23, 2026
Ex-White Sox Star Thomas Sues Team, Nike Over Jersey Sales
Former Chicago White Sox player Frank Thomas has sued his ex-team, Nike and Fanatics in Illinois state court, claiming they unlawfully sold jerseys bearing his name and number without his consent and without compensating him in any way.
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March 23, 2026
AbbVie Escapes Ill. Genetic Privacy Lawsuit
An Illinois federal judge on Friday granted AbbVie summary judgment in a lawsuit claiming it violated the state's genetic privacy law, saying there was "no genuine dispute" that AbbVie never conditioned the plaintiff's employment on whether he disclosed genetic information in the physical exam he was required to undergo before starting work.
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March 23, 2026
Clear GC Will Depart In April, Retain Salary For Another Year
The general counsel of identity verification services company Clear Secure Inc. is stepping down next month but will receive an additional 12 months of salary following her departure, the company revealed last week in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.
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March 23, 2026
Social Media Atty Sanctioned For 'Most Shameful Moment'
A California judge on Monday sanctioned an attorney for the plaintiff in a bellwether trial alleging Meta Platforms and Google's social media platforms harm children's mental health, fining him $1,100 and keeping him off the plaintiffs' steering committee for violating court rules by twice filming inside the courthouse.
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March 23, 2026
Cognizant Fired Worker Over Hiring Bias Claims, Jury Told
A New York University computer science professor on Monday told a federal jury in Manhattan he was unlawfully fired from a lucrative job at Cognizant Technology Solutions for alleging the New Jersey information technology company was engaging in hiring practices that favored immigrant workers from India.
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March 23, 2026
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
The Delaware Chancery Court's docket this past week featured high-stakes disputes involving major consumer brands, a reinstated video game executive, revived noncompete and compensation claims and fresh allegations of corporate misconduct in the healthcare sector.
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March 23, 2026
BJ's Says Pension Fund Oversteps With Climate Study Ask
BJ's Wholesale Club told a Massachusetts federal judge that it cannot be forced to poll shareholders on whether the retailer should study the effects of deforestation on its supply chains, calling it an improper attempt at "micromanagement."
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March 23, 2026
Musk Escapes Claim He Implied Jewish Student Was Neo-Nazi
A Texas appeals court has freed Elon Musk from a defamation suit alleging that he falsely implied a Jewish student at the University of California was a neo-Nazi involved in a fight in Portland, Oregon, saying his social media posts on the subject are protected opinion.
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March 23, 2026
Zetlin & De Chiara Adds Construction Partner To NY Office
Construction law firm Zetlin & De Chiara LLP said Monday it has added an attorney with three decades of experience advising commercial construction as a partner in its New York office.
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March 23, 2026
Chicken Grower's Federal Wage Claims Against Perdue Axed
A Perdue Foods chicken farmer who claimed he was misclassified as an independent contractor filed his federal wage claims too late, a Georgia federal judge ruled, while allowing portions of his state law claims to proceed.
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March 23, 2026
Salesforce Gets Promotion Bias Suit Sent To Arbitration
A white woman must arbitrate her suit alleging Salesforce ignored her complaints that her male boss promoted only Indian men, a Colorado federal judge said, rejecting arguments that her case raised harassment claims that triggered a law shielding her from an out-of-court resolution.
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March 23, 2026
Justices Pass On Challenge To Courts' Sanctions Authority
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined a dietary supplement company's request to review sanctions it was issued at trial in a false advertising dispute, in a case that could have led justices to clarify when courts may use their inherent authority to sanction parties for litigation conduct.
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March 23, 2026
Paul Hastings' Funds Growth Continues With Paul Weiss Atty
Paul Hastings LLP announced Monday the fifth partner addition this year to its investment funds and private capital team, welcoming a former Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP attorney to its New York office.
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March 20, 2026
Social Media Jury Signals Potential Trouble For Meta, Google
After six full days deliberating in a California bellwether trial over allegations that Meta Platforms Inc. and Google LLC harm children's mental health through their social media platforms, the jury submitted a question to the judge potentially indicating it may be leaning in favor of finding one or both defendants liable.
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March 20, 2026
Former Gilead Sciences GC To Earn Over $2.5M Severance
Gilead Sciences Inc. is paying its former general counsel more than $2.5 million in severance after she left the company, according to a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing released Friday.
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March 20, 2026
Nexstar Won Over DC, But Faces Big Task In Local TV Markets
Broadcast behemoth Nexstar had plenty to celebrate in Washington, D.C., on Thursday with twin regulatory approvals pivotal to its plan to take over rival Tegna, but even if the deal survives legal challenges, it will face scrutiny in local TV markets.
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March 20, 2026
4 Open Questions On Tariff Refund System Development
U.S. Customs and Border Protection is developing a system to refund tariffs struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court, but it remains unclear whether it will cover the entire gamut of duties President Donald Trump imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Here, Law360 examines four open questions surrounding the IEEPA tariff refund system being developed by Customs.
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March 20, 2026
Authors' Attys Cut Fee Bid To $187M In $1.5B Anthropic IP Deal
Authors who allege Anthropic pirated their work to train its Claude chatbot urged a California federal judge to grant final approval to Anthropic's $1.5 billion settlement, along with an attorney fee request revised down from $300 million to $187.5 million, arguing the deal is fair despite multiple objections.
