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Fintech
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January 02, 2026
Bitfinex Hacker Says He's Been Released From Prison
Bitfinex hacker Ilya Lichtenstein says he's out of prison early after provisions of a criminal justice reform law shortened his five-year sentence for laundering stolen bitcoin worth billions of dollars.
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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.
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January 02, 2026
Banking Regulation To Watch In 2026
The Trump administration is on the cusp of a pivotal year as it presses ahead in its sweeping push to reset banking regulation, with an agency funding fight, supervisory overhauls, crypto chartering and more all poised for significant developments.
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January 02, 2026
Banking Litigation To Watch In 2026
From a U.S. Supreme Court fight over the Federal Reserve to clashes over state regulatory power, in-house enforcement and the fate of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a slate of high-stakes lawsuits could shake up the banking landscape in the coming year.
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January 02, 2026
CoinFund Co-Founder Alleges Secret Plot To Strip 25% Stake
A co-founder of cryptocurrency investment firm CoinFund has sued the firm and several of its partners in Delaware Chancery Court, alleging that they orchestrated a covert scheme to strip him of a roughly 25% equity stake using undisclosed written consents, a non-pro rata distribution structure and what he calls a sham valuation designed to minimize his payout.
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January 02, 2026
Trade Secret Trends To Watch In 2026
The landscape of trade secret law could see significant developments in 2026 as courts address the aftermath of astronomical jury awards and navigate jurisdictional tensions surrounding the timing and specifics of trade secret disclosures in litigation.
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January 02, 2026
California Cases To Watch In 2026
Legal experts following California courts in 2026 are tracking high-stakes personal injury, antitrust and copyright battles against giants in the social media, artificial intelligence and entertainment industries, as well as wide-ranging legal disputes arising from Los Angeles wildfires and high-profile appeals pending before the California Supreme Court.
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January 02, 2026
Crypto To Take On Rulemaking Push, And Pushback, In 2026
The Trump administration's pledge to make the U.S. the "crypto capital of the world" invigorated a wave of crypto policy efforts from Congress and federal agencies last year, but experts say 2026 will be about sorting the devils in the details.
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January 02, 2026
5 White Collar Enforcement Trends To Watch In 2026
Shifts in white collar enforcement priorities during President Donald Trump's second term in office will pave the way for more changes in the year ahead, as experts predict a ramping up of enforcement actions related to everything from healthcare fraud and tariff evasion to cartels and artificial intelligence.
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January 02, 2026
Milbank PE Co-Head On What Will Drive Deals In 2026
With private equity players hoping for a more active 2026, attorneys are increasingly helping sponsors navigate AI-related diligence, defense sector dealmaking and ongoing liquidity pressure in a market where geopolitical uncertainty and valuation gaps still complicate traditional exits.
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January 01, 2026
Blue Slip Fight Looms Over Trump's 2026 Judicial Outlook
In 2025, President Donald Trump put 20 district and six circuit judges on the federal bench. In the year ahead, a fight over home state senators' ability to block district court picks could make it more difficult for him to match that record.
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January 01, 2026
4 High Court Cases To Watch This Spring
The U.S. Supreme Court justices will return from the winter holidays to tackle several constitutional disputes that range from who is entitled to birthright citizenship to whether transgender individuals are entitled to heightened levels of protection from discrimination.
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January 01, 2026
BigLaw Leaders Tackle Growth, AI, Remote Work In New Year
Rapid business growth, cultural changes caused by remote work and generative AI are creating challenges and opportunities for law firm leaders going into the New Year. Here, seven top firm leaders share what’s running through their minds as they lie awake at night.
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December 23, 2025
Blackstone's LivCor Latest To Settle Rent Price-Fixing Claims
LivCor LLC, a subsidiary of Blackstone, has agreed to a proposed settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice that would resolve allegations the landlord used RealPage's revenue management software to fix rent prices, according to a proposed consent decree filed in North Carolina federal court Tuesday.
