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Public Policy
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March 30, 2026
Michigan Overtaxes Marijuana Sales, Industry Group Claims
Michigan's new tax on marijuana sales has resulted in an effective tax rate that's higher than the constitution permits, a group representing the cannabis industry claimed in a new lawsuit Monday.
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March 30, 2026
Ex-City Council Member's Daughter Admits To COVID Fraud
The daughter of a former city council member in Charlotte, North Carolina, has copped to filing bogus small-business loan applications for COVID-19 relief funds with her mother and sister, making her the second in the family to reach a plea deal with prosecutors.
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March 30, 2026
Immigration Fee Hikes Voided Over Legal Aid Impact
A D.C. federal judge on Monday vacated six immigration court fee increases unveiled in 2020, finding the Executive Office for Immigration Review failed to consider how the fee spikes would affect the legal services providers like the ones that sued to block them.
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March 30, 2026
Feds Slam Unions' AI Surveillance Challenge
The federal government urged a New York federal court to toss allegations that the Trump administration is using a surveillance system to find viewpoints it doesn't like and use the threat of immigration enforcement to suppress speech, arguing the unions behind the suit lack standing to bring their claims.
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March 30, 2026
Utah Expands Tax Credit For Employer-Provided Child Care
Utah expanded a corporate and individual income tax credit for employer-provided child care to apply to off-site facilities under a bill signed by the governor.
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March 30, 2026
5th Circ. Calls Pharmacy GLP-1 Args 'Tough Pills To Swallow'
A Fifth Circuit panel pushed multiple compounding pharmacies to explain why they should get to compound lucrative drugs used for weight loss, including Ozempic, saying Monday that its options if it sides with the pharmacies are "tough pills to swallow."
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March 30, 2026
NJ Town Says Mall's Sunday Sales Flatly Violate State Law
The New Jersey borough of Paramus urged a state court to not toss its suit against the owner of an East Rutherford mall that allegedly violated state laws that ban retailers from selling specific products on Sundays, saying it has standing to sue because the mall owner and the other defendants disobeying the state laws are economically harming the borough.
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March 30, 2026
Sanofi Claims IP Life Extension Needed For Double Patenting
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board rightly found a Sanofi patent application shouldn't be rejected for obviousness-type double patenting, as it doesn't improperly extend patent life, the French drugmaker and its allies have told U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires.
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March 30, 2026
Trade Court Remands China Solar Duty Calculation Again
The U.S. Department of Commerce must again attempt to justify why it used Romanian figures to value inputs in a Chinese solar cell antidumping duty administrative review when most of its other calculations relied on Malaysian data, according to an opinion published Monday by the U.S. Court of International Trade.
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March 30, 2026
Judge Tosses ESA Challenge Against Nevada Lithium Mine
A Nevada federal judge says the federal government didn't violate the Endangered Species Act in approving a more than 7,100-acre lithium mining project that conservation groups argue will drive a rare wildflower into extinction, finding the decision was not arbitrary or capricious under recent Supreme Court precedent.
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March 30, 2026
Churchill Downs Kicks Texas Betting Fight To Federal Court
A dispute over Texans' ability to bet on out-of-state horse races is headed to federal court after Churchill Downs Inc. booted the case out of state court Monday, arguing that it is clearly a cross-state dispute.
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March 30, 2026
Mich. High Court Takes Up Legislators' Fight Over Stalled Bills
The Michigan Supreme Court has agreed to review an internal tussle between chambers of the state Legislature over nine bills that were passed in 2024 but have not made it to the governor's desk.
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March 30, 2026
'Is It Kafka?' Judge Presses Pentagon On Press Restrictions
A D.C. federal judge requested additional briefing Monday from the Trump administration before deciding whether to toss the U.S. Department of Defense's revised rules restricting journalists' access to the Pentagon but said some new allegations from reporters read like the revisions came from a Franz Kafka novel.
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March 30, 2026
FTC Says Anesthesia Group Cheered While Raising Prices
The Federal Trade Commission pushed back against a bid from U.S. Anesthesia Partners to avoid facing trial on claims that it monopolized the market through a rollup strategy, saying the company celebrated its ability to dramatically increase prices.
