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Health
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March 04, 2026
House Panel Tussles Over Minnesota Medicaid Fraud Claims
The public political battle between Minnesota and the federal government over alleged Medicaid fraud in the state continued Wednesday on Capitol Hill, with Republicans and Democrats casting stones at each other after President Donald Trump's administration pulled nearly $260 million in healthcare funding from the state.
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March 04, 2026
7th. Circ. Upholds Healthcare Co.'s Win In FMLA Suit
The Seventh Circuit affirmed a healthcare company's win in a former human resources specialist's Family and Medical Leave Act suit, holding that the health system lawfully terminated her for failing to return to work once her approved leave expired.
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March 04, 2026
Medical Pot Co. Can't Escape Guarantor Status In Lease Fight
A Puerto Rico federal judge won't let Vireo Health Inc. escape responsibility as guarantor of a lease under which one of its subsidiaries failed to pay a landlord, finding that it can't benefit from its own breach of the contractual terms.
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March 04, 2026
Gordon Rees Opens New Offices In North Carolina, Wisconsin
Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani has expanded its reach in the Southeast and Midwest by opening new offices in Charlotte, North Carolina, and Madison, Wisconsin.
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March 03, 2026
11th Circ. Backs Dismissal Of Fee Dispute From BCBS MDL
The Eleventh Circuit has affirmed the dismissal of an attorney fee dispute between two lawyers on the plaintiffs' side of a $2.8 billion Blue Cross Blue Shield multidistrict litigation, ruling Tuesday that neither an oral deal nor a letter between the two lawyers was binding on their payouts.
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March 03, 2026
Inova Defeats Nurses' COVID Vax Bias Suits At 4th Circ.
The Fourth Circuit refused Tuesday to revive suits from nurse anesthetists who said they faced religious and disability discrimination when they were fired for refusing to get vaccinated against COVID-19, ruling that nonprofit healthcare provider Inova wasn't their employer.
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March 03, 2026
Death From Stem Cell Treatment For ALS Draws $24M Verdict
A Washington state jury awarded $24 million to the family of a patient who died just two days after what his family members described as a "worthless" spinal cord procedure to treat his ALS at a Seattle stem cell clinic.
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March 03, 2026
Ex-FDA Leaders Rebut Contraception Rollbacks At 3rd Circ.
Former FDA commissioners argued that Trump-era religious exemptions for birth control coverage jeopardize public health and distort medical science, in an animus brief filed Monday with the Third Circuit.
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March 03, 2026
FDA Targets Advertising For Knockoff Weight-Loss Meds
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday accused about 30 telehealth companies of illegally marketing compounded weight-loss and diabetes drugs, the agency's latest salvo in a crackdown on direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising.
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March 03, 2026
NC Doctor's Bid For New Trial Is Too Late, Judge Says
A North Carolina federal judge has refused to order a new trial for a doctor convicted of participating in an $11 million Medicare fraud scheme, finding that because the motion did not contain new evidence, the deadline to request another trial has passed.
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March 03, 2026
Florida Man Pleads Guilty In $24M HIV Drugs Fraud Scheme
The owner of a marketing company in Florida has pled guilty to receiving kickbacks as part of a $24 million scheme to sign up Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries for HIV prophylactic medications they did not need.
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March 03, 2026
Wells Fargo Escapes Ex-Workers' Prescription Cost Suit
Former Wells Fargo workers on the employer healthcare plan failed to show that the company violated federal benefits law by allowing them to overpay for prescription drugs, a Minnesota federal judge found Tuesday, tossing the proposed class action.
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March 03, 2026
Monthly Merger Review Snapshot
The U.S. Department of Justice got its antitrust case against Live Nation and Ticketmaster teed up for trial, as a court continues mulling the department's settlement last year in a case challenging a deal by Hewlett Packard Enterprise, and lawmakers call for scrutiny of Paramount Skydance's blockbuster acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery.
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March 03, 2026
States Can't Duck Regeneron Counterclaims In FCA Case
Eleven states pursuing a False Claims Act case against Regeneron Pharmaceuticals over what they say were inflated reimbursements for an eye drug can't block counterclaims by the drugmaker on sovereign immunity grounds, a Massachusetts federal judge has ruled.
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March 03, 2026
4th Circ. Won't Revive Retired Miners' Health Fight
The Fourth Circuit refused Tuesday to reopen a dispute over lifetime retirement health and life insurance benefits from a proposed class of retired coal miners, keeping in place a West Virginia federal court's judgment that broadly favored the company following a seven-day bench trial.
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March 03, 2026
Curaleaf Says No Private Info Leaked In Buyers' Data Suit
Curaleaf Inc. is asking a Florida federal court to throw out a suit alleging that its website failed to protect buyers' personal and health information, saying none of the information the site or its software collects is personal property or healthcare information.
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March 03, 2026
Judge Won't Rely On DOJ 'Decency' In Trans Records Case
A Pennsylvania federal judge blocked the U.S. Department of Justice from getting patient-specific records of gender-affirming care at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Children's Hospital, excoriating the government's request and its reasoning for demanding the data.
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March 03, 2026
1st Circ. Won't Revive Boston's Opioid Claims Against PBMs
Boston lost its bid to revive opioid crisis-related claims against two pharmacy benefit managers, as a First Circuit panel affirmed that the suit came years too late.
