Public Policy

  • May 07, 2025

    Durbin Seeks Probe Of 'Disturbing' Pizza Deliveries To Judges

    The ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee wants to know what the Trump administration is doing about reports of threatening pizza deliveries sent to federal judges and their families, amid widespread criticism that the administration's own rhetoric is fueling those types of threats.

  • May 07, 2025

    Muscogee Nation Court To Hear Citizenship Case Arguments

    The Muscogee (Creek) Nation Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in June in a dispute over whether descendants of those once enslaved by the tribe are entitled to citizenship after a nearly yearlong pause in the case.

  • May 07, 2025

    Ex-DOJ Attys Launch DC Firm Focused On Federal Workers

    Two former U.S. Department of Justice attorneys who recently left their government positions have launched a Washington, D.C.-based firm they say will fight the Trump administration's efforts "to dismantle the federal workforce."

  • May 07, 2025

    Developer Fights NJ Power Broker's Bid To Nix Civil RICO Suit

    A Camden, New Jersey, real estate developer is fighting to keep alive his civil racketeering suit against South Jersey power broker George Norcross, arguing in New Jersey state court the recent dismissal of a related indictment against Norcross "changes nothing" in the civil litigation.

  • May 07, 2025

    Wyden Urges Probe Of White House Use Of TeleMessage App

    Senate Finance Committee ranking member Ron Wyden, D-Ore., sent a letter Tuesday to Attorney General Pam Bondi requesting an immediate investigation of the "serious threat to U.S. national security" posed by White House personnel using TeleMessage, an app that archives Signal messages.

  • May 07, 2025

    NJ Anti-SLAPP Fee Shift Applies In Federal Court, Judge Says

    A New Jersey federal judge held that the Garden State anti-SLAPP law's fee-shifting provision applies in federal court, ruling that a blogger sued for defamation by the CEO of a company that helps retiring athletes find new careers can recover attorney fees and costs if he can successfully dismiss the complaint.

  • May 07, 2025

    6th Circ. Skeptical Of US In Tax Court Deadline Case

    Sixth Circuit judges expressed skepticism of the U.S. government's claim that the 90-day deadline to petition the U.S. Tax Court is inflexible, with one judge saying during oral arguments Wednesday in a woman's case challenging the rule that the U.S. Supreme Court seemed to back her.

  • May 07, 2025

    Mass. Justices May Bless Use Of High Bail To Block Removal

    Justices on Massachusetts' highest court appeared reluctant on Wednesday to second-guess a lower court's decision to dramatically increase the bail of a defendant facing imminent deportation solely to keep him in the state for trial.

  • May 07, 2025

    Texas Judge Among 6 Indicted For Alleged Vote Harvesting

    A Texas county judge is among the six individuals facing charges over an alleged vote harvesting scheme related to the 2022 election, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton announced on Wednesday.

  • May 07, 2025

    Conn. Town, State End Feud Over Affordable Housing Credits

    The Connecticut town of New Canaan has agreed to drop its suit against the state's Department of Housing, which was accused in state court of wrongfully rejecting the town's bid for affordable housing credits and a development moratorium.

  • May 07, 2025

    Obama Admin Secretary Johnson To Retire From Paul Weiss

    Former Homeland Security secretary under President Barack Obama Jeh Johnson is planning to retire from Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP at the end of June, leaving his post as co-chair of cybersecurity at the law firm and taking up a co-chair position on Columbia University's board of trustees, according to a recent announcement.

  • May 07, 2025

    NC Top Court Candidate Concedes After 6-Month Showdown

    Republican candidate Judge Jefferson Griffin on Wednesday conceded the North Carolina Supreme Court race to Democratic incumbent Justice Allison Riggs on the heels of a federal judge's decision declaring his efforts to retroactively invalidate votes unconstitutional.

  • May 07, 2025

    Trump Taps Assistant US Atty To Join EEOC

    President Donald Trump has nominated an assistant U.S. attorney in Florida to fill one of the three open seats on the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

  • May 06, 2025

    Dems Exit Hearing After Calling For Crypto Conflict Limits

    House Democrats continued to call for coming digital asset legislation to limit potential conflicts of interest in light of the Trump family's crypto ventures at a Tuesday joint hearing between the financial services and agriculture committees that saw some members walk out in opposition.