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March 30, 2026
IT Worker Fights Early Exit Bid In Pantsless Mayor Video Suit
A former town IT worker has urged a North Carolina federal judge not to throw out his suit claiming he was fired for reporting security footage of the mayor pantsless in town hall, arguing the complaint sufficiently connects the town's top officials to the decision to terminate him.
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March 30, 2026
Fla. Judge Orders Atty Access At Everglades Detention Center
A Florida federal judge is ordering state and federal U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials to facilitate attorney access for noncitizens detained at the informal Everglades detention facility, finding that there are several existing barriers preventing confidential attorney-client communications.
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March 30, 2026
WTO Meeting Ends Without Agreement On Proposed Changes
The World Trade Organization's ministerial conference in Cameroon closed without an agreement on changes sought by the U.S. and other major economies, though 66 members agreed on an interim arrangement on e-commerce rules.
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March 30, 2026
NC County Accused Of Withholding Landfill PFAS Records
A North Carolina county was accused in state court of violating public records law by either not producing — or producing in an inadequate manner — records related to the presence of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substance (PFAS) pollution in and around the county landfill.
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March 30, 2026
ITC Finding Tees Up Duties For Imported Float Glass
The U.S. International Trade Commission on Monday found Chinese and Malaysian float glass entering the U.S. has harmed domestic producers, setting up the introduction of steep antidumping and countervailing duties.
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March 30, 2026
Boston Police Commissioner Beats Demoted Deputy's Suit
Boston's police commissioner defeated a civil rights suit brought by a deputy who was demoted for accepting a post with an oversight commission, as a federal judge ruled Monday that taking a gig with a state agency is not constitutionally protected.
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March 30, 2026
Navajo Nation Fears For Voting Rights With SAVE America Act
A Navajo Nation committee has passed legislation that formally establishes the tribe's opposition to the SAVE America Act over concerns that the legislation will disproportionately affect Indigenous communities across the country, including a significant blow to elders who often lack birth certificates.
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March 30, 2026
Exchanges Are First Line In CFTC Prediction Market Policing
As the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission insists it will be the primary cop for the growing expanse of prediction markets, experts said the agency is signaling that its first line of defense will be the internal enforcement programs of registrants like Kalshi.
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March 30, 2026
Brief Backs Maryland Bid To Halt ICE Warehouse Conversion
A collection of local officials, religious leaders and civil rights groups is urging a federal judge to extend a pause on work to convert a Maryland warehouse into an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center that could hold up to 1,500 people a day.
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March 30, 2026
Md. Officials Immune In Challenge To Pot, Hemp Rules
A Maryland federal judge has thrown out a challenge by hemp sellers, farmers and a consumer to Maryland's new rules requiring a cannabis license to sell intoxicating hemp products, finding that the state officials have sovereign immunity.
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March 30, 2026
Justices Won't Examine Mich. Immunity In Pipeline Row
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to review a Sixth Circuit decision that greenlighted Enbridge Energy LP's lawsuit challenging Michigan's decision to revoke an easement for the company's controversial Line 5 oil and gas pipeline.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
Bridging The Bench And Bars To Uphold The Rule Of Law
In a moment when the judiciary faces unprecedented partisan attacks and public trust in our courts is fragile, and with the stakes being especially high for mass tort cases, attorneys on both sides of the bench have a responsibility to restore confidence in our justice system, say Bryan Aylstock at Aylstock Witkin and Kiley Grombacher at Bradley/Grombacher.
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State And Int'l Standards May Supplant EPA's GHG Rule
The U.S. Environmental Protection agency's recent repeal of its 2009 finding that greenhouse gases endanger public health will likely increase regulatory uncertainty, as states attempt to fill the breach with their own regulatory regimes and some companies shift focus to international climate benchmarks instead, say attorneys at ArentFox Schiff.
