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February 04, 2026
Wash. AG Defends 'Constitutional' Anti-Spam Law In Ulta Suit
Washington's attorney general is defending the constitutionality of a state anti-spam law, denying arguments by beauty retailer Ulta that the statute is an undue burden on interstate commerce and runs afoul of federal law.
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February 04, 2026
Class Attys In Del. Northwest Biotherapeutics Praise Deal
Delaware Chancery Court has lined up a March 16 settlement hearing for a four-year stockholder lawsuit alleging insiders of Northwest Biotherapeutics Inc. received $40 million in stock awards, with proposals including a call for the company to forfeit nearly 22.9 million stock options and it receiving $2.25 million.
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February 04, 2026
'Extraordinary Circumstances': Elon Musk Faces USAID Depo
A Maryland federal judge on Wednesday said billionaire Elon Musk must testify in litigation filed by U.S. Agency for International Development employees claiming he illegally dismantled the foreign aid agency while head of the advisory organization known as the Department of Government Efficiency, saying "extraordinary circumstances justify the deposition."
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February 04, 2026
Oracle Oversold AI Infrastructure Spending, Investor Says
An Oracle Corp. shareholder has accused the company in Delaware federal court of overly promising that its increased spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure would accelerate revenue growth despite concerns about its increasing contractual reliance on OpenAI, saying OpenAI itself is beholden to "AI tailwinds continuing and its models being a market leader."
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February 04, 2026
SEC Cases May Rise After 'Unprecedented' 2025, Attys Say
Following an "unprecedented" year in which the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dismissed the bulk of its crypto docket and filed few new lawsuits, former SEC staff members said Wednesday that there are signs that enforcement actions could begin to ramp up this year.
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February 04, 2026
Under Armour Wants 4th Circ. To Review $100M Coverage Cap
Under Armour asked the Fourth Circuit to review a recent ruling that capped its coverage for a securities class action, government investigations and derivative matters at $100 million, saying the panel overlooked the significance of an endorsement that essentially settled a dispute over when certain claims were made.
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February 04, 2026
Loeb & Loeb To Guide SPAC's Merger With Packaging Co.
Loeb & Loeb LLP is advising a special purpose acquisition company on its proposed combination with Taiwan-based packaging solutions company Deluxe Technology Group, according to an announcement on Wednesday.
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February 04, 2026
Chancery Asked For 120-Day Stay Of Virgin Galactic Suit
The Delaware Chancery Court has been asked to temporarily pause a stockholder derivative suit accusing Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson and other leaders of the spaceflight company of concealing safety risks while selling stock, as related litigation over similar allegations moves toward possible settlement in federal court.
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February 04, 2026
Drugmakers Say Hagens Berman Responsible For Costs
Drugmakers including GSK and Sanofi have told a Pennsylvania federal court that plaintiffs firm Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP should bear the costs for the special master tasked with sorting out long-running disputes in a since-dropped product liability suit.
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February 04, 2026
Wachtel Missry Settles Liability In $26M Atty Malpractice Case
A dispute over who is liable for a former Wachtel Missry LLP partner's alleged exploitation of an elderly client has been settled on the eve of trial, while the Brooklyn federal judge declined to consider recusing himself despite "inadvertently" meeting with the firm's founding partner before the matter was fully put to rest.
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February 04, 2026
Cooley, Ropes & Gray Transactional Attys Move To Latham
Latham & Watkins LLP announced Tuesday that it has hired two partners to help the firm meet evolving capital and growth demands — a Los Angeles-based emerging companies attorney from Cooley LLP and a New York-based capital markets attorney from Ropes & Gray LLP.
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February 04, 2026
Stockholders Ask Del. Justices To Revive Bylaw Suits
Stockholders challenging advance notice bylaws at AES Corp. and Owens Corning urged the Delaware Supreme Court on Wednesday to revive their dismissed suits, saying boards should face fiduciary duty scrutiny the moment they adopt allegedly entrenching bylaws, not only after a proxy contest is triggered.
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February 04, 2026
Ex-Pentagon GC Joins Bradley Arant's National Security Team
Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP has hired the former legal adviser to the National Security Council, who is joining the team in Nashville, Tennessee, and Washington, D.C., to work with the firm's Government Enforcement & Investigations and Defense & National Security teams, the firm announced Tuesday.
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February 04, 2026
Express Scripts Makes 'Fundamental Changes' In FTC Deal
Express Scripts on Wednesday agreed to what the Federal Trade Commission called a "landmark settlement" promising major changes to its drug formulary practices, allowing the company to duck out of a case accusing all three of the country's largest pharmacy benefit managers of inflating insulin prices through rebate schemes.
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February 03, 2026
XAI Fights Uphill To Keep Alive OpenAI IP Theft Suit
Elon Musk's xAI urged a California federal judge Tuesday to change her tentative decision to toss its suit accusing OpenAI of poaching its workers to steal trade secrets, arguing that when considered together, the "whole gestalt" of xAI's allegations against individual employees is enough to state viable claims against OpenAI.
