Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Health
-
January 16, 2026
Immigrant Visa Pause Could Test Limits Of Executive Power
The Trump administration's indefinite pause on immigrant visas for applicants from 75 countries may test the outer bounds of executive control over visa issuance and prompt court battles in a rarely litigated area of immigration law.
-
January 16, 2026
DOJ Reports Historic $6.8B False Claims Act Haul In 2025
The U.S. Department of Justice secured more than $6.8 billion via settlements and judgments under the False Claims Act in the fiscal year that ended September 2025, the largest amount recovered in a single year in the history of the FCA, the DOJ said Friday.
-
January 16, 2026
PBMs Seek Exit From Philly's Suit Over Opioid Crisis
CVS Health Corp. and other pharmacy benefit managers asked a Pennsylvania federal judge to let them out of the city of Philadelphia's lawsuit claiming they contributed to the opioid epidemic in the city, arguing that the city waited too long to file its suit and lacked standing to sue the companies.
-
January 16, 2026
Labcorp Reaches Settlement In Data Privacy Action
Labcorp has reached a settlement with internet users in a proposed class action in North Carolina federal court claiming that the clinical testing company sold users' data without their consent to Meta/Facebook and other tech giants.
-
January 16, 2026
Planned Parenthood Can Challenge Heartbeat Act, Court Says
A Texas appeals court on Friday found that Planned Parenthood has standing to challenge the state law that empowers ordinary citizens to prosecute abortion providers, saying Planned Parenthood has done enough to launch a pre-enforcement challenge to the law.
-
January 16, 2026
Lifecore Investors Ink $3.8M Deal In Accounting Controls Suit
Biotech company Lifecore Biomedical Inc. has reached a $3.8 million deal with its investors to end their claims the company had weak controls over its financial reporting, impairing its ability to remain compliant with Nasdaq listing requirements and causing share declines.
-
January 16, 2026
NuVasive Loses Appeal Over Ex-Exec's Ties To Competitor
The Delaware Supreme Court on Friday affirmed the dismissal of NuVasive Inc.'s long-running lawsuit accusing a former top executive of breaching fiduciary duties and contractual obligations while planning to move to a rival spine-surgery company, ending nearly a decade of litigation over alleged conflicts and disloyal conduct.
-
January 16, 2026
Oversight Head Seeks Help From CMS On NY Medicaid Inquiry
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., asked the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on Friday to aid the committee's investigation into whether New York has wrongfully withheld funds for hospitals disproportionately serving Medicaid recipients and uninsured people.
-
January 16, 2026
Walgreens Workers Snag $2.5M Deal To End Late Pay Suit
Walgreens has agreed to pay $2.5 million to a class of workers who accused the pharmacy chain of not paying their final paychecks on time, the workers said Friday, urging an Oregon federal court to greenlight the settlement.
-
January 16, 2026
Acadia Investors Get Initial OK For $179M Settlement
Acadia Healthcare Co. Inc. investors have received the first OK from a Tennessee federal judge for a $179 million settlement in a class action alleging the company misled them about the strength of its U.K. operations.
-
January 16, 2026
Taxation With Representation: Stibbe, A&O Shearman, Latham
In this week's Taxation With Representation, Keurig Dr Pepper Inc. plans to complete its deal to snap up coffee company JDE Peet's NV, Boston Scientific Corp. acquires medical device company Penumbra Inc., and fitness and wellness platform parent Playlist merges with fitness technology company EGYM.
-
January 16, 2026
Class Cert. Recommended For Nurses In Holiday Pay Case
A group of nurses should proceed as a class in a suit accusing a healthcare company of excluding holiday premiums from their pay when they worked overtime, a Colorado magistrate judge found.
-
January 16, 2026
La. State Court Greenlights Challenge To Gender Care Ban
A Louisiana state judge sided with a group of transgender teenagers who argue the state's ban on gender-affirming care for minors is unconstitutional, denying the state's bid to dismiss the case, according to an announcement Friday from the minors' attorneys.
-
January 16, 2026
Supreme Court Takes On Hikma's 'Skinny Label' Patent Case
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Friday to hear Hikma Pharmaceuticals Inc.'s appeal of a decision reviving a patent case over its "skinny label" on a generic heart drug, after the Trump administration urged the court to take the case.
