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Life Sciences
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April 10, 2026
Taxation With Representation: Goodwin, CMS, Wilson Sonsini
In this week's Taxation With Representation, Gilead Sciences Inc. acquires clinical-stage biotechnology company Tubulis GmbH, private equity firm Court Square Capital Partners closes a multibillion-dollar fund and Neurocrine Biosciences Inc. buys rare-disease drugmaker Soleno Therapeutics Inc.
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April 10, 2026
Ill. Jury Adds $17M Punitive Award To Baby Formula Verdict
Illinois jurors on Friday slapped another $17 million in punitive damages atop the $53 million they awarded the previous afternoon to four mothers who accused Abbott Laboratories of selling preterm infant formula that contributed to a serious and often fatal gut condition their babies developed.
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April 09, 2026
Yale Medical School Can't Nix Fraudulent Insemination Suit
Yale can't escape a negligence suit by onetime patients alleging its former fertility doctor secretly inseminated them with his own sperm, after a Connecticut judge said that a letter from an anonymous doctor, which is mandated by law to support their claims, met the statutory requirements.
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April 09, 2026
Irish Mallinckrodt Unit Stuck In Drug Price-Fixing Suit
An Irish entity of drugmaker Mallinckrodt waited too long to seek dismissal of a price-fixing lawsuit brought by states based on a lack of personal jurisdiction or proper service, a Connecticut federal judge has ruled, finding that the company first raised that argument more than five years after the complaint was filed.
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April 09, 2026
Abbott Hit With $53M Verdict Over Baby Formula Harms
A Cook County jury on Thursday awarded a total of $53 million in damages to four mothers claiming Abbott Laboratories' preterm baby formula contributed to their babies' development of a serious and often fatal gut condition, in the first of such claims to go to trial in Illinois.
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April 09, 2026
Split 4th Circ. Backs West Virginia Schoolchildren Vax Law
A split Fourth Circuit panel struck down an order barring West Virginia from applying a compulsory vaccination law to a student whose parents alleged the law violates her religious rights, ruling the law serves the state's interest in reducing the spread of infectious diseases.
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April 09, 2026
Merck Beats 295 Zostavax Suits Over Missed Deadlines
A Pennsylvania federal judge has tossed 295 cases against Merck & Co. Inc. in the multidistrict litigation alleging its Zostavax shingles vaccine caused the disease, with the court reasoning that the plaintiffs' inactivity doomed the cases.
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April 09, 2026
McKinsey Settles Liability For $125M In Purdue Ch. 11
Consulting firm McKinsey & Co. has agreed to pay $125 million to former client Purdue Pharma LP to settle potential claims related to its work advising Purdue on the sale and marketing of opioids, tying up another loose end in the nearly seven-year-old Chapter 11 case.
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April 09, 2026
Nonprofit Insurer Wants To Seek AstraZeneca Claims Revival
EmblemHealth asked a Massachusetts federal judge to let it seek First Circuit intervention against a decision that cut in half its proposed class action accusing AstraZeneca unit Alexion of using sham patents to protect blood disorder treatment Soliris from biosimilar rivals.
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April 09, 2026
Philly Injection Site Row Judge Rejects Nonprofit's 'Ploy'
A Pennsylvania federal judge on Thursday called the addition of overdose prevention nonprofit Safehouse's president as a counterclaim plaintiff in the government's suit to stop it from launching a safe-injection site in Philadelphia a "ploy" to add another to the ranks of those claiming the government infringed the group's religious freedom.
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April 09, 2026
Abiomed Can't Escape Blood Pump Patent Case
A Massachusetts federal judge has refused to let a Johnson & Johnson MedTech subsidiary dodge claims that it infringed a blood pump patent, the latest event in a wider legal battle launched against it by a unit of Swedish medical device company Getinge AB.
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April 09, 2026
Ecolab Says Personal Injury Law Firm Holding Back $148K
Ecolab and its self-funded employee benefit plan have accused a North Carolina personal injury firm of withholding around $148,000 in settlement funds the food safety company says it's owed for covering a worker's medical bills after a car accident.
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April 15, 2026
The 2026 Lawyer Satisfaction Survey: Where Do You Stand?
How is your work-life balance? Are you content with your compensation and opportunities for advancement at work? Take the 2026 Law360 Lawyer Satisfaction Survey and share your thoughts.
