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Illinois
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March 13, 2026
Drug Co. Moves To Sanction Insurer Over Destroyed Evidence
A drug wholesaler seeking coverage for underlying opioid litigation urged an Illinois federal court to sanction its insurer for destroying key emails and underwriting records, saying the carrier failed to update a litigation hold or suspend its automatic deletion policies and then attempted to hide the issue during discovery.
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March 13, 2026
Driver Seeks Contempt Order For Trucking Co. In Wage Suit
A trucking company has refused to provide an updated class list or confirm a proposed notice in a driver misclassification lawsuit, a former employee said in his bid to hold the company in contempt filed in Illinois federal court.
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March 13, 2026
Greenberg Traurig Adds Taft Private Wealth Partner In Chicago
Greenberg Traurig LLP has hired a former Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP partner, who joins the Chicago team to continue her practice focused on private wealth services, including advising individuals, families and businesses on estate planning and tax matters.
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March 13, 2026
Esquire's $348M Signature Deal Bolsters Litigation Platform
Esquire Financial Holdings Inc. has agreed to buy the parent company of Signature Bank in a roughly $348.4 million deal that Esquire said will help expand its Chicago-area commercial banking presence and support growth of its litigation banking platform.
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March 12, 2026
Portillo's Wrongly Dodged Union Bargaining, NLRB Says
Portillo's Hot Dogs LLC must recognize and bargain with the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers, AFL–CIO after a group of production plant workers voted to organize under the union, the National Labor Relations Board ruled.
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March 12, 2026
Allstate Accused Of Website Tracking Despite Cookie Opt-Out
The Allstate Corp.'s website secretly uses Meta and Google's advertising trackers to share the content of consumers' communications with the insurance company even when site users instruct it not to share that information, according to a proposed class action lodged in Illinois federal court.
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March 12, 2026
Ill. Man Charged With Sending Threatening Letters To Judges
A suburban Chicago man is facing charges in Illinois federal court for mailing threatening letters to two federal judges in Texas and Florida, prosecutors announced Thursday.
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March 12, 2026
Ill. Says Trump's 'Forced Retreat' Can't End Nat'l Guard Suit
The state of Illinois and the city of Chicago are pushing back on the Trump administration's bid to dismiss their lawsuit challenging National Guard deployment to the state because all the troops have since been demobilized or withdrawn, with no plans to return, telling an Illinois federal judge that the president's social media posts and public statements tell a different story.
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March 12, 2026
United Airlines Agrees To Pay $27.5M To End ERISA Suit
United Airlines has agreed to shell out $27.5 million to end a proposed class action alleging it locked retired employees out of a generous COVID-era retirement package, a deal that would moot retirees' pending appeal to the Seventh Circuit, according to a filing in Illinois federal court.
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March 11, 2026
Costco Owes Shoppers Refunds For Voided Tariffs, Suit Says
Costco shoppers are owed back the higher costs they paid as a result of President Donald Trump's global tariffs that the nation's highest court has since declared unlawful, according to a putative consumer class action filed Wednesday in Illinois federal court.
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March 11, 2026
Uber Must Fork Over Internal Docs In FTC Subscription Fight
A California magistrate judge ordered Uber to produce numerous internal documents to the Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday in litigation accusing the ride-share giant of enrolling consumers into its paid subscription service without consent, after the FTC accused the company of stonewalling discovery and producing only 72 documents totaling 179 pages.
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March 11, 2026
Fed Corruption Prosecutor Joins Jenner & Block In Chicago
An ex-prosecutor at the U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago, who played a key role in successfully trying former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, has departed her position as chief of its public corruption unit to join Jenner & Block LLP's investigations team.
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March 11, 2026
Eli Lilly Ordered To Arbitrate Alzheimer's Drug Feud
An Illinois federal judge ordered Eli Lilly and Co. on Tuesday to arbitrate a dispute over millions of dollars in milestone payments allegedly owed under a collaboration agreement to develop an Alzheimer's disease drug, ruling that the drugmaker lacked standing to challenge an underlying security agreement.
