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Corporate
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February 20, 2026
Meta Judge's Antitrust Dismissal 'Usurped' Jury, 9th Circ. Told
Facebook users urged the Ninth Circuit to revive their proposed class action accusing Meta Platforms Inc. of monopolizing personal social networking markets by misrepresenting its privacy and data practices, arguing that a trial judge misapplied antitrust law and "improperly usurped the jury's role" in deciding factual disputes.
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February 20, 2026
Ind. Stadium Bill Moves NFL's Bears Step Closer To Ill. Exit
An Indiana legislative panel has taken a step toward supporting the Chicago Bears in a possible move from Soldier Field in Chicago to a domed stadium in Hammond, Indiana, after Illinois lawmakers said late last year they would not help fund the team's move out of the city to another suburban site.
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February 20, 2026
Beasley Allen Can't Pause NJ Talc DQ Order, Judge Rules
The Beasley Allen Law Firm can't delay an order disqualifying it from representing hundreds of women who claim their ovarian cancer was caused by Johnson & Johnson's talcum powder while it seeks review from the New Jersey Supreme Court, a state judge ruled on Friday.
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February 20, 2026
Middle-Market Private Data Sector Poised For M&A Growth
As demand for insight into the opaque corners of the financial world accelerates, buyers are increasingly zeroing in on middle-market private market data providers, where attorneys say consolidation is poised to intensify.
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February 20, 2026
Milwaukee Accuses Fire Truck Giants Of Rigging The Market
The city of Milwaukee has alleged in a proposed class action that the country's largest fire truck makers and their trade group conspired to slow production so they could force cities and their departments to pay inflated prices.
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February 20, 2026
Tesla Can't Escape $243M Autopilot Crash Verdict
A Florida federal judge refused Friday to undo a $243 million verdict against Tesla, finding evidence presented at trial "more than supports" a jury's determination that the carmaker's Autopilot system contributed to a fatal 2019 crash.
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February 20, 2026
GC Cheat Sheet: The Hottest Corporate News Of The Week
Several pension funds in New York City sued AT&T, alleging the illegal exclusion of their shareholder proposal requesting a corporate diversity report from the telecom giant's corporate ballot. In the meantime, the DOJ said the Trump administration is investigating federal contractors and grant recipients for potentially engaging in discrimination, rather than for their DEI programs. These are among the stories in corporate legal news you may have missed in the past week.
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February 20, 2026
Taxation With Representation: Freshfields, Simpson Thacher
In this week's Taxation With Representation, science and technology company Danaher Corp. acquires medical technology company Masimo Corp., Covetrus merges with a unit of fellow animal health technology company Cencora, and private equity firm Leonard Green & Partners LP buys outstanding Mister Car Wash Inc. shares not already owned by LGP affiliates.
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February 20, 2026
Kennedy Wilson Investor Sues To Block $1.65B Take-Private
A Kennedy-Wilson Holdings Inc. stockholder has sued in the Delaware Chancery Court to block the company's $1.65 billion take-private deal, arguing that the transaction violates Delaware's anti-takeover statute and cannot legally proceed without a supermajority vote of disinterested investors.
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February 20, 2026
Drilling Co. Accused Of Shorting Workers On Overtime
A drilling services company stiffs employees on wages by requiring off-the-clock work, rounding their hours and miscalculating overtime, a worker alleged in a proposed collective action filed in Utah federal court.
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February 20, 2026
Trump Imposes Maximum Tariff After Supreme Court Rebuke
President Donald Trump imposed a temporary global tariff with several exemptions hours after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down tariffs imposed under the International Economic Emergency Powers Act, then announced that he would increase the duty to the 15% maximum.
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February 19, 2026
Ex-Google Engineers Took Trade Secrets To Iran, DOJ Says
Three Silicon Valley engineers exploited their employment at Google and other major tech companies in order to steal trade secrets and send the confidential information to personal devices that they then accessed in Iran, the U.S. Department of Justice said Thursday.
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February 19, 2026
5th Circ. Pauses Order Scrapping FTC Merger Filing Overhaul
The Fifth Circuit on Thursday granted the Federal Trade Commission's emergency motion to pause a Texas federal judge's ruling that threw out the agency's overhaul of premerger reporting requirements.