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December 23, 2025
OCC Wants 'Heightened Standards' Only For Biggest Banks
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on Tuesday said it is moving to amend its heightened standards guidelines for insured national banks to decrease the number of lenders subject to the toughest standards from 38 to eight.
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December 23, 2025
Telcoin Sues To Freeze $1.5M In Stolen Crypto-Assets
Cryptocurrency platform Telcoin LLC has gone to California federal court seeking an emergency injunction and damages against unknown hackers who allegedly siphoned millions in digital assets from customer wallets on Christmas Day 2023.
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December 23, 2025
CFPB Says Earned Wage Access Products Aren't Loans
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has determined that "earned wage access" products are generally not considered credit covered by the Truth in Lending Act, while withdrawing a Biden-era proposed interpretive rule that would have identified all such products as credit.
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December 23, 2025
CFPB Shifts Focus To Debanking, Intentional Discrimination
To align with objections set by the Trump administration, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is turning its attention to "debanking" moving forward and has closed all open investigations that were based on disparate impact liability or unintentional discrimination.
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December 23, 2025
Klarna Faces Investor Alleging IPO Risk Misrepresentations
Klarna Group PLC has been hit with a proposed class action from an investor alleging the payments company damaged shareholders by failing to disclose the risks of its "buy now, pay later" loans typically issued to financially insecure consumers ahead of its initial public offering earlier this year.
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December 23, 2025
Notable Pennsylvania Legislation Of 2025
Pennsylvania's much-delayed 2025 budget bill contained some big public-policy changes like ending a carbon cap-and-trade program, offering an $800 income tax credit and providing stopgap funding for mass transit, even as its domination of the state Legislature's time prevented much else from passing, attorneys told Law360 in reviewing major laws that passed in the last year.
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December 23, 2025
Greenberg Traurig-Led Silicon Valley SPAC Raises $200M
Special purpose acquisition company Silicon Valley Acquisition Corp. began trading publicly on Tuesday after raising $200 million in its initial public offering, with plans to pursue an acquisition of a company undergoing "structural transformation."
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December 23, 2025
Freshfields-Led ServiceNow Buys Armis In $7.75B Cash Deal
Artificial intelligence control tower company ServiceNow, led by Freshfields LLP, on Tuesday announced plans to acquire cyber exposure management company Armis, advised by Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, in a $7.75 billion cash deal.
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December 22, 2025
JPMorgan Rips Javice Attys' 'Absurd' Bills For Candy, Booze
JPMorgan has unveiled new details in its ongoing legal fee fight with Charlie Javice, accusing the convicted financial aid startup founder's Quinn Emanuel defense counsel and other firms of billing for "absurd" and "outrageous" expenses, including specialty cocktails, cellulite butter, a Cookie Monster toy and $530 on gummy bears.
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December 22, 2025
NY's James, 21 Other Dem AGs Say CFPB Defunding Unlawful
New York Attorney General Letitia James led a coalition of nearly two dozen Democratic attorneys general in claiming the Trump administration's effort to defund the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is illegal, telling an Oregon federal court Monday the municipalities are statutorily entitled to the CFPB's resources
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December 22, 2025
Fidelity National Agrees To $210M WorldPay Merger Suit Deal
Fidelity National Information Services has agreed to a $210 million settlement that resolves a proposed class of investors' claims that the fintech misrepresented the success prospects of its multibillion-dollar acquisition of payment processor Worldpay, according to an unopposed motion seeking a Florida federal court's preliminary approval of the deal.
Expert Analysis
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Key Crypto Class Action Trends And Rulings In 2025
As the law continued to take shape in the growing area of crypto-assets, this year saw a jump in crypto class action litigation, including noteworthy decisions on motions to compel arbitration and class certification, according to Justin Donoho at Duane Morris.
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How New SEC Policies Shift Shareholder Proposal Landscape
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins' recent remarks provide a road map for public companies to exclude nonbinding shareholder proposals from proxy materials, which would disrupt the mechanism that has traditionally defined how shareholders and companies engage on governance matters, say attorneys at Gunderson.
