Public Policy

  • March 13, 2026

    DC Judge Blocks Subpoenas Targeting Fed's Powell

    A Washington, D.C., federal judge has blocked a pair of subpoenas tied to the U.S. Department of Justice's criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, finding they were improperly issued with the aim of harassing the central bank chief in a ruling that is reverberating on Capitol Hill.

  • March 13, 2026

    Court Software Co. Dumped Docs At Last Minute, Class Says

    A class of North Carolinians who say the state's new digital court system subjected them to wrongful arrests and extended jail time have told a federal judge that the defense produced "virtually nothing" over five months of discovery, only to bury them in hundreds of thousands of documents at the eleventh hour.

  • March 13, 2026

    FTC Ditching In-House Challenges May Be Seen In Close Calls

    The Federal Trade Commission has signaled that it plans to start challenging mergers directly in federal court, rather than through its in-house process, and while the move is not expected to sway the outcome of most cases, it could influence the close ones.

  • March 13, 2026

    2nd Circ. Revives Sri Lankan's Asylum Bid Despite Terror Bar

    The Board of Immigration Appeals should've examined whether a Sri Lankan national was otherwise eligible to avoid removal after finding he'd materially supported a terrorist organization, the Second Circuit ruled, saying the BIA's approach "renders the statutory exemption process a mirage."

  • March 13, 2026

    Texas Appeals Court Upholds Tax Refund For Chemical Co.

    A Texas chemical manufacturing company is owed a sales and use tax refund on the reusable containers used to ship its products to customers, a state appeals court panel ruled, upholding a trial court order.

  • March 13, 2026

    EPA Aims To Lift Biden-Era Ethylene Oxide Limits

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Friday proposed rolling back limits on emissions of ethylene oxide, a carcinogenic chemical used in the sterilization of medical devices.

  • March 13, 2026

    OECD Business Group Calls For Further Pillar 2 Planning

    The OECD's business stakeholder group on Friday called for "continued refinement" of Pillar Two readiness plans to ensure a smooth application of the 15% global minimum tax on corporate profits. 

  • March 12, 2026

    9th Circ. Partially Lifts Block On Calif. Kids' Privacy Law

    The Ninth Circuit on Thursday scrapped part of an injunction halting a groundbreaking California law requiring social media platforms to bolster privacy protections for children, finding that the tech trade group behind the lawsuit wasn't likely to succeed on its First Amendment challenge to the statute's coverage definition and age estimation mandate.

  • March 12, 2026

    Texas Panel Unsure Beto O'Rourke's Fundraising Row Is Over

    A Texas appellate court hinted Thursday that a bid by former Democratic U.S. Rep. Robert Francis "Beto" O'Rourke to erase the remains of Attorney General Ken Paxton's challenge to his political fundraising may be muddled by a contempt request that's still pending despite the state having gotten the substantive relief it sought.

  • March 12, 2026

    DC Circ. Spends Hours Debating 'Same' Generic Label Reqs

    The D.C. Circuit spent more than three hours Thursday going round with Vanda Pharmaceuticals and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration about whether the label for a generic sleep-wake disorder medication is "the same" as the branded one because it doesn't include Braille.

  • March 12, 2026

    Colo. Panel Clarifies Workers Comp Law On Maintenance Care

    In interpreting the Colorado Workers' Compensation Act, the Colorado Court of Appeals ruled for the first time Thursday that employers and their insurers cannot limit maintenance medical benefits to any specific treatment in a final admission of liability.

  • March 12, 2026

    Fed's Bowman Previews Plan To Rewrite Bank Capital Rules

    Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said Thursday that federal regulators will move next week to propose a sweeping overhaul of U.S. bank capital rules, previewing changes that are expected to result in a "modest" net easing for larger banks.

  • March 12, 2026

    Lawmakers Seek Clarity On Trump's Stock Buyback Order

    Four Democratic lawmakers have called on President Donald Trump and U.S. Department of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to provide clarity on how they plan to enforce a recent executive order barring defense contractors from buying back their stock or paying shareholder dividends if they are underperforming on their contracts. 

