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April 21, 2026
Judge Eyes Ballot Deadline In Feud Over BJ's Climate Study
A Massachusetts federal judge on Tuesday said he's eager to cut to the chase in a dispute over whether BJ's Wholesale Club must allow shareholders to vote on a climate study proposal, suggesting the case could be resolved ahead of a looming proxy ballot deadline.
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April 21, 2026
NBC Beats Diddy's $100M Suit Over 'Salacious' Documentary
Embattled music mogul Diddy cannot pursue his $100 million defamation lawsuit alleging NBCUniversal and its streaming service Peacock put profits over journalistic standards to broadcast a "salacious" documentary containing "fresh lies and conspiracy theories," a Manhattan judge ruled, saying the rapper hasn't shown the defendants were "grossly irresponsible."
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April 21, 2026
2nd Circ. Chilly To Additional Discovery In Cigna Pension Suit
The Second Circuit on Tuesday seemed reluctant to restart proceedings in a long-running suit against Cigna from retirees who challenged changes to their pensions, appearing unwilling to upend a decision to turn down post-judgment discovery in the class action.
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April 21, 2026
Feds Drop 1st Circ. Homelessness Funding Appeal
Three weeks after the First Circuit declined to pause two orders blocking the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development from cutting homelessness funding, HUD has dropped its appeal.
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April 21, 2026
Exec For Former SI Publisher Tells Jury He's Owed Severance
A New Jersey executive who worked for the financially strapped former publisher of Sports Illustrated told a Manhattan federal jury Tuesday that he is owed potentially $2 million after his firing, but the former publisher countered that he was terminated for cause.
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April 21, 2026
Mintz Names Veteran Litigator To Lead New York Office
Mintz Levin Cohn Ferris Glovsky and Popeo PC has promoted a litigator who regularly handles commercial and securities disputes to managing member of its New York office, the firm announced Tuesday.
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April 21, 2026
Feds Pan Nadine Menendez's Bail Bid Months After Appeal
Prosecutors have urged a New York federal judge to reject a bid by Nadine Menendez for bail while she appeals her bribery and corruption conviction, saying her argument falls short of the high bar for release.
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April 21, 2026
Former Federal Attys Join Kelley Drye In New York, LA
Two former federal prosecutors have returned to private practice and recently joined Kelley Drye & Warren LLP's New York and Los Angeles offices.
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April 21, 2026
Sullivan & Cromwell Alerts SDNY To AI Errors In Ch. 15 Case
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP told a New York bankruptcy judge Saturday that an emergency motion it filed in Prince Global Holdings Ltd.'s Chapter 15 case contained several inaccurate citations and other errors, including what the firm described as artificial intelligence "hallucinations."
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April 21, 2026
DOT Releases $4.7B To Aid Upgrades At Penn, Union Stations
The U.S. Department of Transportation said Monday it will invest $4.7 billion into rail improvement projects in Amtrak's Northeast Corridor, including rehabilitations for New York's Penn Station and Washington, D.C.'s Union Station.
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April 21, 2026
Chicago Transit Authority Seeks To Block Refreeze Of $3B
Chicago's transit agency has asked a federal judge to convert his recent temporary restraining order to a preliminary injunction that would block the Trump administration from refreezing $3 billion in funding for city train line upgrades while its lawsuit plays out, saying while work on the projects has been allowed to continue with the TRO, "that peace is fragile."
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April 21, 2026
Weinstein Recasts 'Rape' As 'Regret' In 3rd NY Trial Openings
Harvey Weinstein's attorney told a Manhattan jury Tuesday that the film producer had a genuine on-and-off relationship with a woman who chose to "change the narrative" from consensual sex to rape after he faced a flurry of assault accusations in 2017.
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April 21, 2026
Live Nation Fails In Bid For Quick Nix Of Antitrust Damages
A New York federal court has refused to rule immediately on Live Nation's bid to strike expert testimony and set aside the damages awarded to state enforcers in the antitrust case accusing the company of monopolizing the live entertainment industry.
