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Health
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October 21, 2025
Calif. Court Backs Birth Battery Claim, Split On Gender Abuse
A California appeals court has reinstated a medical battery lawsuit brought by a woman who accused her obstetrician of forcing an unwanted procedure on her during childbirth, but the court rejected her claim that the act constituted gender-based violence, prompting a sharp judicial dissent.
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October 21, 2025
Supreme Court Medina Ruling Erodes Public Health Networks
Healthcare advocates in more than a dozen states are bracing for Planned Parenthood's ouster from public benefit programs after a U.S. Supreme Court decision in June.
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October 21, 2025
PE Giants Ink $18.3B Deal For Hologic Amid Megadeal Blitz
Hologic Inc. said Tuesday it will be acquired by a private equity consortium in a deal valuing the Wachtell Lipton-advised medical technology company around $18.3 billion, marking one of the largest leveraged healthcare buyouts in recent years.
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October 21, 2025
Novartis Says Alexion's 'Block The Cause' Ads Are False
Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. is suing rival Alexion Pharmaceuticals Inc. in Delaware federal court, alleging that Alexion's "Block the Cause" ad campaign for its Ultomiris product falsely implies that Novartis' own treatment is less effective or even dangerous.
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October 21, 2025
Food Co. Strikes $4.7M Deal To End ERISA Tobacco Fee Suit
Food distributor Performance Food Group will pay $4.7 million to settle a proposed class action alleging it violated federal benefits law by charging tobacco users in its health plan an extra fee, according to a filing in Virginia federal court.
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October 20, 2025
USCIS Guidance Gives Scope Of New $100K H-1B Fee
The $100,000 fee requirement for H-1B visas that took effect last month applies to new H-1B petitions filed on behalf of applicants who are outside the United States, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said Monday.
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October 20, 2025
Novo Nordisk Trial Kicks Off Over Kickback Allegations
Lawyers in a federal whistleblower lawsuit against drugmaker Novo Nordisk Inc. on Monday offered to take jurors "behind the curtain" of what they claimed was an illegal scheme by the pharmaceutical company to bribe doctors and patients in order to boost sales of a pricey hemophilia drug, NovoSeven.
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October 20, 2025
NJ Asks If Experts Are Needed For Mental Defenses
New Jersey's Supreme Court on Monday heard arguments on whether expert testimony is needed to advance insanity or diminished capacity defenses in two murder cases, with defense attorneys and the American Civil Liberties Union arguing state lawmakers intended juries, with or without doctors, to evaluate evidence regarding state of mind.
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October 20, 2025
Drugmakers Say Conn. Law Illegally Extends Beyond State
A group of generic drug manufacturers has asked a Connecticut federal court to block the enforcement of a new price-control law against sales that occur outside of Connecticut, claiming that the law violates the U.S. Constitution.
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October 20, 2025
Colo. High Court Upholds $40M Award In Med Mal Cap Suit
The Colorado Supreme Court Monday unanimously ruled that a jury retains its authority to award damages exceeding the state's $1 million cap on medical malpractice damages subject to certain court authority, upholding a nearly $40 million judgment against a state hospital.
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October 20, 2025
Ex-Cano Health CEO Settles $70M Suit Over Failed Dental Deal
The ex-CEO of formerly bankrupt Cano Health Inc. has settled a $70 million lawsuit in Florida state court by a dental services provider that sought to hold him personally liable for the collapse of its business after a deal with Cano Health went sour.
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October 20, 2025
Sterigenics Nears Win In Georgia Ethylene Oxide Litigation
Sterigenics Inc. notched two significant wins in sprawling litigation over its alleged emissions of carcinogenic ethylene oxide at an Atlanta-area plant, as a Georgia state court judge tossed residents' specific causation claims and allegations that the plant's activities constituted a private nuisance.
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October 20, 2025
Tylenol Maker Tells FDA Not To Add Autism Warning
Tylenol maker Kenvue on Friday told the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to reject a call to add warnings about the risk of using acetaminophen during pregnancy, saying that "expansive" scientific evidence shows there is no proven link between the over-the-counter drug and autism.
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October 20, 2025
'A Total Mess': Judge Slams Calif. Privacy Law's Ambiguity
California's Invasion of Privacy Act "is a total mess" that routinely requires courts to make "borderline impossible" decisions about how to apply the law's language to new technologies, a San Francisco federal judge commented in an order Friday, pleading for state lawmakers to bring the law into the 21st century.
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October 20, 2025
Lab Cos. Seek $542M For COVID Testing Reimbursement
Three New York-based COVID-19 testing companies sued the federal government in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims seeking more than $542 million in damages over the government's alleged refusal to reimburse them for providing testing services to uninsured individuals.
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October 20, 2025
21 AGs Back Planned Parenthood In Funding Freeze Fight
A coalition of attorneys general from 21 Democrat-led states chimed in on Monday in support of Planned Parenthood's case challenging the Trump administration's push to cut off Medicaid reimbursements to its centers and affiliates, saying more than a million people could lose healthcare access if the First Circuit doesn't halt the move.
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October 20, 2025
More Fed. Workers Added To TRO Blocking Shutdown Layoffs
A California federal judge who blocked the Trump administration from laying off workers from two unions representing thousands of federal workers has expanded her temporary restraining order to include three more unions and also clarified that the order covered workers with union contracts that the administration is seeking to ditch.