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February 19, 2026
'Hate' For Musk Quickly Narrows Jury Pool In Twitter Deal Trial
A California federal judge quickly narrowed a pool of 92 prospective jurors Thursday in a class action brought by former Twitter investors against Elon Musk, excusing 38 potential jurors who said they couldn't be fair and impartial as Musk's attorney lamented there are "so many people who hate him so much."
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February 19, 2026
Meta Doesn't Understand Its Own Algorithms, Ex-VP Testifies
A former vice president at Meta Platforms Inc. told a California jury Thursday in a landmark bellwether trial over claims the company's Instagram and Google LLC's YouTube harm children's mental health that he quit because he was deeply concerned about safety, and that even Meta's own experts don't understand how its algorithms work.
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February 19, 2026
Latham To Guide Seahawks Sale In Wake Of Super Bowl Win
BigLaw firm Latham & Watkins LLP and investment bank Allen & Co. have been tapped to oversee the sale of the Seattle Seahawks, the estate of late team owner Paul G. Allen said in a Wednesday announcement kicking off the process, less than two weeks after the team scored its second Super Bowl victory in franchise history.
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February 19, 2026
Texas Suit Says Sanofi Paid Kickbacks For Prescriptions
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued Sanofi-Aventis US LLC in state court Thursday, accusing the pharmaceutical company of paying kickbacks to providers so they would prescribe Sanofi's drugs.
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February 19, 2026
DOJ Shifts FCA Focus From Anti-DEI To Antidiscrimination
A U.S. Department of Justice deputy assistant attorney general said on Thursday that the Trump administration is not investigating federal contractors and grant recipients for their diversity, equity and inclusion programs but for potentially engaging in discrimination.
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February 19, 2026
Xerox Whistleblower Deal Cut May Hinge On Public Disclosures
A Texas appellate court wanted to know Thursday whether a trio of whistleblowers is entitled to a $48 million cut of a Medicaid fraud settlement with Xerox, asking whether prior public disclosures of the wrongdoing helped or hurt their case.
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February 19, 2026
UBS Whistleblower To Get Full Retrial On Long-Running Case
A New York federal judge on Thursday ordered a retrial over a fired UBS worker's whistleblower retaliation lawsuit, marking the latest development in a saga that saw the Second Circuit strike down his 2017 trial win twice, before and after the case was revived by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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February 19, 2026
Judge Affirms Literal Infringement In Ravgen's $57M Jury Win
A Texas federal judge has upheld a jury's finding that genetic testing company Natera Inc. committed literal infringement of a patent held by Ravgen Inc., but said Ravgen's expert testimony wasn't enough to support the jury's finding of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents.
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February 19, 2026
NYC Pension Funds Sue AT&T Over Proxy Proposal Exclusion
Several New York City pension funds have sued AT&T over what they say is the illegal exclusion of their shareholder proposal requesting a corporate diversity report from the telecom giant's corporate ballot, following an indication that regulators would allow the exclusion.
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February 19, 2026
$14M Noncompete Fight Moves Forward In Chancery
The Delaware Chancery Court on Thursday largely refused to dismiss claims that Boingo Wireless Inc.'s former director John Basil Georges breached a five-year noncompete tied to the $14 million sale of his wireless infrastructure company, but she threw out a parallel nonsolicitation provision as unenforceably overbroad.
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February 19, 2026
Lyft Must Share Driver Records In Uber Sexual Assault Suit
Lyft Inc. must hand over sexual misconduct records it has on four men who allegedly assaulted and raped passengers while driving for Uber, a California federal judge has ruled, saying such documents could show that Uber, the defendant in multidistrict litigation, knew of the drivers' past conduct.
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February 19, 2026
Live Nation Fights Uphill To Nix FTC Suit Over Ticket Scalping
Live Nation urged a California federal judge Thursday to reconsider her tentative decision refusing to dismiss the Federal Trade Commission's allegations it turned a blind eye to scalpers, arguing that the complaint doesn't identify specific tickets that scalpers were able to obtain by evading security measures that limit purchases.
Expert Analysis
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Forming Measurable Ties
Relationship-building should begin as early as possible in a law firm merger, as intentional pathways to bringing people together drive collaboration, positive client response, engagements and growth, says Amie Colby at Troutman.