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April 21, 2026
NY AG Sues Coinbase, Gemini Over Event Contract 'Gambling'
New York Attorney General Letitia James sued Coinbase and Gemini Tuesday, accusing them of "illegally running gambling operations" in the state through their prediction market offerings in twin actions that join a mounting pile of litigation between state gambling regulators and prediction market platforms.
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April 20, 2026
UK Wine Fraudster Gets 10 Years For $97M Ponzi Scheme
A Brooklyn federal judge on Monday sentenced a former executive of a U.K. wine company to 10 years in prison for his role in a $97 million Ponzi scheme that defrauded investors in loans that were falsely billed as being fully collateralized by high-value wine collections, calling it a "very brazen crime that led to mass amounts of theft."
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April 20, 2026
No High Court Review In NY Nursing Home COVID Death Case
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to review the dismissal of a civil suit against former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and other former state officials over COVID-19-related deaths in nursing homes that allegedly stemmed from the state's controversial early pandemic policies.
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April 20, 2026
NY Hospital Co. Fights Workers' ERISA Suit Over Plan Switch
A group of employees of a Buffalo, New York-area hospital network can't prove their employer violated federal benefits law when it switched them from a pension plan to a cash-balance plan in the late 1990s, the company argued, asking a federal judge to toss the suit.
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April 20, 2026
SEC Says Adviser Traded On Firm Clients' Confidential Info
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission sued an ex-investment advisory firm associate in Manhattan federal court on Monday, accusing him of using a close relative's brokerage account to trade ahead of market-moving announcements by three biopharmaceutical and biotechnology companies that his firm was researching.
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April 20, 2026
Swim Training Co.'s IPO Was Pump-And-Dump, Suit Says
Singapore swim-school operator Fitness Champs Holdings Ltd. was hit with a proposed class action accusing it of concealing a social media-driven "pump-and-dump" scheme in which stock promoters posed as financial advisers to hype the stock through online forums, destroying the company's market capitalization after the shares were dumped.
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April 20, 2026
Mobile Game Co. Lied About Reliance On Skill, Jury Told
An attorney for mobile game maker Skillz Platform Inc. told a Manhattan federal jury Monday that rival Papaya Gaming Ltd. lied to customers about their ability to win based on skill in its games, and that bots made sure users never won too much.
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April 20, 2026
SEC Says Trader Ran $5M Market Manipulation Scheme
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday filed suit against a trader based in Puerto Rico who allegedly manipulated the prices of hundreds of securities and deceived investors into buying them at artificially inflated prices, netting him more than $5 million in illicit profits.
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April 20, 2026
NFL, Teams Try To Ditch Flores' Latest Discrimination Claims
The National Football League and three teams that appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court to have a proposed racial discrimination class action sent to arbitration have asked a New York federal court to throw out the suit's civil rights claims.
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April 20, 2026
Reddit Defends Data-Scraping Claims Against Perplexity
Reddit Inc. is defending its case accusing Perplexity AI Inc. and three data-scraping companies of circumventing security measures to access copyrighted content in order to train the artificial intelligence startup's "answer engine."
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April 20, 2026
NFT Buyer Says Ex-Software Biz Orchestrated Token Rug Pull
A purported blockchain technology platform faces proposed class action allegations it made millions off a so-called rug pull, introducing a series of nonfungible tokens and teasing a cryptocurrency offering that never materialized, then selling those tokens into the artificial market it created and abandoning the platform.
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April 20, 2026
NY Judge Slams ICE Arrest Tactics, Orders Officers To Testify
A New York federal judge has ordered U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers to testify about after-the-fact administrative arrest warrants, saying the government is trying to obscure whether the arrests of two people were lawful.
Expert Analysis
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On ESI Control
Several recent federal court decisions have perpetuated a split over what constitutes “control” of electronically stored information — with judges divided on whether the standard should turn on a party's legal right or practical ability to obtain the information, say attorneys at Sidley.
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2nd Circ. Ruling Reinforces Securities Act Limits Post-Slack
The Second Circuit's recent decision to limit treatment of mandatory reverse splits as actionable sales in Knapp v. Barclays is narrow but important, offering issuers a stronger basis to challenge expansive Securities Act theories and reinforcing the post-Slack v. Pirani discipline of tracing, says Elisha Kobre at Sheppard.