  • March 12, 2026

    Piracy Tops List Of Worries In Next-Generation TV Changeover

    Broadcasters have a lot on their plates as they move to the next TV standard, but chief among their worries will be protecting content from piracy, a security group formed by the major networks told the Federal Communications Commission.

  • March 12, 2026

    Beef Up Telecom Networks To Power AI, Tech Experts Say

    Sprawling artificial intelligence data centers will require larger shares of U.S. energy consumption in the coming years, but telecom networks also need more capacity and resilience if the U.S. wants to fuel an AI boom, a think tank said Thursday.

  • March 12, 2026

    State Dept. Official Tapped To Run Parent Of Voice Of America

    President Donald Trump tapped a U.S. Department of State official to head the U.S. Agency for Global Media Thursday, one day after his administration told a Washington, D.C., federal judge that no one has been running the agency for months and that no succession plan is in place.

  • March 12, 2026

    Wash. Lawmakers Pass Bill On Worker Eligibility Inspections

    The Washington State Legislature has passed a bill requiring employers to provide notice to their employees if the federal government requests records relating to their work eligibility. 

  • March 12, 2026

    NJ AG Fines Firm $375K For Lax Fraud Prevention Procedures

    Broker-dealer Network 1 Financial Securities Inc. will pay nearly $400,000 to settle claims from the New Jersey attorney general that its procedures related to anti-money laundering, customer identity verification and market abuse prevention were ineffectively established and performed.

  • March 12, 2026

    Ga. Justices Say City's Immunity Nixes $33M Crash Verdict

    The Georgia Supreme Court on Thursday vacated a nearly $33 million verdict that a city was ordered to pay to a college student's family after the car the student was driving crashed into a roadside planter, ruling the city's roadway hazard liability largely ends at the road's shoulder.

  • March 12, 2026

    Tariff Refund System Taking Shape, US Customs Tells CIT

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection is making progress developing a system for importers to claim refunds for the global tariff regime struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court, an official told the U.S. Court of International Trade on Thursday.

  • March 12, 2026

    US Chamber Report Warns Of Risks To IP Protection

    While the U.S. has ranked at the top of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's list measuring how countries worldwide are enforcing intellectual property laws, the group said problems with free trade agreements and efforts to reduce pharmaceutical prices could cause problems on the horizon domestically.

  • March 12, 2026

    Democrats Vow To Oversee DOJ's Reported Binance Inquiry

    Three Democratic U.S. senators said Thursday that they will oversee a reported investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice into potential Iran sanctions violations carried out on the cryptocurrency exchange Binance.

  • March 12, 2026

    NY-NJ Commission's Hudson Tunnel Funds Suit Mostly Moot

    The U.S. Court of Federal Claims said Thursday that most of the Gateway Development Commission's claims against the Trump administration are now moot since the federal government recently released millions in previously withheld funds for New York and New Jersey's Hudson Tunnel Project.

  • March 12, 2026

    Idaho Says Director Immune In THC Child Abuse Registry Suit

    The director of Idaho Health and Welfare is asking a federal court to throw out claims from two women alleging the state violated their constitutional rights by putting them on the state's child abuse registry for their use of cannabis while pregnant, saying the director is immune and the state's rules satisfy due process.

  • March 12, 2026

    NFL Alumni Argues Biotech's Suit Lacks Contractual Basis

    The National Football League's largest alumni group is angling to quash a biotech company's breach of contract lawsuit, explaining that details in the suit on the termination of their partnership for a vaccine education program are thin.

Expert Analysis

  • Series

    Hosting Exchange Students Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Opening my home to foreign exchange students makes me a better lawyer not just because prioritizing visiting high schoolers forces me to hone my organization and time management skills but also because sharing the study-abroad experience with newcomers and locals reconnects me to my community, says Alison Lippa at Nicolaides Fink.

  • Postconviction Law In 2026: A Recalibration, Not A Revolution

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    As the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to issue decisions in several federal postconviction cases in the coming months, the justices appear focused on restoring coherence to a system in which sentencing modification, collateral review and finality increasingly overlap, and success for practitioners will depend on strategic clarity, say attorneys at the Law Offices of Alan Ellis.

