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Life Sciences
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October 28, 2025
Akin Beats Malpractice Claim Over Alleged IP Theft Plot
A Third Circuit panel on Tuesday refused to revive a malpractice claim against Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP lodged in a lawsuit that accused attorneys of manipulating patent litigation to steal a former Cornell University graduate student's DNA sequencing intellectual property.
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October 28, 2025
4th Circ. Overturns Landmark W.Va. Opioid Verdict
The Fourth Circuit on Tuesday overturned a key ruling by a West Virginia judge in the first federal bellwether in multidistrict opioid litigation that went in favor of the country's three biggest drug distributors, finding that the oversupply of opioids can create a public nuisance.
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October 28, 2025
Greenberg Traurig Adds Faegre Drinker Mass Tort Pro In NJ
Greenberg Traurig LLP added to its products liability and pharmaceutical practices in New Jersey this week with the addition of a litigator and trial attorney from Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP who specializes in complex mass tort cases.
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October 28, 2025
Texas Accuses Tylenol Makers Of Hiding Autism Danger
The Texas Attorney General's Office on Tuesday sued the makers of Tylenol, alleging they hid the risk that the drug could lead to autism while marketing acetaminophen as the safest pain relief option for pregnant women and young children.
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October 27, 2025
Whistleblower 'Horrified' By Novo Nordisk Drug Sales Tactics
The whistleblower behind a federal lawsuit accusing Novo Nordisk of paying kickbacks to doctors and patients as part of a scheme to drive sales of its hemophilia drug NovoSeven took the witness stand Monday, telling jurors she was "horrified" at how the drugmaker's marketing team targeted doctors.
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October 27, 2025
Bros. Had No Fraud Intent In HIV Drug Scam, Fla. Jury Told
Two Maryland brothers accused of orchestrating a roughly $100 million misbranded HIV drug scheme told a Florida federal jury Monday they had no intent to defraud, saying they were deceived by a co-conspirator who they made a partner in their company.
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October 27, 2025
Teva To Pay $35M In Suit Over Delayed Generic Inhalers
Teva Pharmaceuticals will pay $35 million to resolve claims from a coalition of union healthcare funds that say the company schemed to delay generic competition for its QVAR asthma inhalers, according to a motion for preliminary injunction filed in Massachusetts federal court.
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October 27, 2025
Acadia Pushes For Appeal Of Investors' Partial Early Win
Acadia Healthcare Company Inc. is looking to appeal a partial early win granted to a proposed class of investors accusing the company of misleading them about the strength of its United Kingdom operations, arguing that the court's recent ruling presents controlling questions of law warranting immediate appellate review.
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October 27, 2025
LifeScan Gets Final OK On Ch. 11 Plan After Deal With PBMs
A Texas bankruptcy judge on Monday granted confirmation of LifeScan Global Corp.'s Chapter 11 plan after the debtor reached an agreement with pharmacy benefit managers that resolved their objections, allowing the glucose-monitor maker to complete a deal to cut about $1.4 billion of debt.
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October 27, 2025
Feds Fight Union Bid To Protect Jobs During Gov't Shutdown
The Trump administration is fighting a group of unions' request for a California federal judge to block the government from laying off federal workers during the shutdown, saying the injunction request from eight unions is far too broad.
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October 27, 2025
Fed. Circ. Won't Revive Heart Valve IP Suit Against Edwards
Edwards Lifesciences won't have to face infringement litigation from Aortic Innovations over heart valve transplant technology, the Federal Circuit affirmed Monday.
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October 27, 2025
AbbVie Defends Challenge Of Colorado's Discount Drug Law
AbbVie defended its lawsuit challenging a Colorado law it says conflicts with federal law by forcing manufacturers to sell drugs at steep discounts to Walgreens, CVS and other pharmacy chains, telling a federal judge that the state compels the biotech company to sell more discounted drugs than federal law requires.