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Series
Knitting Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Stretching my skills as a knitter makes me a better antitrust attorney by challenging me to recalibrate after wrong turns, not rush outcomes, and trust that I can teach myself the skills to tackle new and difficult projects — even when I don’t have a pattern to work from, says Kara Kuritz at V&E.
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Welcome To Miami
After nearly 20 years in operation, the Miami Complex Business Litigation Division is a pioneer upon which other jurisdictions in the state have been modeled, adopting many innovations to keep its cases running more efficiently and staffing experienced judges who are accustomed to hearing business disputes, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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Recent Proposals May Spell Supervision Overhaul For Banks
A slew of rules recently proposed by the federal banking agencies with approaching comment deadlines would rewrite supervision standards to be further tailored to banks' size and activities, while prioritizing financial risks over process, documentation and other nonfinancial risks, say attorneys at Davis Wright.
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AI Evidence Rule Tweaks Encourage Judicial Guardrails
Recent additions to a committee note on proposed Rule of Evidence 707 — governing evidence generated by artificial intelligence — seek to mitigate potential dangers that may arise once machine outputs are introduced at trial, encouraging judges to perform critical gatekeeping functions, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.
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Where Things Stand At The CFPB As Funding Dries Up
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is on pace to run out of funding in the new year, threatening current and future rulemaking efforts, but a rapid series of recent actions still carries significant implications for regulated entities and warrants careful monitoring in the remaining weeks of the year, say attorneys at Brownstein Hyatt.
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Terrorist Label For Maduro Poses New Risks For US Firms
The State Department's recent designation of President Nicolás Maduro, and other Venezuelan government and military officials, as members of a foreign terrorist organization drastically increases the level of caution companies must exercise when doing business in the region to mitigate potential civil, criminal and regulatory risk, say attorneys at Freshfields.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Getting The Message Across
Communications and brand strategy during a law firm merger represent a crucial thread that runs through every stage of a combination and should include clear messaging, leverage modern marketing tools and embrace the chance to evolve, says Ashley Horne at Womble Bond.
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How Bank-Fintech Partnerships Changed In 2025
The 2025 transition to the Trump administration, augmented by the reversal of Chevron deference in 2024, has resulted in unprecedented shifts, and bank-fintech partnerships are no exception, with key changes affecting a number of areas including charters, regulatory oversight and anti-money laundering, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
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Opinion
Horizontal Stare Decisis Should Not Be Casually Discarded
Eliminating the so-called law of the circuit doctrine — as recently proposed by a Fifth Circuit judge, echoing Justice Neil Gorsuch’s concurrence in Loper Bright — would undermine public confidence in the judiciary’s independence and create costly uncertainty for litigants, says Lawrence Bluestone at Genova Burns.
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How Fed. Circ. Shaped Subject Matter Eligibility In 2025
The Federal Circuit's most impactful patent eligibility decisions this year, touching on questions about obviousness and abstractness, provide a toolbox of takeaways that can be utilized during patent preparation and prosecution to guard against potential challenges, says Reilley Keane at Banner Witcoff.
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DC Circ. Decision Reaffirms SEC Authority Post-Loper Bright
The recent denial of a challenge to invalidate 2024 amendments to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's tick size and fee-cap rules reinforces the D.C. Circuit's deference to SEC expertise in market structure regulation, even after Loper Bright, though implementation of the rules remains uncertain, say attorneys at Sidley.
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10 Commandments For Agentic AI Tools In The Legal Industry
Though agentic artificial intelligence has demonstrated significant promise for optimizing legal work, it presents numerous risks, so specific ethical obligations should be built into the knowledge base of every agentic AI tool used in the legal industry, says Steven Cordero at Akerman LLP.
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10th Circ. Decision May Complicate Lending In Colorado
The Tenth Circuit's decision last month in National Association of Industrial Bankers v. Weiser clears the way for interest rate limits on all consumer lending in Colorado, including loans from out-of-state banks, potentially adding new complexities to lending to Colorado residents, say attorneys at Manatt.