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Del. Dispatch: What Tesla Decision Means For Exec Comp
The recent Delaware Supreme Court decision granting Tesla CEO Elon Musk his full pay, now valued at $139 billion, following a yearslong battle appears to reject the view that supersized compensation may be inherently unfair to a corporation and its shareholders, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
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Wis. Sanctions Order May Shake Up Securities Class Actions
A Wisconsin federal court’s recent decision to impose sanctions on a plaintiffs law firm for filing a frivolous Private Securities Litigation Reform Act complaint in Toft v. Harbor Diversified may cause both plaintiffs and defendants law firms to reconsider certain customary practices in securities class actions, says Jonathan Richman at Brown Rudnick.
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5 E-Discovery Predictions For 2026 And Beyond
2026 will likely be shaped by issues ranging from artificial intelligence regulatory turbulence to potential evidence rule changes, and e-discovery professionals will need to understand how to effectively guide the responsible and defensible adoption of emerging tools, while also ensuring effective safeguards, say attorneys at Littler.
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Reinventing Bank Risk Mgmt. After 2025's Cartel Crackdown
The Trump administration's 2025 designation of certain transnational drug cartels as terrorists means that banks must adapt to a narrowing margin of error in their customer screening and transaction assessments by treating financial crime prevention as a continuous and cross-enterprise concern with national security implications, says Jack Harrington at Bradley Arant.
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Where States Jumped In When SEC Stepped Back In 2025
The state regulators that picked up the slack when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission scaled back enforcement last year should not be underestimated as they continue to aggressively police areas where the SEC has lost interest and probe industries where SEC leadership has actively declined to intervene, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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2026 Enforcement Trends To Expect In Maritime And Int'l Trade
The maritime and international trade community should expect U.S. federal enforcement to ramp up in 2026, particularly via Office of Foreign Asset Control shipping sanctions, accelerating interagency investigations of trade fraud, and U.S. Coast Guard narcotics and pollution inspections, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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Roundup
Massachusetts Banking Brief
In this Expert Analysis series, attorneys provide quarterly recaps discussing the biggest developments in Massachusetts banking regulation and policymaking.
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SEC Virtu Deal Previews Risks Of Nonpublic Info In AI Models
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent settlement with Virtu Financial Inc. over alleged failures to safeguard customer data raises broader questions about how traditional enforcement frameworks may apply when material nonpublic information is embedded into artificial intelligence trading systems, says Braeden Anderson at Gesmer Updegrove.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Courts Can Boost Access To Justice
Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Samuel A. Thumma writes that generative artificial intelligence tools offer a profound opportunity to enhance access to justice and engender public confidence in courts’ use of technology, and judges can seize this opportunity in five key ways.
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Shopify Suit Is An Early Antitrust Test Of 'Buy Now, Pay Later'
An ongoing antitrust suit in Minnesota federal court filed by Sezzle against Shopify — one of the earliest such lawsuits focused on buy now, pay later services — could play a particularly informative role in how short-term credit offerings and the broader market develop, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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Examining Privilege In Dual-Purpose Workplace Investigations
The Sixth Circuit's recent holding in FirstEnergy's bribery probe ruling that attorney-client privilege applied to a dual-purpose workplace investigation because its primary purpose was obtaining legal advice highlights the uncertainty companies face as federal circuit courts remain split on the appropriate test, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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Hot Topics For Family Offices In 2026
For family offices, the throughline of 2026 is disciplined readiness, as navigating impact from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and platform maturation will be necessary to preserve flexibility and enhance client outcomes, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Opinion
The Case For Emulating, Not Dividing, The Ninth Circuit
Champions for improved judicial administration should reject the unfounded criticisms driving recent Senate proposals to divide the Ninth Circuit and instead seek to replicate the court's unique strengths and successes, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.
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Autonomous AI Attacks Demarcate Shift In Risk Landscape
Anthropic and OpenAI recently disclosed cyberattacks where an artificial intelligence agent was the primary attacker, illustrating immediate implications for corporate governance, contracting and security programs as companies integrate AI with their business systems, say Rahul Mukhi and Melissa Faragasso at Cleary and Brian Lichter at Stroz Friedberg.