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December 05, 2025
How A Little-Known Law Protects Families In ICE Crackdown
As noncitizen families face a heightened threat of detention and deportation, a legal process originally crafted during the AIDS crisis to keep children in the care of trusted adults during an abrupt separation has taken on new urgency.
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December 05, 2025
For NY Inmate, Jamaica's Violence Waits Outside Prison Walls
Jamaican-born Eric Tolliver is nearing the end of his 33-year prison sentence in New York, but what waits for him on the other side might be worse: deportation to his home country, where many want him dead.
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December 05, 2025
Feds Seek 12 Years For Founder's 'Devastating' Crypto Fraud
Federal prosecutors say Terraform founder Do Kwon should face 12 years in prison, arguing that he "fled from the wreckage" after misleading investors ahead of a $40 billion collapse of his stablecoin crypto project.
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December 05, 2025
Iraqi Kurdish Gov't To Fight Immunity Ruling In $490M Feud
The Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq will appeal a ruling denying its sovereign immunity defense in litigation filed by a subsidiary of Kuwaiti logistics firm Agility Public Warehousing Co. to enforce a $490 million judgment against it.
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December 05, 2025
High Court To Weigh Courts' Power Over Arbitration Awards
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Dec. 5 to consider whether federal courts have the authority to confirm or overturn arbitration awards arising out of cases they previously exercised authority over, taking up a tricky legal question stemming from a laid-off security guard's discrimination case.
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December 05, 2025
NYC Official Challenges Charge Stemming From ICE Dustup
New York City Comptroller Brad Lander on Friday denied obstructing Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents as he monitored proceedings at a building where immigrants have been detained in President Donald Trump's crackdown, saying he intends to prove ICE was at fault for a scuffle that ensued.
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December 05, 2025
Energy Dept. Defends $7.5B Grant Cuts In Political Bias Case
The U.S. Department of Energy has urged a federal judge in Washington not to block its termination of energy project grants worth more than $7.5 billion, arguing there is no merit to claims alleging the federal government unconstitutionally targeted funds for Democratic-leaning states.
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December 05, 2025
ERISA Recap: 4 Rulings Worth Paying Attention To From Nov.
The Ninth Circuit striking down a class action win for transgender employee health plan participants who said their gender-affirming care denials were discriminatory is just one noteworthy Employee Retirement Income Security Act ruling from November. Here's a recap of that ruling and three others.
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December 05, 2025
FTC's Abandoned Pepsi Pricing Case Will Be Mostly Unsealed
A New York federal court agreed to largely unseal the Federal Trade Commission's price discrimination complaint against PepsiCo Inc. despite protests from the beverage company and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce after enforcers dropped the case earlier this year.
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December 05, 2025
NYT, Chicago Tribune Sue Perplexity Over 'Verbatim' Outputs
Adding to the heap of pending federal court cases launched by publishers against artificial intelligence companies, The New York Times and Chicago Tribune sued Perplexity AI in New York, claiming its search engine illegally scrapes content from their websites and spits out portions verbatim.
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December 05, 2025
2nd Circ. Backs Ex-Goldman Exec's 1MDB Conviction
Former Goldman Sachs managing director Roger Ng's attempt to overturn his conviction in the $6.5 billion 1MDB corruption scheme hit a wall Friday at the Second Circuit, where a panel categorically rejected his multipronged appeal.
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December 05, 2025
NY Court Grants Murder Retrial Due To Jury Instruction Error
A man sentenced to up to life in prison for murder after stabbing another man in a bar fight has been granted a new trial by a New York appeals court, which said his jury should have been allowed to consider whether he had acted in self-defense.
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December 05, 2025
Judge Denies Firms' Bid To Clarify CFPB's MoneyLion Deal
A New York federal judge has denied a request by consumer advocate law firms to add clarifying language to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's recently approved $1.75 million settlement with MoneyLion Technologies Inc., noting that the advocates did not seek to intervene in the suit and that the CFPB and MoneyLion both oppose the request.