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October 27, 2025
Judge Tosses Eli Lilly Suit Over Telehealth Weight Loss Drugs
A California federal court has dismissed a lawsuit from Eli Lilly against a telehealth company and related entities over the compounding of its popular weight loss drugs Mounjaro and Zepbound, saying the pharmaceutical giant's complaint failed to plausibly allege claims under the Lanham Act and the state's false advertising and consumer protection laws.
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October 27, 2025
Samsung Infringed Smart Ring IP, Suit Says
Smart ring maker Oura has hit Samsung with patent claims in Texas federal court, alleging the Korean electronics giant had been challenging Oura's patents in the U.S. before the launch of its allegedly infringing Samsung Galaxy Ring.
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October 27, 2025
Moderna Says Vax Efficacy Math Doesn't Show Investor Fraud
An investor in vaccine giant Moderna Inc. has failed to show that the company misrepresented the efficacy of its RSV vaccine by pointing out that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration later recalculated the vaccine's efficacy, the company said in an effort to slip a proposed investor class action.
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October 27, 2025
Biotech Firm MapLight Inks $251M IPO Amid Shutdown
Biotechnology company MapLight Therapeutics began trading publicly Monday after raising $251 million in its initial public offering, which marked a rare listing during the ongoing federal government shutdown.
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October 27, 2025
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
The Delaware Chancery Court and Delaware Supreme Court saw another busy week of disputes spanning biotech milestones, reincorporation showdowns, shareholder voting schemes and cryptocurrency fiduciary rights.
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October 27, 2025
Ex-Magellan CEO Avoids Prison Over Faulty Lead Tests
The former CEO of Magellan Diagnostics was sentenced in Massachusetts federal court Monday to a year of home confinement for failing to alert regulators to a problem in the company's lead-testing devices that resulted in inaccurately low lead levels being detected in blood samples.
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October 27, 2025
Covington Helps Novartis Buy Avidity Biosciences For $12B
Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis AG has said it will buy Avidity Biosciences, a U.S. developer of therapeutics for muscle diseases, for approximately $12 billion in a move to boost its neuroscience portfolio.
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October 24, 2025
Pfizer Hit With More Suits Over Depo-Provera
Three women sued Pfizer this week in Florida federal court, alleging its hormonal contraceptive birth control shot Depo-Provera caused their brain tumors in the latest claims that the major drugmaker failed to warn of the link.
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October 24, 2025
Ohio, Ky. Reps Again Pursue Bill To Make PTAB Optional
A bipartisan pair of legislators in the U.S. House of Representatives are floating a bill that would give patent owners the ability to extinguish challenges to their intellectual property at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board before they start.
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October 24, 2025
GNC Franchisee Cos. Largely Lose Bid To Toss Award Order
An international court judge has largely denied efforts by GNC franchisee businesses in Singapore and the Philippines to set aside an order enforcing arbitral awards totaling about $45 million that also enforced a contractual obligation to assign their 54 stores in Singapore to the health and wellness company.
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October 24, 2025
USPTO Chief To Review PTAB Ruling On Tire Sensor Patent
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires has decided to step in and examine a Patent Trial and Appeal Board decision from September to consider a challenge to a Cerebrum Sensor Technologies Inc. tire sensor patent.
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October 24, 2025
Tricida Investors Win OK Of $14.2M Deal Over Kidney Drug
A California federal judge on Thursday granted final approval to a $14.2 million settlement that ends a class action against Tricida Inc. founder Gerrit Klaerner claiming he and the company misled investors on the approval chances for their new kidney disease drug, including nearly $4 million for plaintiffs' counsel.
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October 24, 2025
Generic-Drug Makers Want Conn. Price Cap Blocked During Suit
A trade group for generic and biosimilar drugmakers is asking a Connecticut federal judge to block the state's new drug price cap during the pendency of its challenge, saying it illegally controls prices on sales made outside the state.
