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Public Policy
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March 03, 2026
Copyright Licensing Org. Unveils AI-Use Options For Colleges
The Copyright Clearance Center on Tuesday unveiled a new content licensing option for artificial intelligence systems used by colleges and universities.
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March 03, 2026
DOJ Turns To 2nd Circ. In Bid To Revive James Subpoenas
The U.S. Department of Justice is urging the Second Circuit to revive an investigation into New York Attorney General Letitia James launched by a federal prosecutor later found to have been serving unlawfully, arguing the acting U.S. attorney for the Northern District of New York had been rightfully appointed when he launched the probe.
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March 03, 2026
Philadelphia Nonprofit Sued Over Employee Info Hack
The Philadelphia Corporation for Aging has been hit with privacy claims by a prospective class of employees alleging the nonprofit's failure to properly safeguard their confidential information might have led to it being stolen by cybercriminals during a data breach in July.
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March 03, 2026
NY Judicial Watchdog Says Complaints Break Record Again
New York's judicial watchdog has reported a record number of new complaints filed against judges for the fourth year in a row in 2025.
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March 03, 2026
Judge Won't Rely On DOJ 'Decency' In Trans Records Case
A Pennsylvania federal judge blocked the U.S. Department of Justice from getting patient-specific records of gender-affirming care at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Children's Hospital, excoriating the government's request and its reasoning for demanding the data.
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March 03, 2026
Tenn. Lawmakers OK Expanding Assessment Division's Duties
Tennessee would expand the duties of the state comptroller's office's division of property assessments under a bill approved by state lawmakers and headed to the governor.
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March 03, 2026
FTC Makes 'Significant Progress' In OptumRx, Caremark Talks
Federal Trade Commission staffers got more time Tuesday for settlement talks with OptumRx and Caremark that could end the agency's case accusing the pharmacy benefit managers of inflating insulin prices, with staffers citing considerable progress in the weeks since inking a deal with Express Scripts.
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March 03, 2026
DOJ Nixes Plan To Drop Law Firm EO Appeals In About-Face
A day after informing the D.C. Circuit that it would no longer seek to defend the executive orders issued by President Donald Trump against four law firms, the U.S. Department of Justice reversed course Tuesday, requesting permission to withdraw its motion to voluntarily dismiss the appeals.
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March 03, 2026
Feds Lose Fight To End NY Congestion Pricing
A Manhattan federal judge ruled Tuesday that the U.S. Department of Transportation acted unlawfully when it purportedly terminated a federal agreement that gave New York's congestion pricing the green light, handing the state a decisive victory against the Trump administration's efforts to eliminate the program.
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March 03, 2026
Live Nation Tells Jury It's A 'Fierce' But Legal Competitor
Live Nation does not illegally pressure concert venues or artists to use Ticketmaster and its other services, its counsel told a Manhattan federal jury Tuesday, calling the entertainment giant a "fierce, lawful, legitimate" competitor as a closely watched antitrust trial opened.
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March 02, 2026
High Court Blocks California's Gender Privacy Rule
The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday reinstated a lower court order that barred California public schools from allowing transgender and gender-nonconforming students to use different names and pronouns at school without their parents' knowledge or consent while the order is appealed.
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March 02, 2026
Lawmakers Urged To Rein In Debt Settlement Industry
Lender trade groups on Friday urged Congress to tighten federal oversight of the debt settlement industry, warning of significant potential harm from companies that they said are increasingly pitching consumers on "strategic default" as a path to financial relief.
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March 02, 2026
E-Rate Could Cut Some Regulatory Fat, FCC Told
While the Federal Communications Commission is looking for regulations to get rid of, one organization said it has a list of options for the agency to consider when it comes to the E-Rate subsidy program.
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March 02, 2026
DC Judge Pauses Advance Notice Rule For ICE Facility Visits
A D.C. federal judge paused a Trump administration policy requiring lawmakers to give a seven-day advance notice for oversight visits to immigration detention centers, ruling Monday the lawmakers have shown irreparable injury absent relief given the need for "real-time, on-the-ground information" about facility conditions and detainees' statuses.