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December 05, 2025
Long Island Real Estate Co. Files For Ch. 11 With $35M Debt
Long Island-based real estate holding company Giapreet LLC filed for Chapter 11 in a New York bankruptcy court with just over $35 million in liabilities.
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December 05, 2025
Office Owner SL Green Targets NYC Assets With $1.3B Fund
Office landlord SL Green Realty Corp. said Friday that it has closed a $1.3 billion oversubscribed fund targeting assets in New York City.
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December 05, 2025
Menendez Barred From Holding Public Office After Conviction
Former U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez has been permanently barred from holding any public office or position of trust in New Jersey, following his conviction on federal bribery and corruption charges, Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin announced Friday.
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December 04, 2025
NY AG Applauds Reports Grand Jury Declined To Reindict
New York Attorney General Letitia James Thursday hailed reports that a Norfolk, Virginia, federal grand jury had declined to reindict her on charges of mortgage fraud, refusing to revive a case that President Donald Trump had pushed prosecutors to pursue against his "guilty as hell" political opponent.
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December 04, 2025
Wheeling & Appealing: The Latest Must-Know Appellate Action
Is the False Claims Act constitutional? Will Mark Zuckerberg be deposed in high-profile privacy litigation? Did a major drugmaker's shenanigans cost investors nearly $7 billion? That's a small sample of the intriguing legal questions we're exploring in this preview of December's top appellate action.
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December 04, 2025
Trans Defendants Deserve 'Basic Respect,' Experts Say
The case of Justice Brett Kavanaugh's would-be assassin, who came out as a transgender woman following her arrest, illustrates how criminal courts can be unprepared for, or even hostile to, trans defendants, and experts tell Law360 that courts can make significant inroads by showing trans people a modicum of respect.
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December 04, 2025
Banks Ask Justices To Review Class Cert. In $12B VRDO Suit
A group of major banks has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to review a Second Circuit decision upholding class certification in a $12 billion municipal-bond antitrust lawsuit, arguing the district court erred in not resolving an expert witness evidence dispute before granting certification.
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December 04, 2025
OFAC Fines Real Estate Firm $7M Over Sanctions Violations
The Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control fined a New York property management company more than $7 million for allegedly violating Russian sanctions by receiving payments on behalf of a company owned by a sanctioned Russian oligarch.
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December 04, 2025
Pot Shop Associate Doubts Judge's Neutrality In RICO Case
A landlord accused of allowing an unauthorized cannabis shop to operate within the Cayuga Nation is asking a New York federal judge to recuse herself less than a week before trial is set to begin, suggesting that the jurist might not be unbiased because counsel for the tribe "helped" her "son get a job."
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December 04, 2025
Blue Owl Capital Faces Investor Suit Over Redemption Woes
Alternative investment manager Blue Owl Capital Inc. faces a proposed investor class action alleging that it concealed financial stress related to shareholder redemptions, hurting investors when it disclosed a quarterly earnings miss and announced a merger that could have halted certain private fund redemptions.
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December 04, 2025
Gov't Watchdog To Probe FHFA Mortgage Fraud Referrals
The Government Accountability Office will review whether Federal Housing Finance Agency Director William Pulte weaponized mortgage fraud investigations against the president's perceived political opponents and flouted the agency's typical investigation process.
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December 04, 2025
TaskUs' $17.5M Investor Settlement, Atty Fees Get Final OK
Final approval has been granted to the $17.5 million deal settling claims between outsourced digital customer service company TaskUs and its investors who allege that the company improperly influenced its ratings on the employer review website Glassdoor, according to an order on Thursday.
Expert Analysis
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Expect DOJ To Repeat 4 Themes From 2024's FCPA Trials
As two upcoming Foreign Corrupt Practice Act trials approach, defense counsel should anticipate the U.S. Department of Justice to revive several of the same themes prosecutors leaned on in trials last year to motivate jurors to convict, and build counternarratives to neutralize these arguments, says James Koukios at MoFo.