-
January 16, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London saw the David Lloyd gym chain file an intellectual property claim against its founder, security company Primekings reignite a long-running dispute with the former owners of an acquired business, and a pair of Belizean developers sue a finance executive they say shut them out of a cruise port project.
-
January 16, 2026
Widower Of BNY Mellon Bank VP Says Hospital Missed Cancer
Doctors at Allegheny Health Network missed indications that a BNY Mellon vice president's stomach ulcers were a sign of cancer and didn't correctly diagnose her until it had spread throughout her abdomen, according to a lawsuit filed in Pennsylvania state court by her widower Wednesday.
-
January 15, 2026
SEC Says Healthcare Exec Misspent $10.6M In Investor Funds
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Thursday accused a healthcare company CEO of misappropriating over $10 million from investors by falsely claiming the funds would be used to develop cancer screening and treatment technology when in fact they were spent on credit card debt, luxury vehicles and strip club visits.
-
January 15, 2026
Wrong Word Dooms Med Mal Suit Against UT Cancer Center
A Texas appeals court on Thursday dismissed a suit accusing the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center of causing a cancer patient's injuries from "chemotherapy," saying that because the treatment was actually "immunotherapy," an exception to governmental immunity did not apply.
-
January 15, 2026
3 Brothers Used Dental Practices To Bilk Medicare, Jury Told
Federal prosecutors told a Pennsylvania jury on Thursday that brothers operating a nationwide chain of dental practices were the driving force of a complex scheme that the government said defrauded Medicare through bogus reimbursement claims, the use of unapproved dental implants and the fudging of visa paperwork to recruit foreign workers.
-
January 15, 2026
Ex-CEO Of COVID Vax Maker Accused Of Insider Trading
New York Attorney General Letitia James on Thursday sued the former CEO of healthcare contractor Emergent BioSolutions Inc., alleging insider trading amid troubles manufacturing a COVID-19 vaccine, while signing a $900,000 settlement with the company over its approval of an executive trading plan.
-
January 15, 2026
Trial 'No Longer Warranted' After Judge's Stelara Reversal
The fate of insurer CareFirst's suit accusing Johnson & Johnson of using a merger and patent fraud to anticompetitively protect immunosuppressive drug Stelara from competition is in doubt after a Virginia federal judge reversed course and nixed key claims he had previously teed up for trial.
-
January 15, 2026
5th Circ. Revives Allstate's Fraud Suit Over Car Crash Billing
The Fifth Circuit on Wednesday revived Allstate's racketeering suit alleging doctors and personal injury lawyers unleashed a barrage of unnecessary treatments for car accident patients and caused Allstate to pay $4.7 million in claims, finding the insurer sufficiently pled details about the conspiracy and specifics surrounding each allegedly fake medical billing.
-
January 15, 2026
Trump Admin Defies Funding K-12 Mental Health Grants
The Trump administration is fighting an effort by a coalition of U.S. states to preserve at least six months of funding for K-12 mental health grants meant to help students process gun violence, arguing that an earlier court ruling doesn't require the feds to fund the grants.
-
January 15, 2026
Simpson Thacher Guides New Mountain's $1.2B Fund Close
New Mountain Capital LLC, guided by Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LLP, has closed its second noncontrol private equity fund with $1.2 billion raised, aiming to use the funds to target companies in industries such as healthcare technology and life sciences, the alternative investment firm announced on Thursday.
-
January 15, 2026
Colo. Eye Clinics Settle Medicaid Double-Billing Claims
The Colorado attorney general's office announced Thursday that it reached a settlement totaling $520,000 with two eye care clinics that the state claimed were double-billing a Medicaid vision program for more than five years.
Expert Analysis
-
Federal Grantees May Soon Face More Limitations On Speech
If courts accept the administration’s new interpretation of preexisting case law, which attempts to graft onto grant recipients the existing limitations on government contractors' free speech, a more deferential standard may soon apply in determining whether an agency’s refusal or termination of a grant was in violation of the First Amendment, say attorneys at Venable.
-
5 Crisis Lawyering Skills For An Age Of Uncertainty
As attorneys increasingly face unprecedented and pervasive situations — from prosecutions of law enforcement officials to executive orders targeting law firms — they must develop several essential competencies of effective crisis lawyering, says Ray Brescia at Albany Law School.