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March 02, 2026
Dems Probe Trump 'Fixer' In Kirkland Pro Bono Deal
Top Democratic legislators who are investigating the legality of pro bono agreements some BigLaw firms made with President Donald Trump demanded Monday that Kirkland & Ellis LLP provide information about the involvement of Boris Epshteyn, whom the lawmakers called Trump's "legal fixer and co-conspirator to overturn the 2020 presidential election."
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March 02, 2026
9th Circ. Says Malibu, Culver City Filed Air Traffic Suits Too Late
The Ninth Circuit on Monday rejected challenges from Malibu and Culver City of the Federal Aviation Administration's flight pattern adjustments in Southern California, saying the municipalities waited too long to challenge the 2016 air traffic revisions.
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March 02, 2026
Wireless Co. Asks For FCC Waiver Of Handset 'Unlocking'
Since the FCC recently let Verizon out of a requirement that made the company open its cellphones to other carriers after 60 days, it's only fair that a smaller carrier similarly bound because of a spectrum-leasing agreement with Verizon be let out as well, that company says.
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March 02, 2026
Hemp Cos. Lose Challenge To Connecticut Regulations
A Connecticut federal judge has dismissed a suit from a group of hemp companies alleging the state's new hemp laws violate the 2018 Farm Bill that legalized hemp, saying the sellers haven't shown that they are preempted by the federal law.
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March 02, 2026
Texas AG Says Gender Care Ban Includes Mental Health
Mental-health professionals in Texas risk losing their licenses and public funding if they "facilitate" the gender-affirming care banned under state law, said an opinion issued Friday by Attorney General Ken Paxton, which calls them the "gatekeepers."
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March 02, 2026
Ulta Case Judge Finds Wash. Antispam Law Constitutional
Weeks after a similar ruling across the state, another Washington federal judge has ruled that the state's antispam statute is constitutional and comports with U.S. law, allowing customers to move forward with their proposed class action accusing beauty retailer Ulta of bombarding shoppers with misleading email advertisements.
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March 02, 2026
Epic Must Face Price Conspiracy Claims Over Gallstone Drug
Epic Pharma LLC must face the majority of suits by hospitals, insurers and other drug purchasers alleging it conspired to raise and control the price of gallstone medication ursodiol, a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled Monday.
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March 02, 2026
Trucking Group Defends $21M Atty Fee Bid In RI Tolls Fight
The commercial trucking industry's lead trade group has argued it's entitled to $21 million in attorney fees as it staunchly objected to a Rhode Island federal magistrate judge's recommendation that its request be slashed to $2.7 million in long-running litigation over the state's truck tolling program.
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March 02, 2026
4 Things That Likely Sealed Fate Of SCOTUSblog Founder
When 12 "guilty" verdicts were read aloud by the jury in SCOTUSblog founder Thomas Goldstein's tax evasion and mortgage fraud trial last week, it was the culmination of a 16-day trial that took jurors deep into Goldstein's ultra high-stakes poker playing, his lavish lifestyle and his former law firm's accounting. Here, Law360 looks at four key pieces of evidence that likely moved jurors to their decision.
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March 02, 2026
Refugees Seek To Block DHS' Refugee Detentions Nationally
A group of refugees asked a Massachusetts federal court to stop the Trump administration's policy allowing immigration authorities to detain an estimated 100,000 refugees across the U.S. who haven't secured green cards, saying it violates their civil liberties.
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March 02, 2026
Scientists Slam 'Political Attack' On Judges' Reference Book
Partisan politics is interfering with a reference manual judges routinely rely on to understand complicated scientific evidence, according to more than two dozen contributors who on Monday raised the alarm about Republican attorneys general successfully lobbying for a chapter on climate change to be deleted.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
US Cybersecurity Strategy Must Include Immigration Reform
Cyberthreats are escalating while the cybersecurity workforce remains constrained due to a lack of clear standards for national-interest determinations, processing backlogs affecting professionals who protect critical public systems and visa allocations that do not reflect real-world demands, says Rusten Hurd at Colombo & Hurd.
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How 2025 Executive Orders Are Reshaping Consumer Finance
In 2025, President Donald Trump used executive orders to initiate a reversal of policies on fair lending, urge agencies to use enforcement and supervisory tools to police debanking, and reduce consumer financial regulation — and the resulting flurry of deregulatory activity will likely continue in 2026, says Elizabeth Tucci at Goodwin.