  • OCC's New Fee Clearance Shows Further Ease Around Crypto

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    The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's recent holding that banks can use crypto-assets to pay certain blockchain network fees shows that the OCC is further warming to the idea that organizations are using new methods to do "the very old business of banking," say attorneys at Jones Day.

  • How SEC Civil Penalties Became Arbitrary: The Framework

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    An examination of how the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has recently applied guidelines governing the imposition of monetary penalties in enforcement actions shows that civil penalty awards in many cases are inconsistent with the rules established to structure them, say David Slovick at Kopecky Schumacher and Phil Lieberman at Vanderbilt Law.

  • How A 1947 Tugboat Ruling May Shape Work Product In AI Era

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    Rapid advances in generative artificial intelligence test work-product principles first articulated in the U.S. Supreme Court’s nearly 80-year-old Hickman v. Taylor decision, as courts and ethics bodies confront whether disclosure of attorneys’ AI prompts and outputs would reveal their thought processes, say Larry Silver and Sasha Burton at Langsam Stevens.

  • Opinion

    Faulty Legal Assumptions Obscure Police Self-Defense Law

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    As illustrated by the public commentary surrounding the shooting of Renee Nicole Good by an immigration agent, lawyers sometimes have mistaken assumptions about the applicability of self-defense when law enforcement officers deploy deadly force, but the governing legal standard is clear, says Markus Funk at White & Case.

  • Why 2026 Could Be A Bright Year For US Solar

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    2025 was a record-setting year for utility-scale solar power deployment in the U.S., a trend that shows no signs of abating, so the question for 2026 is whether permitting, interconnection, and state and federal policies will allow the industry to grow fast enough to meet demand, say attorneys at Beveridge & Diamond.

  • 2026 Int'l Arbitration Trends: Tariffs Drive Transformation

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    In 2025, the Trump administration's sweeping tariffs triggered an unprecedented wave of trade-related disputes — and this, along with evolving M&A practices, the challenges of enforcing arbitral awards against sovereign states, and the role of emerging technologies, will continue to drive international arbitration trends this year, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • What Productivity EO May Mean For Defense Industrial Base

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    President Donald Trump’s recent executive order barring stock buybacks and dividend payments by "underperforming" defense contractors represents a significant policy shift from traditional oversight of the defense industrial base toward direct intervention in corporate decision-making, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • What's New In ISS' Benchmark Voting Policy Updates For 2026

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    Companies should audit their governance structures and disclosures to prepare for the upcoming proxy season in light of Institutional Shareholder Services' 2026 policy updates, which include tighter guardrails on capital structures and director compensation, and more disclosure-driven assessments of environmental and social shareholder proposals, say attorneys at Fenwick.

  • Navigating Privilege Law Patchwork In Dual-Purpose Comms

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    Three years after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to resolve a circuit split in In re: Grand Jury, federal courts remain split as to when attorney-client privilege applies to dual-purpose legal and business communications, and understanding the fragmented landscape is essential for managing risks, say attorneys at Covington.

  • AG Watch: Calif. Fills Federal Consumer Protection Void

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    California's consumer protection efforts seem to be intensifying as federal oversight wanes, with Attorney General Rob Bonta recently taking actions related to buy now, pay later products, credit reporting and medical debt, consumer credit discrimination, and the use of artificial intelligence in consumer services, say attorneys at Cooley.

  • AI-Driven Harassment Poses New Risks For Employers

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    Two recent cases show that deepfakes and other artificial intelligence‑generated content are emerging as a powerful new mechanism for workplace harassment, and employers should take a proactive approach to reduce their liability as AI continues to reshape workplace dynamics, say attorneys at Littler.

  • Drilling Down Into The Uncertain Future Of Venezuelan Energy

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    Several key issues will inform whether, when and how U.S. businesses enter, reenter or expand operations in Venezuela — including sanctions relief, economic incentives, resolution of past expropriations, questions about the country's political outlook, and broader trends and conditions in the global energy market, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • What Changed For Healthcare Transaction Law In 2025

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    Though much of the legislation introduced last year to expand state scrutiny of healthcare transactions did not pass, investors should pay close attention to the overarching trends, which are likely to continue in this year's legislative sessions, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.

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