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Public Policy
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April 16, 2026
Citizens Group Says 27 States Are Eyeing AI Chatbot Laws
Twenty-seven U.S. states are looking at passing laws to make artificial intelligence companies face liability claims in civil suits if they fail to protect consumers who interact with chatbots, while another three states have already enacted protections, according to a citizens group's new legislative tracker.
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April 16, 2026
2nd Circ. Says Animal Groups Can't Challenge Swine Rule
The Second Circuit on Thursday held that a trio of animal welfare groups don't have the standing to fight the U.S. Department of Agriculture's revised practices for inspecting pigs at slaughterhouses, ruling that none of the groups have shown they are likely to be harmed by the rule.
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April 16, 2026
Judiciary Panel Loves Paralegal's Idea To Modernize Briefs
An Arizona paralegal's unsolicited idea for overhauling a procedural rule governing the format of briefs found a surprisingly enthusiastic audience Thursday at a federal judiciary meeting, where prominent officials and attorneys voiced strong interest and agreed to explore the concept in earnest.
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April 16, 2026
Minn. Charges ICE Agent With Assault Over Traffic Gun Threat
A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent is facing felony assault charges in Minnesota after local prosecutors say he tried to illegally bypass a highway traffic jam and then pointed his duty weapon at two people in another vehicle, the Hennepin County Attorney's Office announced Thursday.
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April 16, 2026
DC Circ. Ponders If FERC Mistakenly Rejected PJM Deal
PJM transmission owners faced a skeptical D.C. Circuit Thursday, as aside from saying their arguments were properly preserved in an appeal of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission rejecting a plan they worked out with regional grid operator PJM Interconnection, they also had to defend the arguments themselves.
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April 16, 2026
Ex-ByteDance Exec Fights Perjury Sanction At 9th Circ.
A former ByteDance executive urged the Ninth Circuit Thursday to revive a suit he filed against the TikTok owner after he was fired, saying the case should've been heard in state court and a federal judge had no jurisdiction to order terminating sanctions after finding he perjured himself.
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April 16, 2026
Trump Taps Ret. Coast Guard Rear Admiral As New CDC Chief
President Donald Trump on Thursday nominated Dr. Erica Schwartz, a retired U.S. Coast Guard rear admiral who holds medical and law degrees and served as deputy surgeon general in the first Trump administration, to be the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's next director.
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April 16, 2026
San Diego Alleges Fire Truck-Makers Attempted Monopoly
San Diego has alleged in a federal lawsuit that fire truck manufacturers REV Group and Oshkosh Corp., along with private equity firm American Industrial Partners, orchestrated an anticompetitive scheme to consolidate the market and charge municipalities across the nation inflated prices.
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April 16, 2026
ITC Told Wrongly Claimed Patent Fee Discounts Sink Chip Suit
Semiconductor company Everspin Technologies Inc. has asked the U.S. International Trade Commission to end a memory chip patent suit against it by Avalanche Technology Inc., saying Avalanche's patents are unenforceable because the company wrongly claimed a "small entity" discount on patent fees for years.
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April 16, 2026
CFTC's Selig Pushes Back On Lawmakers' Staffing Concerns
U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chair Michael Selig on Thursday dismissed lawmakers' concerns that his agency may be understaffed for a widening mandate that includes policing prediction markets, and insisted he won't delay rulemaking while he waits for the president to appoint other commissioners.
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April 16, 2026
FERC Aims For June To Act On DOE Data Center Grid Plan
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on Thursday said it will act by the end of June on a controversial U.S. Department of Energy proposal to standardize grid hookup procedures for data centers and other electricity-hungry facilities, two months later than the DOE had requested.
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April 16, 2026
White House Again Ordered To Stop Ballroom Construction
A D.C. federal judge on Thursday clarified his injunction blocking construction on the White House ballroom project, amending his order to specifically stop construction on all aboveground construction but allowing for construction of national security facilities beneath it.