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March 20, 2026
Real Estate Recap: Rate Hold, Data Center Regs, Housing EOs
Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including reactions to the latest interest rates news from the Fed, states tamping down on data center development and executive orders on the affordable housing front.
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March 20, 2026
Feds Don't Have To Reveal Probe Of BofA's Epstein Ties
The federal government does not have to disclose a possible investigation into Bank of America's alleged role in enabling Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking scheme, a New York federal judge said Friday, explaining his order earlier this month denying the bank's bid to stay a civil suit that has since been settled.
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March 20, 2026
Employment Authority: Union Contracts Elusive At Big Names
Law360 Employment Authority covers the biggest employment cases and trends. Catch up this week with coverage on how unions at big-name employers are still fighting for their first contracts several years after workers launched campaigns, the possibility that a U.S. Department of Labor independent contractor rule will have little impact on app-based companies, and the questions the Fourth Circuit is considering as it takes up Liberty University's challenge to a ruling that allowed a transgender former employee to pursue a sex discrimination suit against the Christian school.
Expert Analysis
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: January Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses five rulings from October and November, and identifies practice tips from cases involving consumer fraud, oil and gas leases, toxic torts, and wage and hour issues.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Judicial Use Informs Guardrails
U.S. Magistrate Judge Maritza Dominguez Braswell at the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado discusses why having a sense of how generative AI tools behave, where they add value, where they introduce risk and how they are reshaping the practice of law is key for today's judges.
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What Businesses Offering AI Should Expect From The FTC
The Federal Trade Commission's move to reopen and set aside an administrative order against Rytr shows that the FTC is serious about executing on the administration's Artificial Intelligence Action Plan, and won't stand in the way of businesses offering AI products with pro-consumer, legitimate uses, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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Crypto-Asset Strategy For Corporate Legal Leaders In 2026
As digital assets experience increased regulatory clarity, institutional adoption and technological maturity, in-house legal leaders must build strong policies this year and stay engaged with the evolving market to help their companies seize the opportunities of the digital asset era while managing the risks, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.
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What US Cos. Must Know To Comply With Italy's AI Law
Italy's newly effective artificial intelligence law means U.S. companies operating in Italy or serving Italian customers must now meet EU AI Act obligations as well as Italy-specific requirements, including immediately enforceable criminal penalties, designated national authorities and sector-specific mandates, say attorneys at Portolano Cavallo.
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Cybersecurity Must Remain Financial Sector's Focus In 2026
In 2026, financial institutions face a wave of more prescriptive cybersecurity legal requirements demanding clearer governance, faster incident reporting, and stronger oversight of third-party and AI-driven risks, making it crucial to understand these issues before they materialize into crises, say attorneys at Sidley.
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How 2025 Recalibrated Fair Use For The AI Era
Although the Second Circuit's decision last year in Romanova v. Amilus Inc. did not involve artificial intelligence, its formulation of relevant fair use factors provides a useful guide for lower courts examining AI cases in 2026, demanding close attention from legal practitioners on both sides of these disputes, say attorneys at Cleary.
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2026 Int'l Arbitration Trends: Next Steps In Age Of AI, Crypto
Parties' use of artificial intelligence and blockchain technologies will continue in 2026, and international arbitrators will be called upon to evolve by building expertise in blockchain functionality, cryptography and decentralized finance protocols, and understanding the power and limitations of large language models, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Presidential Pardon Brokering Can Create Risks For Attys
The emergence of an apparent “pardon shopping” marketplace, in which attorneys treat presidential pardons as a market product, may invite investigative scrutiny of counsel and potential criminal charges grounded in bribery, wire fraud and other statutes, says David Klasing at The Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: 5 Tips From Ex-SEC Unit Chief
My move to private practice has reaffirmed my belief in the value of adaptability, collaboration and strategic thinking — qualities that are essential not only for successful client outcomes, but also for sustained professional satisfaction, says Dabney O’Riordan at Fried Frank.
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Patent Applicants Must Get Biologics Enablement Right
As artificial intelligence increasingly becomes a core driver in drug discovery, it is critical for drug companies to adapt their drafting strategies to the unique features of AI-generated inventions, and to pay particularly close attention to enablement standards, says Sanandan Malhotra at Novo Nordisk.
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2026 Int'l Arbitration Trends: Awards Against Sovereign States
The enforcement of arbitral awards against sovereign states is one of the most contentious and rapidly evolving areas in international arbitration, with three defining issues on the 2026 horizon: the scope of sovereign immunity, assignability of rights, and availability of fraud and corruption defenses, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Start A Law Firm
Launching and sustaining a law firm requires skills most law schools don't teach, but every lawyer should understand a few core principles that can make the leap calculated rather than reckless, says Sam Katz at Athlaw.
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5 Compliance Takeaways From FINRA's Oversight Report
The priorities outlined in the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's recently released annual oversight report focus on the organization's core mission of protecting investors, with AI being the sole new topic area, but financial firms can expect further reforms aimed at efficiency and modernization, say attorneys at Armstrong Teasdale.
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How SEC Civil Penalties Became Arbitrary: 3 Potential Fixes
Data shows that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's seemingly unlimited authority to levy monetary penalties on market participants has diverged far from the federal securities laws' limitations, but three reforms can help reverse the trend, say David Slovick at Kopecky Schumacher and Phil Lieberman at Vanderbilt Law.