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March 03, 2026
FTC Makes 'Significant Progress' In OptumRx, Caremark Talks
Federal Trade Commission staffers got more time Tuesday for settlement talks with OptumRx and Caremark that could end the agency's case accusing the pharmacy benefit managers of inflating insulin prices, with staffers citing considerable progress in the weeks since inking a deal with Express Scripts.
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March 03, 2026
Fla. Billing Co. To Settle With Feds Over $15M Medicare Fraud
The U.S. government has settled its False Claims Act lawsuit with a medical coding and billing business it accused of aiding a Miami-based laboratory in fraudulently billing Medicare for more than $15 million in genetic tests.
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March 02, 2026
High Court Blocks California's Gender Privacy Rule
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday reinstated a lower court order that barred California public schools from allowing transgender and gender-nonconforming students to use different names and pronouns at school without their parents' knowledge or consent while the order is appealed.
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March 02, 2026
E-Rate Could Cut Some Regulatory Fat, FCC Told
While the Federal Communications Commission is looking for regulations to get rid of, one organization said it has a list of options for the agency to consider when it comes to the E-Rate subsidy program.
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March 02, 2026
Texas AG Says Gender Care Ban Includes Mental Health
Mental-health professionals in Texas risk losing their licenses and public funding if they "facilitate" the gender-affirming care banned under state law, said an opinion issued Friday by Attorney General Ken Paxton, which calls them the "gatekeepers."
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March 02, 2026
Abbott Beats Data Sharing Suit Over Glucose Tracking Trial
An Illinois federal judge on Monday permanently tossed a lawsuit accusing Abbott Laboratories of unlawfully sharing website visitors' personal data with Meta and Google, saying the plaintiffs can't plausibly show that their legally protected information ever left Abbott's website.
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March 02, 2026
Epic Must Face Price Conspiracy Claims Over Gallstone Drug
Epic Pharma LLC must face the majority of suits by hospitals, insurers and other drug purchasers alleging it conspired to raise and control the price of gallstone medication ursodiol, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled Monday.
Expert Analysis
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Traditional FCA Enforcement Surges Amid Shifting Priorities
The U.S. Department of Justice’s January report on False Claims Act enforcement in fiscal year 2025 reveals that while the administration signaled its intent to expand FCA enforcement into new areas such as tariffs, for now the greatest exposure remains in traditional areas like healthcare — in which the risk is growing, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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State Of Insurance: Q4 Notes From Illinois
In 2025's last quarter, Illinois’ appellate courts weighed in on overlapping homeowners coverages for water-related damages, contractual suit limitation provisions in uninsured motorist policies, and protections for genetic health information in life insurance underwriting, while the Department of Insurance sought nationwide homeowners' insurance data from State Farm, says Matthew Fortin at BatesCarey.
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NYC Bar Opinion Warns Attys On Use Of AI Recording Tools
Attorneys who use artificial intelligence tools to record, transcribe and summarize conversations with clients should heed the New York City Bar Association’s recent opinion addressing the legal and ethical risks posed by such tools, and follow several best practices to avoid violating the Rules of Professional Conduct, say attorneys at Smith Gambrell.
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Dispatches From Utah's Newest Court
While a robust body of law hasn't yet developed since the Utah Business and Chancery Court's founding in October 2024, the number of cases filed there has recently picked up, and its existence illustrates Utah's desire to be top of mind for businesses across the country, says Evan Strassberg at Michael Best.
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4 Quick Emotional Resets For Lawyers With Conflict Fatigue
Though the emotional wear and tear of legal work can trap attorneys in conflict fatigue — leaving them unable to shake off tense interactions or return to a calm baseline — simple therapeutic techniques for resetting the nervous system can help break the cycle, says Chantel Cohen at CWC Coaching & Therapy.
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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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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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Lessons From EdTech Provider's Data Breach Settlements
Education technology company Illuminate Education's recent settlements with three states and the Federal Trade Commission over state privacy law claims following a student data breach are some of the first of their kind, suggesting a shift in enforcement focus to how companies handle student data and highlighting the potential for coordinated enforcement actions, say attorneys at Wilson Sonsini.
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Justices' Med Mal Ruling May Spur Huge Shift For Litigators
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in the medical malpractice suit Berk v. Choy, holding that a Florida procedural requirement does not apply to medical malpractice claims filed in federal court, is likely to encourage eligible parties to file claims in federal court, speed the adjudicatory process and create both opportunities and challenges for litigators, says Thomas Kroeger at Colson Hicks.
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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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Key Sectors, Antitrust Risks In Pricing Algorithm Litigation
Algorithmic pricing lawsuits have proliferated in rental housing, hotels, health insurance and equipment rental industries, and companies should consider emerging risk factors when implementing business strategies this year, say attorneys at Hunton.
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Ag Bill Wording Presents Existential Threat To Hemp Industry
A proposal in the agriculture appropriations bill for fiscal year 2026, which excludes almost everything synthesized from cannabis from the legal definition of “hemp,” would have catastrophic consequences for thousands of farmers, medical researchers and businesses by banning everything from intoxicating delta-9 THC products to topical CBD creams, says Alissa "Ali" Jubelirer at Benesch.