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March 11, 2026
Advocacy Group Asks Ill. Judge To Block Trump DEI Orders
Counsel for an advocacy group supporting human trafficking survivors urged an Illinois federal judge Wednesday to block two of President Donald Trump's executive orders restricting federal diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, arguing that the coalition has been forced to censor its speech for fear of losing Department of Justice grants it needs to operate.
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March 11, 2026
17 States Fight 'Unprecedented' WH Admissions Data Demand
A coalition of more than a dozen states led by Massachusetts asked a federal judge Wednesday to block enforcement of a new Trump administration requirement to retroactively report detailed data on sex and race in college admissions, saying the survey was hastily implemented and rife with issues that expose schools to potential liability.
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March 11, 2026
Cannabis Bakery Hit With Default Judgment In Wage Suit
A bakery that sells cannabis products owes pay to a former cashier who sued it for overtime and tip violations, an Illinois federal judge ruled, accepting a magistrate judge's recommendation for a default judgment.
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March 10, 2026
Judge Fumes As Live Nation Antitrust Trial Remains In Limbo
The status of Live Nation Entertainment's antitrust trial and proposed settlement over federal and state government claims of anticompetitive conduct remained up in the air Tuesday amid pushback by several states, while the Manhattan federal judge overseeing the case upbraided the parties for keeping him out of the loop about negotiations.
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March 10, 2026
Salesforce Wins Stay Of Backpage Trafficking Cases In Illinois
An Illinois federal judge Tuesday temporarily put on hold litigation accusing Salesforce of benefiting from sex trafficking through advertisements uploaded on Backpage.com after finding that related criminal proceedings against Backpage's founder and former executives must first be resolved.
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March 10, 2026
Justices Advised To Keep Law Clear In 'Skinny Label' Case
Several intellectual property groups have urged the U.S. Supreme Court to use a case involving "skinny labels" on generic drugs to set clear guidelines on what constitutes induced patent infringement, saying the outcome has implications beyond pharmaceuticals.
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March 10, 2026
Rapper Was Wary Years Before Firing Ex-Manager, Jury Hears
Chance the Rapper testified Tuesday that he has honored the oral payment arrangement he reached with his former manager but should have terminated their relationship closer to learning that manager tried to cut himself into a business opportunity from which he knew he wouldn't be paid.
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March 10, 2026
Ill. Tax Preparer Gets 10 Years For $14M PPP Loan Fraud
An Illinois federal judge's decision to impose a 10-year prison sentence on a man for his role in a $14 million fraud scheme where he took kickbacks for preparing false applications for pandemic-era Paycheck Protection Program loans drew surprised outbursts in the courtroom Tuesday from both the defendant and his attorney.
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March 10, 2026
Insurers Can't Resume Investor Fight In $220M Coverage Row
A Texas appellate court Tuesday rejected two insurance companies' bid to stop a group of shareholders of now-bankrupt Cobalt International Energy from pursuing claims on behalf of thousands of other investors, stymieing the carriers' attempts to curtail a fight over coverage of a $220 million securities settlement.
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March 10, 2026
Grill Co. Failed To Warn Of Brush Risk, Class Action Says
Grill maker Weber failed to warn U.S. consumers that metal bristles could detach from its grill brushes and cause internal injuries, according to a proposed class action in Illinois federal court that follows a recall of more than 3 million brushes.
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March 10, 2026
Feds Urge End To IRS Wind, Solar Safe Harbor Fight
The Trump administration has told a D.C. federal judge there's no basis to sustain a lawsuit challenging an IRS notice eliminating a safe harbor test that wind and solar projects could use to qualify for clean energy tax credits.
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March 10, 2026
Juul Says Court Wrongly Revived Wholesaler's Pricing Suit
Juul Labs and a wholesaler are asking an Illinois federal court to reconsider its revival of a price discrimination case brought by a rival wholesaler over e-cigarette sales, saying the decision was procedurally improper and wrong on the law.