Expert Analysis
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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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Where 4th And 9th Circ. Diverge On Trade Secret Timing
Recent Fourth and Ninth Circuit decisions have revealed a deepening circuit split over when plaintiffs must specifically define their alleged trade secrets, turning the early stages of trade secret litigation into a key battleground and elevating the importance of forum selection, say attorneys at Skadden.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: 3 Tips On Finding The Right Job
After 23 years as a state and federal prosecutor, when I contemplated moving to a law firm, practicing solo or going in-house, I found there's a critical first step — deep self-reflection on what you truly want to do and where your strengths lie, says Rachael Jones at McKool Smith.
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Series
Painting Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Painting trains me to see both the fine detail and the whole composition at once, enabling me to identify friction points while keeping sight of a client's bigger vision, but the most significant lesson I've brought to my legal work has been the value of originality, says Jana Gouchev at Gouchev Law.
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Courts Are Still Grappling With McDonnell, 9 Years Later
The Seventh and D.C. Circuits’ recent decisions in U.S. v. Weiss and U.S. v. Paitsel, respectively, demonstrate that courts are still struggling to apply the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2016 ruling in McDonnell v. U.S., which narrowed the scope of “official acts” in federal bribery cases, say attorneys at Quinn Emanuel.
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AI Will Transform Patent Examination For The Better
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's increasing use of artificial intelligence tools will result in patents that are more thoroughly vetted, and patent applicants and practitioners will need to adapt their drafting strategies and address stronger and more sophisticated rejections, say attorneys at Troutman.
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Hybrid Claims In Antitrust Disputes Spark Coverage Battles
Antitrust litigation increasingly includes claims for breach of warranty, product liability or state consumer protection violations, complicating insurers' reliance on exclusions as courts analyze whether these are antitrust claims in disguise, says Jameson Pasek at Caldwell Law.
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Drug Ad Crackdown Demonstrates Admin's Aggressive Stance
Recent actions by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services targeting pharmaceutical companies' allegedly deceptive advertising practices signal an active — potentially even punitive — intent to regulate direct-to-consumer advertising out of existence, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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Protecting Sensitive Court Filings After Recent Cyber Breach
In the wake of a recent cyberattack on federal courts' Case Management/Electronic Case Files system, civil litigants should consider seeking enhanced protections for sensitive materials filed under seal to mitigate the risk of unauthorized exposure, say attorneys at Redgrave.
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Series
Judging Figure Skating Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Judging figure skating competitions helps me hone the focus, decisiveness and ability to process complex real-time information I need in court, but more importantly, it makes me reengage with a community and my identity outside of law, which, paradoxically, always brings me back to work feeling restored, says Megan Raymond at Groombridge Wu.
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Trending At The PTAB: Petitioners' Settled Expectations
Recent Patent Trial and Appeal Board decisions show that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's new "settled expectations" factor is no longer the exclusive domain of patent owners and can also provide petitioners with viable pathways to argue against discretionary denial, say attorneys at Finnegan.
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9th Circ. Ruling May Help Pharma Cos. Avert Investor Claims
The Ninth Circuit's recent decision affirming the dismissal of a securities fraud class action alleging that Talphera deceived investors by marketing a drug with a misleading slogan should give plaintiffs pause before filing similar complaints where snappy slogans are accompanied by copious clarifying information, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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What Ethics Rules Say On Atty Discipline For Online Speech
Though law firms are free to discipline employees for their online commentary about Charlie Kirk or other social media activity, saying crude or insensitive things on the internet generally doesn’t subject attorneys to professional discipline under the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, says Stacie H. Rosenzweig at Halling & Cayo.
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Junior Attys Must Beware Of 5 Common Legal Brief Mistakes
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
Junior law firm associates must be careful to avoid five common pitfalls when drafting legal briefs — from including every possible argument to not developing a theme — to build the reputation of a sought-after litigator, says James Argionis at Cozen O'Connor.
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Opinion
State AGs, Not Local Officials, Should Lead Public Litigation
Local governments’ public nuisance lawsuits can raise constitutional and jurisdictional challenges, reinforcing the principle that state attorneys general — not municipalities — are best positioned to litigate on behalf of citizens when it is warranted, says former Utah Attorney General John Swallow.