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A Look At EEOC Actions In 2025 And What's Next
President Donald Trump issued several executive orders last year that reshaped policy at the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and with the administration now controlling a majority of the commission, the EEOC may align itself fully with orders addressing disparate impact and transgender issues, say attorneys at Jones Day.
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FDA's AI Deployment Brings New Potential And Risks
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's recent announcement about making agentic artificial intelligence tools available to agency employees may portend accelerated regulatory timelines and lower costs for drug companies and consumers, but potential errors and biases will necessitate additional safeguards, says Angela Silva at Lewis Brisbois.
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3 Key Takeaways From Planned Rescheduling Of Cannabis
An executive order reviving cannabis rescheduling represents a monumental change for the industry and, while the substance will remain illegal at the federal level, introduces several benefits, including improving state-legal cannabis operators' tax treatment, lowering the industry's legal risk profile, and leaving state-regulated markets largely intact, say attorneys at Dentons.
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OFAC Sanctions Will Intensify Amid Global Tensions In 2026
The Office of Foreign Assets Control will ramp up its targeting of companies in the private equity, venture capital, real estate and legal markets in 2026, in keeping with the aggressive foreign policy approach embraced by the Trump administration in 2025, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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6 Issues That May Follow The 340B Rebate Pilot Challenge
Though the Health Resources and Services Administration withdrew a pending case to reconsider the controversial 340B rebate pilot program, a number of crucial considerations remain, including the likelihood of a rework and questions about what that rework might look like, say attorneys at Spencer Fane.
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Wis. Sanctions Order May Shake Up Securities Class Actions
A Wisconsin federal court’s recent decision to impose sanctions on a plaintiffs law firm for filing a frivolous Private Securities Litigation Reform Act complaint in Toft v. Harbor Diversified may cause both plaintiffs and defendants law firms to reconsider certain customary practices in securities class actions, says Jonathan Richman at Brown Rudnick.
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5 E-Discovery Predictions For 2026 And Beyond
2026 will likely be shaped by issues ranging from artificial intelligence regulatory turbulence to potential evidence rule changes, and e-discovery professionals will need to understand how to effectively guide the responsible and defensible adoption of emerging tools, while also ensuring effective safeguards, say attorneys at Littler.
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Reinventing Bank Risk Mgmt. After 2025's Cartel Crackdown
The Trump administration's 2025 designation of certain transnational drug cartels as terrorists means that banks must adapt to a narrowing margin of error in their customer screening and transaction assessments by treating financial crime prevention as a continuous and cross-enterprise concern with national security implications, says Jack Harrington at Bradley Arant.
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How Developers Can Harness New Texas Zoning Framework
A Texas law introducing a new zoning framework has the potential to unlock meaningful multifamily development opportunities, but developers and their project teams should follow four steps to help identify how affected cities are interpreting and implementing the new law, says Angela Hunt at Munsch Hardt.
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Where States Jumped In When SEC Stepped Back In 2025
The state regulators that picked up the slack when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission scaled back enforcement last year should not be underestimated as they continue to aggressively police areas where the SEC has lost interest and probe industries where SEC leadership has actively declined to intervene, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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2026 Enforcement Trends To Expect In Maritime And Int'l Trade
The maritime and international trade community should expect U.S. federal enforcement to ramp up in 2026, particularly via Office of Foreign Asset Control shipping sanctions, accelerating interagency investigations of trade fraud, and U.S. Coast Guard narcotics and pollution inspections, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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2026 State AI Bills That Could Expand Liability, Insurance Risk
State bills legislating artificial intelligence that are expected to pass in 2026 will reshape the liability landscape for all companies incorporating AI solutions into their business operations, as any novel private rights of action authorized under AI-related statutes signal expanding exposures, say attorneys at Wiley.
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Streamlining Product Liability MDLs With AI And Rule 16.1
With newly effective Rule 16.1 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure providing enhanced guidance on multidistrict litigation and the sophistication of artificial intelligence continuing to advance, parties have the opportunity to better confront the significant data challenges presented by product liability MDLs, say attorneys at Hollingsworth.