-
February 24, 2026
PowerSchool and the Chicago Board of Education have reached a $17.25 million settlement resolving a proposed class action accusing them of violating students' privacy by surreptitiously monitoring their communications, according to a motion filed in Illinois federal court.
-
February 24, 2026
A Chicago-area café urged the Seventh Circuit on Tuesday to revive claims that it was unconstitutionally denied a liquor license for a tavern it planned to acquire, saying admitted animus over the owner's effort to shed light on red-light-camera-related corruption should overcome any rational basis analysis over the denial.
-
February 24, 2026
A Seattle federal judge sided with The Boeing Co. in its discovery dispute with a Colorado technology company, finding that the plaintiff did not take reasonable steps to prevent disclosing privileged information in hundreds of documents it now seeks to claw back.
-
February 24, 2026
Coinbase urged an Illinois federal judge Tuesday to grant an injunction blocking the state's enforcement of its gaming laws against the company's sports-related event contracts offerings, arguing that effort "falls right in the heartland of preempted state laws" and that such transactions can only be regulated by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
-
February 24, 2026
A Connecticut federal judge has ruled that drugmaker Mallinckrodt PLC shrugged off monetary claims brought by states in a sprawling generic drug antitrust enforcement action when the company emerged from bankruptcy in 2022.
-
February 24, 2026
Greenberg Traurig LLP has hired a former Baker McKenzie attorney who specializes in real estate-focused private equity funds as a shareholder in its Chicago office.
-
February 24, 2026
Illinois is defending two recently enacted laws that allow private parties to sue civil immigration enforcement officers for knowingly violating their constitutional rights and bar civil immigration arrests at courthouses, telling a federal court the Trump administration lacks standing to challenge them.
-
February 24, 2026
An Illinois federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit brought by intellectual property law firm Fitch Even Tabin & Flannery LLP against the co-founder of a former patent client that accused it of malpractice, saying the firm was improperly seeking a declaration on state law claims without raising a federal question.
-
February 23, 2026
The protections offered by California's data privacy law are an inferior substitute for those under Illinois' biometric privacy law, an Illinois federal judge found, refusing to allow Meta to escape a proposed class action accusing it of improperly storing Messenger and Messenger Kids users' facial geometries.
-
February 23, 2026
The Northern Trust Co. seeks to shed certain claims that it failed to prevent a former vice president from looting the trust of an elderly banking heiress, arguing that it was also a victim of the alleged scheme and "no company is immune to dishonest actors."
-
February 23, 2026
A "highly suspect" severance payment a home building company made to a $13.7 million trading fraudster who also stole from the business should be further examined before a district court determines whether the payment violated a pending asset citation order, the Seventh Circuit said Monday.
-
February 23, 2026
Sixteen Democratic-led states are backing a legal challenge to an Internal Revenue Service notice eliminating a safe harbor test that large wind and solar projects could use to qualify for clean energy tax credits.
-
February 23, 2026
An Illinois federal judge Friday denied class certification in a lawsuit accusing Blue Diamond Growers of deceiving consumers by describing its almonds as "smokehouse" when their titular taste comes from synthetic flavoring, saying the proposed lead plaintiff admitted in a deposition she had knowledge of the alleged defect but continued to purchase the product.
-
February 23, 2026
An Illinois company that provides administrative services to debt adjusters has sued the Connecticut Department of Banking, challenging an administrative order to make restitution to Constitution State customers and potentially pay up to $100,000 for each alleged violation of debt adjustment and money transmission licensing rules.
-
February 23, 2026
A class of GLP-1 patients claim that telehealth company Hims & Hers falsely advertised its compounded injections as made with "the same active ingredient" as weight loss drugs Ozempic and Wegovy despite containing other key ingredients, according to a suit filed in Illinois federal court.
-
February 23, 2026
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear an appeal from a sweepstakes machine business owner convicted of bribery who is seeking limits on law enforcement officers' ability to interrogate individuals detained during a search without first reading them their Miranda rights.
-
February 20, 2026
Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including attorney views into shareholder activism among public real estate investment trusts, FinCEN's new anti-money laundering rule, and the second-to-last U.S. state to shed certain pollution inspections for commercial and industrial property transfers.
-
February 20, 2026
The first jury verdict in the U.S. finding a patent owner violated state law meant to curb bad faith patent suits had unique circumstances that will be hard to repeat, but attorneys say Tuesday's decision still has them considering the little-used laws more closely.
-
February 20, 2026
Facing requests to address alleged jurisdictional shortcomings against e-commerce platforms in two mass counterfeiting cases Friday, a Seventh Circuit panel signaled that such discussion seems unwarranted in one vendor's fee appeal while resolving the issue separately for an e-commerce intermediary might be inappropriate given its unclear case record.
-
February 20, 2026
An Illinois dispensary is suing its former business partners, rival shops and a law firm in a $10 million racketeering suit, alleging they conspired to steal the dispensary's assets and sabotage their attempts to reopen in a bid to drive them out of business.
-
February 20, 2026
Cornell, Georgetown, Notre Dame, MIT and UPenn say that students fighting their bid to go straight to the Seventh Circuit on a ruling that teed up a trial over allegations that the schools fixed financial aid offerings "mischaracterize the questions presented and downplay Supreme Court precedent," insisting a prompt appeal would hasten the resolution of the case.
-
February 20, 2026
An Illinois man was sentenced to nearly three years in prison Friday for threatening to assault, kidnap and murder the Florida federal judge who oversaw the criminal classified documents case against President Donald Trump.
-
February 20, 2026
Parties involved in price-fixing litigation over polyvinyl chloride pipe costs have offered differing solutions to an Illinois federal court, with defendants in the consolidated action pushing for dismissal as plaintiffs urged the court to start permitted discovery.
-
February 20, 2026
An Indiana legislative panel has taken a step toward supporting the Chicago Bears in a possible move from Soldier Field in Chicago to a domed stadium in Hammond, Indiana, after Illinois lawmakers said late last year they would not help fund the team's move out of the city to another suburban site.
-
February 19, 2026
A Connecticut federal judge has once again rejected generic-drug makers' bid to escape a multistate lawsuit accusing them of engaging in an overarching antitrust conspiracy, saying the evidence supports the need for a jury trial on whether the companies colluded to fix prices and divvy up markets for dozens of generic drugs.