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TOP NEWS
Feds Inadvertently Disclosed Trump Classified Docs Report
By Rose Krebs
The government told a Florida federal court on Thursday that it inadvertently disclosed a report from former special counsel Jack Smith regarding the criminal case against President Donald Trump over his handling of classified documents to a former federal prosecutor separately accused of emailing confidential documents from the report to herself.
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BANKING & SECURITIES
ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL
HEALTH & LIFE SCIENCES
IP & TECHNOLOGY
USPTO Snubs Avalanche's Deficiency Payments For Chip IP
By Elliot Weld
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has declined to accept fee deficiency payments from Avalanche Technology Inc. on four patents covering memory chips after a judge at the U.S. International Trade Commission turned down a rival's request to toss an infringement case based on uncertainty over whether the office would accept the fees.
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MEDIA & ENTERTAINMENT
TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE
SPORTS & BETTING
Sports And Real Estate: A Special Report
By Real Estate Authority Staff
Nowadays, professional sports are as deeply woven into the real estate and legal industries as they are into American culture. In this special report, Law360 Real Estate Authority examines the most recent interplay between sports and real estate development, the policies and litigation accompanying it, and the vast legal work guiding it.
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EMPLOYMENT & BENEFITS
PERSONAL INJURY & MEDICAL MALPRACTICE
PRODUCT LIABILITY
Roundup
Product Liability Q2 Regulatory Roundup
By Emily Field
This spring and early summer saw the EPA setting its sights on "forever chemicals," approving some of them for use in pesticides and clawing back limits on their presence in drinking water. The former top FDA official is now out, and several nominees are waiting to fill gaps at the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
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GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
TAX
IMMIGRATION
Feds Win Bid To Pause Philly's ICE Agent Unmasking, ID Law
By P.J. D'Annunzio
A Pennsylvania federal judge on Thursday ruled Philadelphia's law requiring federal agents to display badges and unmask themselves while on duty in the city likely went against the Constitution because it interfered with the way the federal government operates, noting in his ruling that the law was even treated with skepticism by the mayor and the city's solicitor.
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WHITE COLLAR
NATIVE AMERICAN
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
EXPERT ANALYSIS
What Ratings Overhaul May Mean For Banking Industry
Proposed revisions to the bank rating system commonly known as CAMELS could constrain examiner discretion and tie supervisory outcomes more closely to measurable financial risk, potentially saving compliance costs, reducing the frequency of ratings downgrades and spurring a more growth-oriented banking system, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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Series
Choral Singing Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Singing in the New York City Bar Chorus — a hobby partly inspired by the late U.S. District Judge Richard Owen, who infused my clerkship year with opera music — has improved my legal career by refining my abilities to listen, exude confidence and develop emotional intelligence, says Bonnie Baker at Friedman Kaplan.
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LEGAL INDUSTRY
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