Expert Analysis
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Algorithmic Bias Risks Remain For Employers After AI Order
A recent executive order articulates a federal preference for a minimally burdensome approach to artificial intelligence regulation, but it doesn't eliminate employers' central compliance challenge or exposure when using AI tools, say Marjorie Soto Garcia and Joseph Mulherin at McDermott, and Candice Rosevear at Peregrine Economics.
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Series
Fly-Fishing Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Much like skilled attorneys, the best anglers prize preparation, presentation and patience while respecting their adversaries — both human and trout, says Rob Braverman at Braverman Greenspun.
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4 Ways GCs Can Manage Growing Service Of Process Volume
As automation and arbitration increase the volume of legal filings, in-house counsel must build scalable service of process systems that strengthen corporate governance and manage risk in real time, says Paul Mathews at Corporation Service Co.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Forming Measurable Ties
Relationship-building should begin as early as possible in a law firm merger, as intentional pathways to bringing people together drive collaboration, positive client response, engagements and growth, says Amie Colby at Troutman.
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5 E-Discovery Predictions For 2026 And Beyond
2026 will likely be shaped by issues ranging from artificial intelligence regulatory turbulence to potential evidence rule changes, and e-discovery professionals will need to understand how to effectively guide the responsible and defensible adoption of emerging tools, while also ensuring effective safeguards, say attorneys at Littler.
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Where States Jumped In When SEC Stepped Back In 2025
The state regulators that picked up the slack when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission scaled back enforcement last year should not be underestimated as they continue to aggressively police areas where the SEC has lost interest and probe industries where SEC leadership has actively declined to intervene, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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2026 State AI Bills That Could Expand Liability, Insurance Risk
State bills legislating artificial intelligence that are expected to pass in 2026 will reshape the liability landscape for all companies incorporating AI solutions into their business operations, as any novel private rights of action authorized under AI-related statutes signal expanding exposures, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Series
Judges On AI: How Courts Can Boost Access To Justice
Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Samuel A. Thumma writes that generative artificial intelligence tools offer a profound opportunity to enhance access to justice and engender public confidence in courts’ use of technology, and judges can seize this opportunity in five key ways.
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Examining Privilege In Dual-Purpose Workplace Investigations
The Sixth Circuit's recent holding in FirstEnergy's bribery probe ruling that attorney-client privilege applied to a dual-purpose workplace investigation because its primary purpose was obtaining legal advice highlights the uncertainty companies face as federal circuit courts remain split on the appropriate test, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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Opinion
The Case For Emulating, Not Dividing, The Ninth Circuit
Champions for improved judicial administration should reject the unfounded criticisms driving recent Senate proposals to divide the Ninth Circuit and instead seek to replicate the court's unique strengths and successes, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.
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ERISA Litigation Trends To Watch With 2025 In The Rearview
There were significant developments in Employee Retirement Income Security Act litigation in 2025, including plaintiffs pushing the bounds of sponsor and fiduciary liability and defendants scoring district court wins, and although the types of claims might change, ERISA litigation will likely be just as active in 2026, say attorneys at Groom Law.
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How 11th Circ.'s Zafirov Decision Could Upend Qui Tam Cases
Oral argument before the Eleventh Circuit last month in U.S. ex rel. Zafirov v. Florida Medical Associates suggests that the court may affirm a lower court's opinion that the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act are unconstitutional — which could wreak havoc on pending and future qui tam cases, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Series
Muay Thai Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Muay Thai kickboxing has taught me that in order to win, one must stick to one's game plan and adapt under pressure, just as when facing challenges by opposing counsel or judges, says Mark Schork at Feldman Shepherd.
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Higher Expectations For 'Schedule A' IP Suits On The Horizon
Two 2025 rulings may reflect a growing judicial discomfort with the current state of Schedule A litigation — intellectual property lawsuits that typically involve brand owners suing multiple defendants doing business on e-commerce platforms — and that evidentiary submissions and temporary restraining order requests may face more rigorous review, says Dylan Scher at Quinn Emanuel.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Intentional Career-Building
A successful legal career is built through intention: understanding expectations, assessing strengths honestly and proactively seeking opportunities to grow and cultivating relationships that support your development, say Erika Drous and Hillary Mann at Morrison Foerster.