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Environmental
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									September 24, 2025
									GAO Says Energy Dept. Must Review PFAS At Dozens Of SitesThe U.S. Department of Energy needs to speed up its review of how forever chemicals are and have been used at its sites across the nation, the congressional watchdog agency said Wednesday. 
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									September 24, 2025
									Philly Alleges Companies Misled About Products' RecyclabilityS.C. Johnson & Son and snack cake maker Bimbo Bakeries USA have been sued by the city of Philadelphia for allegedly misleading consumers about the recyclability of plastics they use in their products. 
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									September 24, 2025
									Kirkland, Davis Polk Lead Mirion's $585M Paragon BuyRadiation detection company Mirion, advised by Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP, on Wednedsay announced that it has agreed to buy Kirkland & Ellis LLP-led nuclear power company Paragon Energy Solutions from private equity shop Windjammer Capital in a $585 million cash deal. 
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									September 24, 2025
									Tribal Groups Back 9th Circ. Bid To Block Ariz. Land TransferTwo tribal advocacy groups are backing a Ninth Circuit bid to block a 2,400-acre federal land exchange in Arizona to make way for a billion-dollar copper mining project they say will destroy an ancient worship site, arguing that federal policies are systematically stripping Indigenous nations of their homelands. 
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									September 24, 2025
									Md. County Backs Landowners In 4th Circ. Power Line DisputeA county board of commissioners in Maryland told the Fourth Circuit that a Public Service Energy Group unit trying to build a 67-mile transmission line has no right to conduct testing on private landowners' properties, saying a lower court erred in granting the company access. 
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									September 23, 2025
									UC Researchers Win Expanded Injunction Against Grant CutsA California federal judge Monday issued another preliminary injunction ordering the Trump administration to reinstate grants awarded to University of California researchers, this time resurrecting grants awarded by the U.S. Department of Defense, the U.S. Department of Transportation and the National Institutes of Health. 
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									September 23, 2025
									5th Circ. Won't Disturb EPA's Denial Of Texas Ozone PlanThe Fifth Circuit on Monday refused to upend a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency decision denying Texas' Clean Air Act implementation plans, finding that the EPA's procedure complied with the law and its reasoning for denying the plans "was sound." 
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									September 23, 2025
									New Illinois Law Opens The Door To More Toxic Tort LitigationA new Illinois law expanding the state's jurisdictional reach in toxic tort cases has drawn mixed reactions from attorneys, with some praising the law as an added accountability measure for toxic exposure and others decrying it as an open invitation for forum shopping that could clog the state's dockets. 
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									September 23, 2025
									Enviro Orgs. Ask 5th Circ. To Review Delfin LNG Project LicenseEnvironmental groups on Monday asked the Fifth Circuit to find that the U.S. Department of Transportation violated federal law when it issued a license for the construction and operation of the Delfin LNG LLC deepwater liquefied natural gas project. 
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									September 23, 2025
									Tax Court Slashes $38M In Easement Donation DeductionsThe U.S. Tax Court on Tuesday slashed $38 million in deductions for donations of two conservation easements across hundreds of acres in Georgia, finding one lacked the required conservation purpose and neither was potentially headed for mining development as the donors had claimed. 
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									September 23, 2025
									Ship's Owner Can't Shift Blame For Bridge Collapse, Court ToldThe Singaporean owner and manager of the container ship that slammed into Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge and triggered its collapse cannot try to shift blame for its own failings, the South Korean shipbuilder HD Hyundai Heavy Industries Co. Ltd. has told a Pennsylvania federal court. 
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									September 23, 2025
									4 Firms Pave Way For $1B All-Cash Drainage Systems DealAdvanced Drainage Systems said Tuesday it will acquire National Diversified Sales, the water management business of Germany's Norma Group SE, in an all-cash deal valued at about $1 billion. 
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									September 23, 2025
									Foes Slam Feds' GHG Plan As Trump Decries Green 'Scam'Green groups and democrats are strongly opposing the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's proposal to abandon a key greenhouse gas policy, as President Donald Trump on Tuesday called climate change "the greatest con job ever perpetrated on the world." 