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How The SEC Has Subtly Changed Its Injunction Approach
For decades, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has relied on the obey-the-law injunction, but judicial deference to the SEC's desired language has fractured since 2012 — with the commission itself this year utilizing a more tailored approach to injunctions, albeit inconsistently, say attorneys at Hilgers Graben.
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Lessons As Joint Employer Suits Shift From Rare To Routine
Joint employer allegations now appear so frequently that employers should treat them as part of the ordinary risk landscape, and several recent decisions demonstrate how fluid the liability doctrine has become, says Thomas O’Connell at Buchalter.
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Series
Power To The Paralegals: How And Why Training Must Evolve
Empowering paralegals through new models of education that emphasize digital fluency, interdisciplinary collaboration and human-centered lawyering could help solve workforce challenges and the justice gap — if firms, educators and policymakers get on board, say Kristine Custodio Suero and Kelli Radnothy.
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Series
Playing Softball Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My time on the softball field has taught me lessons that also apply to success in legal work — on effective preparation, flexibility, communication and teamwork, says Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty.
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And Now A Word From The Panel: Choosing MDL Venues
One of the most interesting yet least predictable facets of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation's practice is venue — namely where the panel decides to place a new MDL proceeding — and its choices reflect the tension between neutrality and case-specific factors, says Alan Rothman at Sidley.
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Analyzing AI's Evolving Role In Class Action Claims Admin
Artificial intelligence is becoming a strategic asset in the hands of skilled litigators, reshaping everything from class certification strategy to claims analysis — and now, the nuts and bolts of settlement administration, with synthetic fraud, algorithmic review and ethical tension emerging as central concerns, says Dominique Fite at CPT Group.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Time Management
Law students typically have weeks or months to prepare for any given deadline, but the unpredictability of practicing in the real world means that lawyers must become time-management pros, ready to adapt to scheduling conflicts and unexpected assignments at any given moment, says David Thomas at Honigman.
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Courts Keep Upping Standing Ante In ERISA Healthcare Suits
As Article III standing becomes increasingly important in litigation brought by employer-sponsored health plan members under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, several recent cases suggest that courts are taking a more scrutinizing approach to the standing inquiry in both class actions and individual matters, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.
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How Hyperlinks Are Changing E-Discovery Responsibilities
A recent e-discovery dispute over hyperlinked data in Hubbard v. Crow shows how courts have increasingly broadened the definition of control to account for cloud-based evidence, and why organizations must rethink preservation practices to avoid spoliation risks, says Bree Murphy at Exterro.
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State False Claims Acts Can Help Curb Opioid Fund Fraud
State versions of the federal False Claims Act can play an important role in policing the misuse of opioid settlement funds, taking a cue from the U.S. Department of Justice’s handling of federal fraud cases involving pandemic relief funds, says Kenneth Levine at Stone & Magnanini.
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Recent Precedent May Aid In Defending Ad Tech Class Actions
An emergent line of appellate court precedent regarding the indecipherability of anonymized advertising technology transmissions can be used as a powerful tool to counteract the explosion of advertising technology class actions under myriad statutory theories, say attorneys at Duane Morris.
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Key Points From DOJ's New DeFi Enforcement Outline
Recent remarks by the U.S. Department of Justice's Criminal Division head Matthew Galeotti reveal several issues that the decentralized finance industry should address in order to minimize risk, including developers' role in evaluating protocols and the importance of illicit finance risk assessments, says Drew Rolle at Alston & Bird.
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Atkins-Led SEC Continues Focus On Private Funds
Since the change in administration, there has overall been a more accommodative regulatory stance toward private funds, but a recent enforcement action suggests that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is not backing off from enforcement in the space completely, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Sales And Use Tax Strategies For Renewables After OBBBA
With the One Big Beautiful Bill Act sharply curtailing federal tax incentives for solar and wind projects, it is vital for developers to carefully manage state and local sales and use tax exposures through early planning and careful contract structuring, say advisers at KPMG.