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April 09, 2026
Ex-Pharmacy Director Denies Using Trade Secrets At New Job
A former director at a specialty infusion therapy pharmacy urged a New Jersey federal court to reject her former employer's bid to block her from working for a rival, arguing that her new job does not pose any threat of imminent harm to her former company.
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April 09, 2026
US Again Urges High Court To Back Drug Price Program
The administration of President Donald Trump again urged the Supreme Court not to hear a challenge to the Medicare drug price negotiation program, arguing against a constitutional challenge brought by Boehringer Ingelheim that drug companies aren't forced to accept lower prices because they can choose not to participate.
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April 08, 2026
Fed. Circ. Questions Specificity Needed In Oxy IP Invalidation
A Federal Circuit panel expressed frustration with attorneys from both Purdue Pharma LP and generic-drug maker Accord Healthcare Inc. Wednesday as it tried to navigate whether the Delaware district court order invalidating Purdue's abuse-deterrence patent was explicit enough.
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April 08, 2026
Biz Judge Keeps Doc Class Action Against Luxottica, For Now
A Texas Business Court judge Wednesday kept alive, on procedural grounds, a proposed class action made up of Texas optometrists who say that their office space deals with eye care giant Luxottica of America Inc. didn't follow Texas law.
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April 08, 2026
AbbVie Says 340B Program Defines 'Patient' Too Broadly
Federally funded healthcare providers in the 340B Drug Pricing Program are using an "overly broad" interpretation of the word "patient" based on government guidelines, and it's leading to them abusing 340B discounts, AbbVie claimed in a lawsuit filed against two federal health agencies Wednesday.
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April 08, 2026
States Seek Time For Talks To Settle Drug Price-Fixing Suit
The states suing generic-drug manufacturers in one of three sprawling antitrust cases want a Connecticut federal judge to pause all deadlines for three months so they can focus on settling with the remaining defendants, according to a joint filing.
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April 08, 2026
3M Settles Ex-Worker's COVID Vax Firing Suit
A former 3M Co. employee who claimed the company's COVID-19 vaccination mandate policy was "unnecessary" and "draconian" has settled his more than 3-year-old suit over his firing, according to a court filing.
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April 08, 2026
AstraZeneca Wants 25 Opt-Ins Axed From Pay Bias Suit
More than two dozen women refused to take part in required discovery and should be removed from a collective action accusing AstraZeneca of paying female pharmaceutical sales representatives less than men, the company told an Illinois federal court.
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April 08, 2026
Abbott Urges Ill. Jury To Reject Claims Formula Led To NEC
Counsel for Abbott Laboratories told an Illinois jury Wednesday that four infants, whose mothers allege the company's preterm baby formula caused their serious intestinal illness, would have developed the disease "even without a drop of formula" given other risk factors and that the absence of other feeding options at the time of the babies' births dooms their parents' claims.
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April 08, 2026
Biopharma-Focused Jeito Wraps 2nd Fund With $1.2B In Tow
Biopharmaceutical-focused private equity shop Jeito Capital, advised by Goodwin Procter LLP, on Wednesday announced that it closed its second fund above target after raising more than €1 billion ($1.2 billion) from investors.
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April 08, 2026
Faegre Drinker Hires 2 Venable FDA Partners In DC
Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP has hired two attorneys from Venable LLP who joined that firm in 2023 and focus their practices on helping clients understand U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulatory frameworks, the firm announced Wednesday.
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April 08, 2026
Redesigned Supplement Partially Cleared In Patent Row
A Delaware federal court has found that most of the redesigned versions of a nutritional supplement don't infringe a patent owned by Kaneka Corp., while also saying it's still unclear how much the Japanese company is owed for earlier versions the court found did infringe.
Expert Analysis
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Drug Wholesaler's DPA Shows Imperfect Efforts Still Count
Atlantic Biologicals’ recent deferred prosecution agreement with federal prosecutors for allegedly distributing controlled substances to pill mill pharmacies demonstrates that even subpar cooperation, when combined with genuine remediation and strategic advocacy, can yield outcomes that protect a company's long-term interests, says Jonathan Porter at Husch Blackwell.