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									September 23, 2025
									EPA Still Can't Escape Tort Claims Over Flint Water CrisisA Michigan federal judge has again denied a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency request to dismiss Federal Tort Claims Act litigation seeking to hold the government liable for allegedly lax oversight of the water system in Flint, Michigan. 
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									September 23, 2025
									Law Firms Sued Over La. Hurricane Claim Fee SchemeTwo law firms and certain attorneys engaged in a scheme to "grossly and blatantly" inflate damages estimates for hurricane-related property insurance claims in order to "collect an exorbitant fee which they would all share," a group of seven Louisiana residents told a Louisiana federal court. 
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									September 23, 2025
									Chemours Asks 4th Circ. To Toss Ohio River Pollution OrderChemours told the Fourth Circuit a West Virginia federal judge botched the law and the science about the risks a forever chemical poses when he ordered its Washington Works facility to stop discharging permit-exceeding amounts of the substance into the Ohio River. 
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									September 23, 2025
									Sullivan & Cromwell Guides Sempra On $10B Subsidiary SaleSempra said Tuesday it has agreed to sell a 45% stake in its infrastructure subsidiary to a consortium led by KKR and Canada's CPP Investments for $10 billion, while separately securing $7 billion of equity financing led by Blackstone to advance a major liquefied natural gas project in Texas. 
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									September 22, 2025
									Energy Investor Can Enforce €61M Award Against BulgariaA D.C. federal judge Monday sided with Maltese investor ACF Renewable Energy Ltd. in a suit seeking to enforce a €61 million ($71.86 million) arbitral award against Bulgaria in a dispute over the country's changes to a fixed 20-year rate plan. 
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									September 22, 2025
									Trump Admin Says Calif. Emissions Waiver Fight Is DOAThe Trump administration has told a federal judge that California can't use the courts to override the will of Congress and undo the revocation of Clean Air Act waivers allowing the Golden State to establish its own vehicle emissions standards. 
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									September 22, 2025
									EPA Proposes Rolling Back TSCA Risk Evaluation RegsThe U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Monday proposed loosening regulations for chemical health risk evaluations, saying the existing set can unnecessarily prolong reviews and stifle new products, but green groups are criticizing the move as a giveaway to industry. 
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									September 22, 2025
									NextEra Dodges Antitrust Claims In $1B Power Line FightA Massachusetts federal judge on Monday dismissed claims that NextEra Energy violated antitrust law in efforts to delay construction of a $1 billion transmission line, saying developer Avangrid Inc. failed to show how NextEra's actions limited competition in New England electricity markets. 
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									September 22, 2025
									8th Circ. To Hear Tribal Tesoro Pipeline Row In OctoberThe Eighth Circuit has set arguments for Oct. 21 in North Dakota tribal members' challenge to a lower court's decision that denied them intervention in a lawsuit against the federal government's right-of-way trespassing claims against Tesoro High Plains Pipeline. 
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									September 22, 2025
									Mich. Panel Reaffirms 3M's Win In Challenge To PFAS RulesA Michigan appellate panel has again upheld a court decision invalidating Michigan's limits on PFAS chemicals in tap water, finding that 3M Co. may challenge the rules in court without first lodging an administrative complaint with the state's environmental agency. 
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									September 22, 2025
									Perkins Coie Adds Former US Treasury Tax Policy Atty In DCPerkins Coie LLP has brought on a tax attorney who worked in the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Office of Tax Policy, where he handled work related to laws such as the Inflation Reduction Act and the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the firm announced Monday. 
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									September 22, 2025
									34-Year DOJ Enviro Atty, Deputy Assistant AG, Joins BracewellA career U.S. Department of Justice environmental lawyer, who most recently was the deputy assistant attorney general of the agency's Environmental and Natural Resources Division, has taken his first role in private practice at Bracewell LLP, where he'll work as a partner, the firm announced Monday. 
Expert Analysis
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								Attacks On Judicial Independence Tend To Manifest In 3 Ways  Attacks on judicial independence now run the gamut from gross (bald-faced interference) to systemic (structural changes) to insidious (efforts to undermine public trust), so lawyers, judges and the public must recognize the fateful moment in which we live and defend the rule of law every day, says Jim Moliterno at Washington and Lee University. 