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April 16, 2026
Del. River Regulator Says It Lawfully Extended LNG Permit
The Delaware River Basin Commission and the developer of a proposed liquefied natural gas export terminal asked a New Jersey federal court to toss a suit alleging the commission wrongly renewed a construction permit for a second time, saying the dispute rests on differing grammatical interpretations.
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April 16, 2026
AGs' Win Over Live Nation Leaves DOJ Watching From The Side
Live Nation Entertainment Inc.'s across-the-board trial rout by 34 state attorneys general underscores the ascendancy of state antitrust enforcers looking to fill perceived enforcement gaps left by the U.S. Department of Justice during President Donald Trump's second term.
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April 16, 2026
US, Okla. Tribes Fight DAs' Stay Bid In Jurisdiction Row
Three tribal nations and the federal government are asking a district court to reject a request by two Oklahoma district attorneys to stay a jurisdictional challenge until another dispute with a Tulsa County prosecutor is resolved by the Tenth Circuit, arguing that the appeal is not likely to prevail.
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April 16, 2026
Kalshi Rejects Returning Enforcement Case To State Court
Prediction market platform Kalshi contends that a suit brought against the company by Michigan's attorney general alleging violations of state gambling laws should stay in federal court and not be remanded to state court.
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April 16, 2026
Judge Doubts Broad Shift In Immigration Hearing Access
A D.C. federal judge appeared unconvinced Thursday by a human rights group's claim that the public is getting less access to immigration court hearings in Minnesota during the second Trump administration.
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April 16, 2026
HHS Defends ACA Overhaul Against Cities' Challenge
The Health and Human Services Department is defending sweeping changes to the Affordable Care Act marketplace against attacks from three cities, asking a Maryland federal judge to grant summary judgment and allow the agency to shorten open enrollment, institute tighter income checks and charge a reenrollment verification premium.
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April 16, 2026
FCC Urged To Keep 60 MHz In C-Band Airwaves For Satellites
A public advocacy group has told the Federal Communications Commission it's a good idea to reserve at least 60 megahertz of spectrum in the upper C-band for satellite services as it ponders how big a chunk to auction for wireless.
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April 16, 2026
Conn. Justices Nix Asbestos Widow's 'Double Recovery' Bid
A town and a state agency are entitled to a lien on private asbestos litigation settlements in cases of combined work and home exposures, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled Thursday, blocking a widow from obtaining through lawsuits and worker compensation claims what one justice dubbed a possible "double recovery."
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April 16, 2026
Seattle's COVID-Era Tenant Protections Face Appellate Skeptic
A Washington state appellate judge pushed back Thursday on Seattle's defense of COVID-19-era tenant rights ordinances, observing that the plaintiff landlord may have a stronger Fifth Amendment takings claim than usual because of the "unique" situation of "six regulations passed within a short time period."
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April 16, 2026
Fla. Panel Upholds Ex-Worker's Postclaim Arbitration Deal
A Florida state appellate panel on Wednesday barred a woman from pursuing sexual discrimination allegations against her former employer in court, saying she agreed to arbitrate her claims in a settlement that followed her initial U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission charge.
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April 16, 2026
Telecom Tower Builder Fights Ga. County's Project Rejection
A telecommunications tower builder has sued Georgia's Clayton County after officials rejected its construction request over risk of harm to the community, saying the county's denial lacked evidence for its reasoning.
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April 16, 2026
Equity Residential Cuts $56M Deal In RealPage MDL
A Chicago-based real estate investment trust has reached a $56 million settlement in a sprawling, multidistrict antitrust class action that claims the REIT and multiple landlords used property management software company RealPage Inc.'s revenue management software for rent price-fixing.
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April 16, 2026
Google Says EU Search Data Sharing Plan Raises Concerns
Google has pushed back after European enforcers outlined how they expect the company to share its search data to comply with its obligations as a gatekeeper in the search engine market, saying the measures raise privacy and other concerns.