-
Anticipating FTC's Shift On Unfair Competition Enforcement
As the Federal Trade Commission signals that it will continue to challenge unfair or deceptive acts and practices under Section 5 of the FTC Act, but with higher evidentiary standards, attorneys counseling healthcare, technology, energy or pharmaceuticals clients should note several practice tips, says Thomas Stratmann at George Mason University.
-
Opinion
It's Time For The Judiciary To Fix Its Cybersecurity Problem
After recent reports that hackers have once again infiltrated federal courts’ electronic case management systems, the judiciary should strengthen its cybersecurity practices in line with executive branch standards, outlining clear roles and responsibilities for execution, says Ilona Cohen at HackerOne.
-
HHS Wound Care Report Highlights Need For Payment Reform
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' recent report on potential abuse in Medicare Part B payments for skin substitutes highlights specific fraud schemes, but more importantly emphasizes that broader changes are needed for the wound care sector's fundamentally flawed payment system, say attorneys at Paul Hastings.
-
Considering Judicial Treatment Of The 2023 Merger Guidelines
Courts have so far primarily cited the 2023 merger guidelines for propositions that do not differ significantly from prior versions of the guidelines, leaving it unclear whether the antitrust agencies will test the guidelines’ more aggressive theories, and how those theories will be treated by federal judges, say attorneys at Covington.
-
Series
Writing Novels Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Writing my debut novel taught me to appreciate the value of critique and to never give up, no matter how long or tedious the journey, providing me with valuable skills that I now emphasize in my practice, says Daniel Buzzetta at BakerHostetler.
-
SDNY OpenAI Order Clarifies Preservation Standards For AI
The Southern District of New York’s recent order in the OpenAI copyright infringement litigation, denying discovery of The New York Times' artificial intelligence technology use, clarifies that traditional preservation benchmarks apply to AI content, relieving organizations from using a “keep everything” approach, says Philip Favro at Favro Law.
-
4 Strategies To Ensure Courts Calculate Restitution Correctly
Recent reversals of restitution orders across the federal appeals courts indicate that some lower courts are misapplying fundamental restitution principles, so defense attorneys should consider a few ways to vigilantly press these issues with the sentencing judge, says Wesley Gorman at Comber Miller.
-
Assessing The Future Of The HIPAA Reproductive Health Rule
In light of a Texas federal court's recent decision to strike down a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services rule aimed to protect the privacy of patients seeking abortions and gender-affirming care, entities are at least temporarily relieved from compliance obligations, but tensions are likely to continue for the foreseeable future, says Liz Heddleston at Woods Rogers.
-
Opinion
Expert Reports Can't Replace Facts In Securities Fraud Cases
The Ninth Circuit's 2023 decision in Nvidia v. Ohman Fonder — and the U.S. Supreme Court's punt on the case in 2024 — could invite the meritless securities litigation the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act was designed to prevent by substituting expert opinions for facts to substantiate complaint assertions, say attorneys at A&O Shearman.
-
Opinion
High Court, Not A Single Justice, Should Decide On Recusal
As public trust in the U.S. Supreme Court continues to decline, the court should adopt a collegial framework in which all justices decide questions of recusal together — a reform that respects both judicial independence and due process for litigants, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
-
Series
Traveling Solo Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Traveling by myself has taught me to assess risk, understand tone and stay calm in high-pressure situations, which are not only useful life skills, but the foundation of how I support my clients, says Lacey Gutierrez at Group Five Legal.
-
Opinion
DOJ's Tracing Rule For Pandemic Loan Fraud Is Untenable
In conducting investigations related to COVID-19 relief fraud, the government's assertion that loan proceeds are nonfungible and had to have been segregated from other funds is unsupported by underlying legislation, precedent or the language establishing similar federal relief programs, say Sharon McCarthy, Jay Nanavati and Lasya Ravulapati at Kostelanetz.
-
New Health AI Guidance Features A Provider-Centric Approach
New guidance from the Joint Commission and Coalition for Health AI regarding the responsible use of artificial intelligence in healthcare deviates from preexisting guidance by recommending a comprehensive framework for using AI tools, focusing on healthcare provider organizations rather than on AI developers, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.