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October 20, 2025
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
This past week, the Delaware Chancery Court and Supreme Court handled a crowded corporate docket, weighing blockbuster merger appeals, shareholder settlement objections, fights over control involving an NBA franchise and a high-profile appeal from Elon Musk involving a massive payday from Tesla.
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October 20, 2025
Justices Won't Review Repeat Indictment For Medicare Fraud
The U.S. Supreme Court let stand Monday the repeat indictment of a health clinic manager for what the Second Circuit called a massive, yearslong scheme to submit false claims to Medicare and Medicaid, effectively rejecting the manager's claims that his original trial was irreparably delayed.
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October 20, 2025
Top Court Won't Hear Chicago Hospital's Medicaid Dispute
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to review a decision by the full Seventh Circuit holding that a Chicago hospital can't sue the state of Illinois to force the managed care organizations it contracts with to make timely Medicaid payments, rejecting a petition that argued another case on the high court's docket "will likely decide the outcome" in this one.
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October 20, 2025
High Court Won't Hear Hospital Vax Mandate Case
The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday it won't review a decision backing a hospital's termination of a group of workers who refused to get COVID-19 vaccinations.
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October 20, 2025
Justices Won't Review Merck's Immunity From Vaccine Claims
The U.S. Supreme Court refused Monday to review a decision immunizing Merck & Co. from claims that it blocked competition by making false submissions to federal regulators for its mumps vaccine.
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October 17, 2025
Nursing Exec Denied New Trial On Wage-Fixing Claims
A Nevada federal judge has denied a new trial to a nursing executive convicted of wage-fixing conspiracy and wire fraud after he claimed the U.S. Department of Justice misled the jury about sweetheart terms of a cooperation deal with another company.
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October 17, 2025
Injury Law Roundup: Uber Wins Bellwether Sex Assault Trial
In our inaugural Injury Law Roundup, juries in the Golden State were busy as Uber won a closely watched sexual assault trial and Johnson & Johnson got crushed with a near $1 billion verdict in a talc case, while Boies Schiller Flexner LLP admitted to an artificial intelligence gaffe in a sex-assault-related case. Here, we put Law360 readers on notice of what's been recently trending in personal injury and medical malpractice news.
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October 17, 2025
Mixed Discretionary Denial Batch Caps Off Big Week For PTAB
Deputy U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director Coke Morgan Stewart allowed 19 Patent Trial and Appeal Board petitions to go forward while denying 21 others on Friday, concluding a week that saw major reforms at the PTAB.
Expert Analysis
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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.
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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 Wood Rogers.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Client Service
Law school teaches you how to interpret the law, but it doesn't teach you some of the key ways to keeping clients satisfied, lessons that I've learned in the most unexpected of places: a book on how to be a butler, says Gregory Ramos at Armstrong Teasdale.
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How Occasional Activists Have Reshaped Proxy Fights
The sophistication and breadth of first-time activist engagement continue to shape corporate governance and strategic outcomes, as evidenced across corporate annual meetings this summer, meaning advisers should anticipate continued innovation in tactics, increased regulatory complexity, and a persistent focus on board accountability, say attorneys at MoFo.
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Bid Protest Spotlight: Documentation, Overrides, Eligibility
Recent decisions by the U.S. Court of Federal Claims and the U.S. Government Accountability Office illustrate the importance of contemporaneous documentation in proposal evaluations, the standards for an agency’s override of a Competition in Contracting Act stay, and the regulatory requirements for small business joint ventures, says Cody Fisher at MoFo.
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Shutdown Imperils Telehealth Access For Medicare Patients
The federal government shutdown that commenced on Oct. 1 coincided with the expiration of certain telehealth flexibilities that had preserved expansive access to telehealth services for Medicare beneficiaries following COVID-19, creating significant legal and financial uncertainty for healthcare providers and patients, say attorneys at Robinson & Cole.
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Mass. Ruling May Pave New Avenue To Target Subpoenas
A Massachusetts federal court’s recent decision to quash a subpoena seeking information on gender-affirming care at Boston Children’s Hospital is a significant departure from courts' deferential approach to subpoena enforcement, and may open a new pathway for practitioners challenging investigative tools in the future, say attorneys at Gibson Dunn.
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What To Expect After FDA Warnings To GLP-1 Compounders
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's recent warning letters to companies advertising compounded versions of GLP-1 medications raise questions not just about the enforcement outlook for marketing such products, but also about the future of drug compounding as a whole, say attorneys at Spencer Fane.
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Why Justices Seem Inclined To Curtail Del. Affidavit Statute
After recent oral argument before the U.S. Supreme Court in Berk v. Choy — asking whether Delaware's affidavit-of-merit statute applies in federal diversity actions, or whether the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure displace the state requirement — it appears the court is poised to simplify the standard approach, says Eric Weitz of The Weitz Law Firm.
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How Financial Cos. Can Prep As NYDFS Cyber Changes Loom
Financial institutions supervised by the New York State Department of Financial Services can prepare for two critical cybersecurity requirements relating to multifactor authentication and asset inventories, effective Nov. 1, by conducting gap analyses and allocating resources to high-risk assets, among other steps, say attorneys at Pillsbury.