  • May 06, 2025

    HUD Says Suit To Block Fund Cuts Belongs In Claims Court

    The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development urged a Washington federal judge on Tuesday to reject emergency relief sought by San Francisco, Boston, New York and King County, Washington, to block the Trump administration from slashing millions of dollars of homelessness assistance grants, saying federal court lacks jurisdiction. 

  • May 06, 2025

    Colo. Judge Wary Pausing Dam Construction Can't Be Done

    A Colorado federal judge said at the end of a daylong hearing Tuesday that she still had not heard what she needed to decide if further construction is necessary to ensure a partially constructed dam won't create public safety risks, after she had previously halted the project for further environmental review.

  • May 06, 2025

    Ruling Doesn't Bind FERC Auction Approval, DC Circ. Told

    A Federal Energy Regulatory Commission determination that a court ruling required it to let a grid operator proceed with a flawed electricity capacity auction cannot be squared with its duty to modify unjust or unreasonable rates, consumer advocates and public utilities told the D.C. Circuit.

  • May 06, 2025

    Mobile Cos. Ramp Up Call For Spectrum, But Face Hurdles

    The nation's mobile service providers on Tuesday pushed for more midband spectrum to fuel the wireless industry, even as key policymakers worried Congress could act too hastily to commercialize airwaves the military needs for defense operations.

  • May 06, 2025

    Calif. Senate Committee Demands Audit After Bar Exam Errors

    The California Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday moved a bill forward calling for a full audit of the February bar exam, which was marred by technical glitches, after holding a hearing where the committee's chair said he's "incredulous" that some of the questions were filled with errors and typos.

  • May 06, 2025

    Group Says $1.6M Funding Cut Derails Native History Efforts

    The National Congress of American Indians says a recent $1.6 million funding cut to Native American boarding school research by the Trump administration will derail efforts to document the history of Indigenous communities, survivors and those who never made it home.

  • May 06, 2025

    Fed Lawmakers Demand Halt On Cuts Affecting Tribal Health

    A bipartisan group of U.S. senators is urging U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to halt any further actions that would affect tribal healthcare and to ensure necessary resources and staffing to fully deliver services for American Indians and Alaska Natives.

  • May 06, 2025

    NY Says Owner Has To Sell Ski Resort After Antitrust Loss

    A New York ski resort operator who a state judge has ruled violated antitrust law by buying a rival and shutting it down should have to sell off one of its properties, preferably the one it shut down, so it can be reopened for next winter, the Empire State is arguing.

  • May 06, 2025

    Freedmen Descendant Can't Redo $90M Cherokee Nation Suit

    A D.C. federal judge has refused to reconsider his decision favoring the Cherokee Nation in a case brought by a descendant of the Freedmen, people of African descent who were once enslaved by the tribe, saying she has failed to argue anything new.

  • May 06, 2025

    Google Says DOJ's Monopoly Fixes Could Reveal 'Essential IP'

    The head of Google's search engine warned a D.C. federal judge Tuesday that the U.S. Department of Justice's proposed data sharing mandates would allow rivals to clone nearly everything that makes up Google, dramatically changing the company's incentives to innovate and pulling away key resources.

  • May 06, 2025

    League Reps Grilled By Senators Over Sports Streaming Deals

    Broadcast executives from three of the four biggest U.S. pro sports leagues answered bipartisan grilling by a Senate committee Tuesday over spiraling costs and scattered availability of games brought on by the increased use of streaming services, insisting that they were improving access and would improve it more in the near future.

Expert Analysis

  • Reconciling 2 Smoke Coverage Cases From California

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    As highlighted by a California Department of Insurance bulletin clarifying the effect of two recent decisions on insurance coverage, the February state appellate ruling denying coverage for property damage from smoke, ash and soot should be viewed as an outlier, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • Series

    NY Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q1

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    The most noteworthy developments from the first quarter of the year in New York financial services include newly proposed regulations on overdraft fees, a groundbreaking settlement by the state attorney general, and a potentially precedent-setting opinion regarding the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, say attorneys at Quinn Emanuel.