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2 Discovery Rulings Break With Heppner On AI Privilege Issue
While a New York federal court’s recent ruling in U.S. v. Heppner suggests that some litigants’ communications with AI tools are discoverable, two other recent federal court decisions demonstrate that such interactions generally qualify for work-product protection under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, says Joshua Dunn at Brown Rudnick.
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Opinion
BNP Paribas Case Could Upend Global Banking Norms
If upheld on appeal, a New York federal jury's multimillion-dollar verdict against BNP Paribas would create an unpredictable liability landscape for global financial institutions in which fully lawful services in foreign countries can give rise to civil liability in U.S. courts, in a manner contrary to federal law, say attorneys at White & Case.
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Series
Isshin-Ryu Karate Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My involvement in martial arts, specifically Isshin-ryu, which has principles rooted in the eight codes of karate, has been one of the most foundational in the development of my personality, and particularly my approach to challenges — including in my practice of law, says Kaitlyn Stone at Barnes & Thornburg.
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What To Know About NY's Employment Credit Check Ban
An amendment to the New York state Fair Credit Reporting Act prohibiting applicants' or employees' consumer credit history from being used in employment-related decisions statewide will take effect in a few days, so employers should update policies, train teams and audit positions for narrow exemptions, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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'Made In America' EO May Not Survive Section 230
President Donald Trump's recent executive order to combat fraudulent "Made in America" claims in advertising directs the Federal Trade Commission to deem online marketplaces' failure to verify third-party origin claims as unlawful, but such a rule would likely run into Section 230's publisher immunity doctrine, say attorneys at Blank Rome.
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CFTC Actions Show Prediction Market Insider Trading Risks
It is a myth that insider trading law does not apply in prediction markets, as the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission's recent enforcement actions illustrate that it has full authority to pursue such cases federally — and intends to, says attorney Gregg Goldfarb.
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Prepping For White House's Proposed AI Framework
The artificial intelligence legislative framework issued by the White House last month reframes the policy landscape, creating a number of near-term developments for companies to track as congressional committees attempt to convert the framework into legislative text, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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2nd Circ. Clarifies When Prior Good Acts May Be Admissible
The Second Circuit's recent ruling in U.S. v. Cardenas, vacating a drug conspiracy conviction over improperly excluded evidence, indicates that evidence of prior good acts may be admissible to corroborate a defendant's testimony about their understanding of events and intent, say attorneys at Lowenstein Sandler.
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Opinion
State Bars Need To Get Specific About AI Confidentiality
Lawyers need to put actual client information into artificial intelligence tools to get their full value, but they cannot confidently do so until state bars offer clear, formal authority on which plan tiers of the three most popular generative AI tools are safe to use when sharing specific client details, says attorney Nick Berk.
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Opinion
Futures Market Anonymity Now Presents A Structural Problem
Following anomalous trading on prediction markets just before major recent policy announcements from the Trump administration, many have called on Congress to act, but the problem is not primarily a statutory gap — it is a structural one, built into the self-regulatory model that governs futures exchanges, says Tamara de Silva at De Silva Law Offices.
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Opinion
Judicial Restraint Anchors Constitutional Order
Contrasting opinions in two recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings — Trump v. CASA and Bost v. Illinois State Board of Elections — demonstrate how the judiciary’s constitutionally entrusted role can easily be preserved or disrupted, and invite renewed attention to the enduring importance of judicial restraint, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.
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The Evolution Of States' Workplace Violence Prevention Laws
Utah's new law requiring hospitals to implement comprehensive workplace violence reporting systems continues a broader trend of state efforts to expand workplace protections in the absence of sufficient federal regulations, say attorneys at Ogletree.
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Resolving The Conflict In 2nd Circ. Foreign Discovery Rulings
The Second Circuit recently issued two seemingly inconsistent decisions regarding the federal statute that permits U.S. discovery for purposes of a foreign proceeding, but the unifying feature appears to be the broad scope for district court discretion under Section 1782, say attorneys at Katsky Korins.