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Key Takeaways As HRSA Aims To Revive 340B Rebate Pilot
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' recent request for feedback on the 340B Rebate Model Pilot Program demonstrates that it intends to correct the model's procedural defects, which is positive news for participating manufacturers, but a setback for covered entities, say attorneys at Manatt.
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When MDLs Drag, State Courts Can Speed Mass Tort Results
Understanding the structural dynamics that can delay resolution in multidistrict litigation is essential to understanding why a state court strategy is sometimes not merely attractive, but necessary for plaintiffs seeking timely and just outcomes, say attorneys at DiCello Levitt.
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Leveraging MDLs And State Courts In Mass Tort Strategy
Multidistrict litigation's quiet drift from a pretrial coordination device to a de facto national court for mass torts poses a strategic question for plaintiffs counsel — whether an MDL will yield timely trials, meaningful accountability and fair value for clients, or whether a state court strategy will be more effective, say attorneys at DiCello Levitt.
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Unique Issues Facing Brand-Compounder Patent Litigation
Recent litigation and potential enforcement action against Hims & Hers Health raise questions about how compounders and branded pharmaceuticals companies would be positioned in patent litigation as compared to generics companies, which would require strategies different from those that would be used in traditional Hatch-Waxman Act litigation, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Series
Volunteering With Scouts Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Serving as an assistant scoutmaster for my son’s troop reaffirmed several skills and principles crucial to lawyering — from the importance of disconnecting to the value of morality, says Michael Warren at McManis Faulkner.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: In Court, It's About Storytelling
Law school provides doctrine, cases and hypotheticals, but when lawyers step into the courtroom, they must learn the importance of clarity, credibility, memorability and preparation — in other words, how to tell simple, effective stories, say Nicholas Steverson and Danielle Trujillo at Wheeler Trigg, and Lisa DeCaro at Courtroom Performance.
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Pros And Cons Of FDA's Push For Nonprescription Drugs
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's recent moves to shift more prescription drugs to over-the-counter status could increase access to important medications, but also bring potential safety risks and other trade-offs for drug companies, say attorneys at Hogan Lovells.
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How Recent Del. Rulings Clarify M&A Deal Fraud Carveouts
Two recent Delaware decisions have provided clarity regarding when a party can or cannot rely on representations made during the course of an M&A transaction, particularly on the scope and enforceability of antireliance provisions, and on representations they knew or should have known were false, says Anthony Boccamazzo at Olshan Frome.
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High Court's 'Skinny Label' Case May Tackle Wider Questions
The U.S. Supreme Court's upcoming decision in Hikma v. Amarin will have important ramifications for broader debates over what defines a generic version of a drug, and the pending case is already altering patent practice, say attorneys at Taft.
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Aligning Microsoft Tools With NYC Bar AI Recording Guidance
The New York City Bar Association’s recently issued formal opinion, providing ethical guidance on artificial intelligence-assisted recording, transcription and summarization, raises immediate questions about data governance and e-discovery for companies that use Microsoft 365 and Copilot, say Staci Kaliner, Martin Tully and John Collins at Redgrave.
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FDA's Biosimilarity Guidance Holds Uncertain Implications
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's new draft guidance aimed at simplifying the biosimilarity demonstration process may not be enough to overcome the barriers that have historically constrained biosimilar competition, and could affect biosimilar access in unexpected ways, say analysts at Analysis Group.
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Unpacking Key Themes From NY's New Healthcare Strategy
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul's 2026 State of the State agenda, read together with the state's fiscal year 2027 executive budget, reflect a clear framework to utilize Medicaid as the state's operating platform for healthcare reform, say attorneys at Sheppard.
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5 Different AI Systems Raise Distinct Privilege Issues
A New York federal court’s recent U.S. v. Heppner decision, holding that a defendant’s use of Claude was not privileged, only addressed one narrow artificial intelligence system, but lawyers must recognize that the spectrum of AI tools raises different confidentiality and privilege questions, says Heidi Nadel at HP.
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Opinion
AI-Assisted Arbitration Needs Safeguards To Ensure Fairness
As tribunals and arbitral institutions increasingly use artificial intelligence tools in their decision-making processes, clear disclosure standards and procedural safeguards are necessary to ensure that efficiency gains do not erode the fairness principles on which arbitration depends, says Alexander Lima at Wesco International.