  • SEC Crypto Mining Statement Delivers Regulatory Clarity

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's March 20 statement clarifying that certain crypto mining activities do not constitute the offer and sale of securities marks the end of the SEC's enforcement-first approach and ushers in a more predictable environment for blockchain innovation and investment, says Jeonghoon Ha at Ha Law.

  • State Extended Producer Responsibility Laws: Tips For Cos.

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    As states increasingly shift the onus of end-of-life product management from consumers and local governments to the businesses that produce, distribute or sell certain items, companies must track the changing landscape and evaluate the applicability of these new laws and regulations to their operations, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • Law Firm Executive Orders Create A Legal Ethics Minefield

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    Recent executive orders targeting BigLaw firms create ethical dilemmas — and raise the specter of civil or criminal liability — for the government attorneys tasked with implementing them and for the law firms that choose to make agreements with the administration, say attorneys at Buchalter.

  • Reviewing Calif. Push To Restrict Private Equity In Healthcare

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    A recent proposed bill in California aims to broaden the state's existing corporate practice of medicine restrictions, so investors must ensure that there is clear delineation between private equity investment in practice management and physicians' clinical decision-making, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • NLRB Firing May Need Justices' Input On Removal Power

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    President Donald Trump's unprecedented removal of National Labor Relations Board member Gwynne Wilcox spurred a lawsuit that is sure to be closely watched, as it may cause the U.S. Supreme Court to reexamine a 1935 precedent that has limited the president's removal powers, say attorneys at Kelley Drye.

  • The OCC's Newly Relaxed Approach To Bank Crypto Activity

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    With the early March rescission of Biden-era interpretive guidance, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has loosened its approach to regulating national banks and federal savings associations' crypto-asset activities, possibly removing one barrier to banks engaging in such activities, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Contractor Remedies Amid Overhaul Of Federal Spending

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    Now that the period for federal agencies to review their spending has ended, companies holding procurement contracts or grants should evaluate whether their agreements align with administration policies and get a plan ready to implement if their contracts or grants are modified or terminated, say attorneys at DLA Piper.

  • 5 Steps To Promote Durable, Pro-Industry Environmental Regs

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    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's planned wave of deregulation will require lengthy reviews, and could be undone by legal challenges and future changes of administration — but industry involvement in rulemaking, litigation, trade associations, and state and federal legislation can help ensure favorable and long-lasting regulatory policies, say attorneys at Balch & Bingham.

  • Trade Policy Shifts Raise Hurdles For Gov't And Cos. Alike

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    The persistent tension between the Trump administration's fast-moving and aggressive trade policies and the compliance-heavy nature of the trade industry creates implementation challenges for both the business community and the government, says Sara Schoenfeld at Kamerman.

  • Firms Must Embrace Alternative Billing Models Or Fall Behind

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    As artificial intelligence tools eliminate inefficiencies and the Big Four accounting firms enter the legal market, law firms that pivot from the entrenched billable hour model to outcomes-based pricing will see a distinct competitive advantage, says attorney William Brewer.

  • Opinion

    7 Ways CFTC Should Nix Unnecessary Regulatory Burdens

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    Several U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission regulations do not work efficiently in practice, all of which can be abolished or improved in order to comply with a recent executive order requiring the elimination of 10 regulations for every new one implemented, say attorneys at K&L Gates.

  • Key Issues To Watch As USPTO Changes Abound

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    As 2025 continues to unfold, changes at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office — including new leadership, operational reforms, legislative initiatives and AI-related policies — have potential to influence proceedings, including efforts to prosecute patents and adversarial proceedings before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • Risks Of Today's Proffer Agreements May Outweigh Benefits

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    Modern-day proffer agreements offer fewer protections to individuals as U.S. attorney's offices take different approaches to information-sharing, so counsel must consider pushing for provisions in such agreements that bar the prosecuting office from sharing information with nonparty government agencies, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.

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