Editor's Picks
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Trump's Legal Battles
States, federal employee unions, various advocacy groups and several individuals have filed over 220 lawsuits challenging the Trump administration's implementation of executive orders and other initiatives. Law360 has created a database of those lawsuits, separated into categories based on their subject matter.
Expert Analysis
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Adapting To The Shift Toward Ex Parte Patent Challenges
As recent U.S. Patent and Trademark Office developments shift the patent challenge landscape, challengers will need to reconsider long-held assumptions about forum selection for validity challenges, and patent owners should prepare to defend against more ex parte filings, say attorneys at Marshall Gerstein.
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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 Cos. Should Look For As Minn. Plans PFAS Product Ban
As regulators finalize rulemaking for Minnesota's sweeping restrictions on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in consumer and commercial products, manufacturers, importers, distributors and retailers should pay attention — especially to how the pathway for essential use exemptions ends up being defined, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.
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Employer Tips As Calif. Law Rewrites Retention Pay Rules
California's recent enactment of A.B. 692 disrupts how employers structure sign-on bonuses, retention payments and other incentives tied to continued employment, but employers that adjust their compensation strategies can attract and retain talent while managing their compliance risks, say attorneys at Foley & Lardner.
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Opinion
CBP's $166B Tariff Refund Portal Needs 4 Safeguards
Before launching its automated web portal to process tariff-refund disbursements on April 20, U.S. Customs and Border Protection should apply the expensive lessons learned from the pandemic-era employee retention credit, says Peter Gariepy at RubinBrown.
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CFTC Chair's Speech Hints At Innovation-Friendly Policies
Remarks made by Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chair Michael Selig at the Futures Industry Association's conference last month provided the most comprehensive articulation of his regulatory agenda and signaled a shift in the CFTC's regulatory posture, including a rare focus on agency coordination and support for digital asset innovation, say attorneys at Willkie.
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How CFPB Opinion Changes Earned Wage Access Definition
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's recent conclusion that earned wage access is not "credit" for purposes of Regulation Z of the Truth in Lending Act improves on prior guidance on these products in several meaningful ways, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
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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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Microplastics On Water Contaminant List Could Spur Claims
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's proposal to include microplastics in its draft sixth Contaminant Candidate List under the Safe Drinking Water Act could influence consumer fraud claims and enforcement by state attorneys general, as well as claims against manufacturers from entities facing regulatory compliance costs, says Arie Feltman-Frank at Jenner & Block.
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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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Fraud Enforcement, Sentencing Face Unusual Convergence
The Trump administration’s newly created task force to eliminate fraud and the U.S. Sentencing Commission’s recent proposals to scale back certain elements of the federal sentencing framework seem to point in opposite directions, creating a collision of policy priorities that may reshape how fraud cases are charged, negotiated and sentenced for years to come, says David Tarras at Tarras Defense.
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Gender-Expansive Calif. Equal Pay Laws Widen Employer Risk
California's recent amendments to strengthen its Equal Pay Act and Pay Transparency Act aim to shrink the wage gap, not only for women, but also for nonbinary and transgender employees, creating new compliance obligations for employers and increasing their potential exposure, say attorneys at the Jhaveri-Weeks Firm.
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Insights From OppFi Suit On Building Calif. Bank Partnerships
A California state judge’s tentative ruling, walking through business evidence that Utah bank FinWise was not a “rent-a-bank” that fintech firm Opportunity Financial used as a front to dodge interest rate caps on in-state lenders, offers a helpful road map for structuring legally compliant bank-fintech partnerships under California law, say attorneys at Manatt.
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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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Rebuttal
FTC Case Reinforces Established Price Discrimination Rules
Far from redefining price discrimination, as contended by a recent Law360 guest article, the Federal Trade Commission's suit against Southern Glazer's falls squarely within the historical interpretation of the Robinson-Patman Act, says retired attorney Irving Scher.