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Opinion
Federal Preemption In AI And Robotics Is Essential
Federal preemption offers a unified front at a decisive moment that is essential for safeguarding America's economic edge in artificial intelligence and robotics against global rivals, harnessing trillions of dollars in potential, securing high-skilled jobs through human augmentation, and defending technological sovereignty, says Steven Weisburd at Shook Hardy.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: What Cross-Selling Truly Takes
Early-career attorneys may struggle to introduce clients to practitioners in other specialties, but cross-selling becomes easier once they know why it’s vital to their first years of practice, which mistakes to avoid and how to anticipate clients' needs, say attorneys at Moses & Singer.
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What 'Precedential' Decisions Reveal About USPTO's Direction
Significant procedural changes at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office last year have reshaped patent litigation and business strategies and created uncertainty around the USPTO's governing rules, but an accounting of the decisions the office designated as precedential and informative sheds light on the agency's new approach, say attorneys at Sterne Kessler.
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OCC Mortgage Escrow Rules Add Fuel To Preemption Debate
Two rules proposed in December by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which would preempt state laws requiring national banks to pay interest on mortgage escrow accounts, are a bold new federal gambit in the debate over how much authority Congress intended to hand state regulators under the Dodd-Frank Act, says Christian Hancock at Bradley Arant.
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CFIUS Initiative May Smooth Way For Some Foreign Investors
A new program that will allow certain foreign investors to be prevetted and admitted to fast-track approval by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States will likely have tangible benefits for investors participating in competitive M&A, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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When Tokenized Real-World Assets Collide With Real World
The city of Detroit's ongoing case against Real Token, alleging building code and safety violations across over 400 Detroit residential properties, highlights the brave new world we face when real estate assets are tokenized via blockchain technology — and what happens to the human tenants caught in the middle, say Biying Cheng and Cornell law professor David Reiss.
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Drafting Tech Patents After USPTO's Eligibility Memos
Two recent U.S. Patent and Trademark Office memos on subject matter eligibility declarations provide an evidentiary playbook for artificial intelligence and software patent applications, highlighting how targeted, stand‑alone SMEDs that present objective, claim‑anchored facts can improve patent application outcomes, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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How Lenders Can Be Ready For Disparate Impact Variabilities
Amid state attorneys general's and regulators' mixed messaging around disparate impact liability, financial institutions can take several steps to minimize risk, including ensuring compliance management aligns with current law and avoiding decisions that impede growth in business and service, says Elena Babinecz at Baker Donelson.
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Wage-Based H-1B Rule Amplifies Lottery Risks For Law Firms
Under the wage-based H-1B lottery rule taking effect Feb. 27, law firms planning to hire noncitizen law graduates awaiting bar admission should consider their options, as the work performed by such candidates may sit at the intersection of multiple occupational classifications with differing chances of success, says Jun Li at Reid & Wise.
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Series
Judges On AI: Practical Use Cases In Chambers
U.S. Magistrate Judge Allison Goddard in the Southern District of California discusses how she uses generative artificial intelligence tools in chambers to make work more efficient and effective — from editing jury instructions for clarity to summarizing key documents.
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Opinion
Criminalizing Officials' Speech Erodes Trust In Justice System
Federal prosecutors reportedly investigating whether Minnesota officials’ public statements illegally impeded immigration enforcement is a dangerous overextension of obstruction law that would criminalize dissent and sow public distrust in law enforcement, say Marc Levin and Khalil Cumberbatch at the Council on Criminal Justice.
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Opinion
Corporations Should Think Twice About Mandatory Arbitration
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent acceptance of mandatory arbitration provisions in corporate charters and bylaws does not make them wise, as the current system of class actions still offers critical advantages for corporations, says Mohsen Manesh at the University of Oregon School of Law.
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A Closer Look At California Financial Regulator's 2026 Agenda
California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation Commissioner KC Mohseni in recent remarks demonstrated the regulator's growing importance amid the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's retreat by debuting expansive goals for 2026, including finalizing rulemaking for the state's digital asset law and expanding enforcement authority around consumer complaints, says John Kimble at Hinshaw.