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February 03, 2026
Calif. Privacy Agency Taps Meta Alum To Head New Audits Unit
The California Privacy Protection Agency on Tuesday announced the creation of a new Audits Division to assess companies' compliance with the state's consumer data privacy framework and named the most recent director of public policy at social media giant Meta Platforms Inc. to lead the unit.
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February 03, 2026
ImmunityBio Stockholder Targets Soon-Shiong In Chancery
The Delaware Chancery Court on Tuesday heard arguments over whether biotech billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong and ImmunityBio Inc.'s board breached their fiduciary duties by approving insider financing that allegedly allowed him to secure equity at deeply discounted prices as the company neared regulatory approval for its lead cancer drug.
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February 03, 2026
Wachtell Lipton, Davis Polk Steer $12B Santander Deal
Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz and Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP are guiding Banco Santander SA's $12.3 billion cash-and-stock acquisition of Webster Financial Corp., according to an announcement made Tuesday.
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February 03, 2026
Uber Should Pay $144M For Sex Assault By Driver, Jury Told
Uber should pay more than $144 million in compensatory and punitive damages for choosing "profit over safety," leading to the rape of a 19-year-old woman by a rideshare driver, her lawyer told an Arizona federal jury at the close of a landmark bellwether trial on Tuesday.
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February 03, 2026
Medtronic's Bundling Isn't Anticompetitive, Prof Tells Jury
A University of Chicago economics professor testified Tuesday in a California federal trial over antitrust claims against Medtronic, saying its practice of bundling its advanced bipolar devices for sales with other products isn't anticompetitive but is actually a very common American practice used by the likes of McDonald's and Costco.
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February 03, 2026
SEC Tosses Biden-Era Case Against Wyoming Crypto Co.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has walked away from an attempt to block the issuance of a pair of digital tokens offered by a Wyoming-based company, saying that changes in federal policy toward the cryptocurrency industry necessitated an end to the administrative proceedings.
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February 03, 2026
Chancery Slashes Mootness Fee Proposal In Bolt Suit
A Delaware vice chancellor on Tuesday pruned to $4.1 million a $7.5 million attorney fee request for litigation that ended with cancellation of more than $37 million in Bolt Financial Group shares used by a company controller to secure a later-defaulted-upon, company-guaranteed loan.
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February 03, 2026
Resort, Expedia Sued Over Guests' Carbon Monoxide Deaths
The families of three young women who died of carbon monoxide poisoning allegedly due to a negligently installed and faulty water heater lodged a suit in Massachusetts federal court on Tuesday, blaming a Belize resort, its Canadian developer, and travel booking website Expedia for their deaths.
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February 03, 2026
Convicted Oil Trader To Remain Free On Bond During Appeal
A Connecticut federal judge Tuesday ruled that an oil trader convicted of overseas bribery can remain free on bond while he appeals his Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and money-laundering convictions, saying a new trial might be possible if the Second Circuit finds fault with her jury instructions.
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February 03, 2026
AI Robot Co.'s Microsoft Ties Were Overblown, Investor Says
The developer of a purported artificial intelligence-powered bartender robot faces a proposed class action accusing it of misleading investors about Microsoft's involvement in its project, causing the company's share price to sink after the truth was revealed but not before the developer locked in a $38.7 million private placement deal.
Expert Analysis
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3 Key Ohio Financial Services Developments From 2025
Ohio's banking and financial services sector saw particularly notable developments in 2025, including a significant Ohio Supreme Court decision on creditor disclosure duties to guarantors in Huntington National Bank v. Schneider, and some major proposed changes to the state's Homebuyer Plus program, says Alex Durst at Durst Kerridge.
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Privacy Ruling Shows How CIPA Conflicts With Modern Tech
A California federal court's recent holding in Doe v. Eating Recovery Center that Meta is not liable for reading, or attempting to read, the pixel-related transmission while in transit reflects a mismatch between the California Invasion of Privacy Act's 1967 origins and modern encrypted, browser‑driven communications, says David Wheeler at Neal Gerber.
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Rescheduling Cannabis Marks New Tax Era For Operators
As the attorney general takes steps to move cannabis from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled Substances Act, operators and advisers should prepare by considering the significant changes this will bring from tax, state, industry and market perspectives, says Michael Harlow at CohnReznick.
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Series
Playing Tennis Makes Me A Better Lawyer
An instinct to turn pain into purpose meant frequent trips to the tennis court, where learning to move ahead one point at a time was a lesson that also applied to the steep learning curve of patent prosecution law, says Daniel Henry at Marshall Gerstein.
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Justices' BDO Denial May Allow For Increased Auditor Liability
The Supreme Court's recent denial of certiorari in BDO v. New England Carpenters could lead to more actions filed against accounting firms, as it lets stand a 2024 Second Circuit ruling that provided a road map for pleading falsity with respect to audit certifications, says Dean Conway at Carlton Fields.
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FTO Designations: Containing Foreign Firms' Legal Risks
Non-U.S. companies can contain legal risks related to foreign terrorist organizations by deliberately structuring operations to demonstrate that any interactions with cartel-affected environments are incidental, constrained and unrelated to advancing harm on the U.S., says David Raskin at Nardello & Co.
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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.