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								Statistics Tools Chart A Path For AI Use In Expert Testimony  To avoid the fate of numerous expert witnesses whose testimony was recently deemed inadmissible by courts, experts relying on artificial intelligence and machine learning should learn from statistical tools’ road to judicial acceptance, say directors at Secretariat. 
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								A Look At Texas Corp. Law Changes Aimed At Dethroning Del.  Seeking to displace Delaware as the preferred locale for incorporation, Texas recently significantly amended its business code, including changes like codifying the business judgment rule, restricting books and records demands, and giving greater protections for officers and directors in interested transactions, say attorneys at Fenwick. 
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								Justices Hand Agencies Broad Discretion In NEPA Review  By limiting the required scope of reviews under the National Environmental Policy Act, the U.S. Supreme Court's recent ruling in Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County could weaken the review process under NEPA, while also raising questions regarding the degree of deference afforded to agencies, say attorneys at Foley Hoag. 
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								Series Law School's Missed Lessons: Appreciating Civil Procedure.jpg)  If you’re like me, law school’s often complex and theoretical approach to teaching civil procedure may have contributed to an early struggle with the topic, but when seen from a practical perspective, new lawyers may find they enjoy mastering these rules, says Chloe Villagomez at Foster Garvey. 
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								Calif. Bar Exam Fiasco Shows Why Attys Must Disclose AI Use  The recent revelation that a handful of questions from the controversial California bar exam administered in February were drafted using generative artificial intelligence demonstrates the continued importance of disclosure for attorneys who use AI tools, say attorneys at Troutman. 
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								Justices Widen Gap Between Federal, Calif. Enviro Reviews  While the U.S. Supreme Court's recent opinion in Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County, Colorado, narrowed the scope of National Environmental Policy Act reviews, it may have broadened the gulf between reviews conducted under NEPA and those under the California Environmental Quality Act, say attorneys at Hanson Bridgett. 
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								In 2nd Place, Va. 'Rocket Docket' Remains Old Reliable  The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia was again one of the fastest civil trial courts in the nation last year, and an interview with the court’s newest judge provides insights into why it continues to soar, says Robert Tata at Hunton. 
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								How Attorneys Can Become Change Agents For Racial Equity  As the administration targets diversity, equity and inclusion efforts and law firms consider pulling back from their programs, lawyers who care about racial equity and justice can employ four strategies to create microspaces of justice, which can then be parlayed into drivers of transformational change, says Susan Sturm at Columbia Law School. 
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								Seven County Ruling Should Trim Agency Enviro Analysis  The U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Seven County Infrastructure Coalition v. Eagle County provides needed clarity for infrastructure projects by expressly directing agencies to narrow environmental reviews, and reducing the threat of litigation if even tangential issues are not exhaustively evaluated, say attorneys at Dentons. 
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								Series Running Marathons Makes Me A Better Lawyer  After almost five years of running marathons, I’ve learned that both the race itself and the training process sharpen skills that directly translate to the practice of law, including discipline, dedication, endurance, problem-solving and mental toughness, says Lauren Meadows at Swift Currie. 
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								Calif. Air Board Offers Early Hints On Climate Reporting  As initial reporting deadlines for California's new climate reporting laws approach, guidance provided by the California Air Resources Board in a virtual public workshop sheds some light on rulemaking to come, and how to prepare for compliance during this period of uncertainty, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher. 
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								Series Law School's Missed Lessons: Supporting A Trial Team  While students often practice as lead trial attorneys in law school, such an opportunity likely won’t arise until a few years into practice, so junior associates should focus on honing skills that are essential to supporting a trial team, including organization, adaptability and humility, says Lucy Zelina at Tucker Ellis. 
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								Opinion Address Nationwide Injunction Issues With Random Venues  Many of the qualms about individual district court judges' authority to issue nationwide injunctions could be solved with a simple legislative solution: handling multiple complaints about the same agency action filed in different district courts by assigning a venue via random selection, says Harvey Reiter at Stinson. 
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								FAR Rewrite May Cloud Key Gov't Contract Doctrine  The Trump administration's government procurement overhaul, under which sections of the Federal Acquisition Regulation are eliminated by default, is bound to collide with a doctrine that allows courts to read omitted clauses into government contracts if they represent long-standing pillars of federal procurement law, say attorneys at Rogers Joseph.