-
April 24, 2026
The launch of the refund process for tariffs struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court marks the start of lengthy and multifaceted court battles as companies fight with consumers — and amongst themselves — about who gets a slice of the $166 billion pie, experts told Law360.
-
April 24, 2026
Waffle House was sued in Georgia federal court by a former unit manager who alleged that the restaurant chain depleted her medical leave without authorization, denied her reasonable accommodations and twice demoted her due to her pregnancy.
-
April 24, 2026
An Eleventh Circuit panel Friday appeared wary of arguments that two men's lack of confidence in Georgia's electoral process and their attempts to contact the state's secretary of state about alleged voter registration anomalies gave them standing to sue under the National Voter Registration Act.
-
April 24, 2026
An Eleventh Circuit panel appeared divided Friday over whether to reverse a Georgia federal judge's order blocking the state from cutting off funding for transgender prisoners' hormone therapy, with one judge insisting that the state had de facto conceded the treatment was medically necessary.
-
April 24, 2026
After recently serving as Georgia's solicitor general, an attorney who clerked with the U.S. Supreme Court has returned to Jones Day in its Atlanta office, strengthening the firm's issues and appeals practice.
-
April 24, 2026
A concrete products manufacturer has wrongly classified maintenance managers as overtime-exempt despite their routine, nonmanagerial duties, a former employee has alleged in a proposed collective and class action in Georgia federal court.
-
April 23, 2026
A Delta Air Lines passenger who defecated on himself after he was handcuffed and denied the opportunity to use the bathroom urged the Ninth Circuit on Thursday to give him another trial after a judge scrapped his $7.2 million verdict, arguing that the court wrongly tossed the verdict after trial.
-
April 23, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit affirmed much of an order compelling arbitration in the Cayman Islands of claims brought by a seaman who was injured aboard a luxury 288-foot yacht allegedly owned by billionaire and former Sears CEO Edward Lampert, saying its precedent on such matters remains good law.
-
April 23, 2026
A Georgia federal judge freed Bitcoin Depot on Thursday from a proposed class action over a 2024 data breach that affected tens of thousands of customers after ruling that the speculative risk of identity theft on its own could not support the suit.
-
April 23, 2026
The owner and former president of the now-defunct Georgia-based First Liberty Building & Loan LLC was arraigned Thursday in Georgia federal court for allegedly orchestrating a $140 million Ponzi scheme, according to the U.S. attorney's office in Atlanta.
-
April 23, 2026
Two State Farm units don't belong in a Florida couple's suit over reimbursement for unearned premiums following a total loss, the Eleventh Circuit found, while reviving the couple's breach of contract claim against the insurer's Florida-based subsidiary pending a new jurisdictional analysis.
-
April 23, 2026
A female Delta Air Lines aviation maintenance planner working under all-male management was placed on a coaching plan that didn't apply to her male colleagues and was used to deny her a merit raise and suggest performance deficiencies that didn't exist, she said in a complaint in Georgia federal court.
-
April 23, 2026
Mercedes-Benz ignored a Vietnamese American employee's complaints about a manager's racial bias before ultimately firing him after he took leave for the birth of his child, he told a Georgia federal court.
-
April 23, 2026
A former Georgia state representative who stepped down this year amid allegations that she fraudulently obtained unemployment insurance during the COVID-19 pandemic avoided prison time Thursday as a federal judge sentenced her to time served.
-
April 23, 2026
A Black travel nurse claiming Emory Healthcare fired her for complaining that she got less training than white colleagues is turning to the Eleventh Circuit after losing her lawsuit, according to a notice filed in Georgia federal court.
-
April 23, 2026
Georgia's supreme court has been asked to consider changing a former state court judge's voluntary resignation amid an ethics case against her into an involuntary removal and to prohibit her from holding judicial office, while the former judge contends her resignation moots disciplinary proceedings.
-
April 23, 2026
A cosmetic surgery provider objected to a magistrate judge's recommendation that it be sanctioned for neglecting to keep sales data and messages that may have been relevant in a U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission disability bias suit, saying the data has already been provided in other records.
-
April 22, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit on Wednesday affirmed a lower court's decision tossing former Delta Air Lines Inc. pilots' claims that they were forced out of their jobs for taking military leave, ruling the pilots would have been forced out anyway for abusing their sick leave.
-
April 22, 2026
Alston & Bird LLP urged a Florida federal court on Wednesday to toss a malpractice suit claiming the firm facilitated a $328 million cryptocurrency scam at Goliath Ventures Inc., arguing that the proposed class of Goliath investors who brought the suit were never clients of the firm.
-
April 22, 2026
A Georgia federal judge Wednesday narrowed the scope of claims filed on behalf of a proposed nationwide class of 16 million drivers whose OnStar driving data was allegedly used to spy on them, while largely preserving the wiretapping allegations at the heart of the suit.
-
April 22, 2026
RJ Reynolds Vapor Co., which produces Vuse e-cigarettes, filed a suit in Delaware federal court seeking a declaration that it does not infringe a patent held by rival VPR Brands.
-
April 22, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit has vacated a preliminary injunction halting the operations of an Everglades-based immigration detention center for bypassing federal environmental laws, ruling two environmental groups and the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida challenging the detention center failed to show that it is under federal control.
-
April 22, 2026
The parent company of Arby's, Dunkin' and other fast-food chains urged a Georgia federal court to toss the remaining claims in a class action alleging employees in its health plan were unlawfully charged more for using tobacco, pointing to the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 Loper Bright ruling.
-
April 22, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit ruled that parents' proposed class action seeking damages from the Florida Prepaid College Board over failing to provide a portion of tuition for their daughters' education cannot proceed, saying their claims are barred under sovereign immunity.
-
April 22, 2026
The Eleventh Circuit on Wednesday pressed Florida on its argument that a landmark 1988 U.S. Supreme Court case supported its defense of a state law barring books with sexual content from school libraries, with two judges hinting that the high court's decision might not be directly on point.