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Public Policy
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March 17, 2026
Chief Justice Says Personal Attacks On Judges 'Got To Stop'
Chief Justice John Roberts on Tuesday condemned the personal attacks on federal judges that have become increasingly common during President Donald Trump's second term in office — and that are often launched by the president himself — and defended the daily work of the judiciary.
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March 17, 2026
Senate OKs Conservative Think Tank GC As Louisiana Judge
The Senate voted 51-45 on Tuesday to confirm Anna St. John, president and general counsel of the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute, as a U.S. district judge for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
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March 17, 2026
Fla. Student Group Says Deactivation Violated Free Speech
A College Republicans chapter at the University of Florida told a federal court that the university violated its First Amendment rights when the school revoked its registration after a chapter member's alleged off-campus antisemitic speech.
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March 17, 2026
Medical Goods Co. Can't Appeal Insurance Reimbursement
A medical equipment supplier is not a "health care provider" under the Pennsylvania Workers' Compensation Act and thus cannot challenge an insurer's payment for an injured worker's medical supplies, the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court ruled.
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March 17, 2026
Alcon Drops $430M Lensar Deal Under Pressure From FTC
Swiss eye care company Alcon Inc. has abandoned its planned purchase of a Florida-based maker of laser treatments for cataracts, Lensar Inc., after the Federal Trade Commission threatened to block the $430 million deal.
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March 17, 2026
Miss. Expands Energy Project Tax Break To Battery Systems
Mississippi will offer energy storage facilities that use battery energy storage systems a property tax break for energy projects under a bill signed by the governor.
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March 17, 2026
Judge Says NY Counties Can't Shake Tribal 911 Bias Claims
Two New York counties must face a Cayuga Nation member's discrimination lawsuit in a dispute over 911 access, a federal district court judge determined, saying his allegations of slow response times are enough to allege an injury.
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March 17, 2026
McGuireWoods Adds Former CDC Scientist From McDermott
McGuireWoods LLP said Tuesday that it has hired a former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention scientist from McDermott Will & Schulte LLP, touting his background as a microbiologist and his history advising healthcare clients.
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March 16, 2026
PBGC Keen On Dishing Out Opinion Letters, Director Says
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. has revamped its website to encourage attorneys to seek opinion letters about how the Employee Retirement Income Security Act applies to specific scenarios. PBGC Director Janet Dhillon spoke to Law360 about that effort, the PBGC's latest financial report to Congress and her goals for the agency.
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March 16, 2026
1st Circ. Affirms Block Of Trump's 'Unprecedented' Aid Freeze
The First Circuit on Monday mostly upheld a lower court's order blocking the Trump administration from enacting a "sweeping and unprecedented categorical 'freeze' of federal financial assistance," ruling that the states involved in the suit will likely successfully show that the federal government acted arbitrarily and capriciously.
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March 16, 2026
DC Circ. Judge Skeptical Of DOJ's Quick Removal Argument
A D.C. circuit judge didn't appear to be buying the Trump administration's argument as to why advocacy groups should not be allowed to challenge three U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement policies related to the deportation and expedited removal of noncitizens.
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March 16, 2026
NJ Panel Presses AG On Withheld Police Discipline Data
A New Jersey appellate panel grilled a deputy attorney general Monday over the attorney general office's refusal to release Essex County's police misconduct data to the Office of the Public Defender, questioning whether confidentiality claims justify withholding information the OPD calls essential to transparency and criminal defense.
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March 16, 2026
OCC Calls For Preemption Of Ill. Swipe-Fee Law At 7th Circ.
A top U.S. banking regulator is seconding the banking industry's call for the Seventh Circuit to block Illinois' tax and tip swipe-fee ban, arguing a lower-court judge missed the "forest for the trees" in ruling the state-law restrictions are enforceable against banks it oversees.
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March 16, 2026
Live Nation Trial Resumes, Exec Says Competition Is Up
The antitrust trial of Live Nation picked back up Monday after a weeklong hiatus with a coalition of states in the driver's seat, after the U.S. Department of Justice settled its case against the live entertainment giant, with one of its executives testifying that competition in the concert promotion business has grown in recent years.
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March 16, 2026
Amazon Prime Parallels Threaten Doxo's Bid To Beat FTC Suit
Online bill pay platform Doxo fought uphill at a hearing Monday in Washington federal court to beat the Federal Trade Commission's claims it misleads consumers, with the judge noting that Amazon.com Inc. had made some of the same arguments in the FTC's lawsuit targeting its Prime subscription program and lost.
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March 16, 2026
Trump Taps Vance For Fraud Task Force, Bashing Blue States
President Donald Trump on Monday signed an executive order creating a task force chaired by Vice President JD Vance that aims to curb "fraud, waste and abuse" in federal housing, food and other benefit programs, with the president alleging "staggering fraud and waste" in Minnesota and other Democratic-led states.
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March 16, 2026
Manufacturing Factor Adds More New Twists To AIA Cases
An announcement that the U.S. manufacturing activities of parties in America Invents Act patent challenges will be considered in institution decisions could make it more difficult for some foreign companies to secure reviews and make proceedings more complex, attorneys say.
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March 16, 2026
Apparel Co., Crypto Backer Drop SEC Suit Over 'Airdrops'
An apparel company and its cryptocurrency industry group backer preemptively suing the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission have dropped their case over digital asset transactions being securities, saying the SEC's recent policy pivot "suggest[s] a change in the commission's position regarding free airdrops."
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March 16, 2026
Boris Epshteyn Targeted Over Trump Bid To 'Coerce' BigLaw
Lawyers, law professors and retired judges led by two nonprofits urged the New York state courts' ethics committee on Monday to investigate Boris Epshteyn's involvement in President Donald Trump's efforts to "intimidate and coerce" BigLaw firms into pro bono agreements with the administration.
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March 16, 2026
Feds, ACLU Clash Over Gitmo Immigrant Detentions
Just three noncitizens were being detained at Guantánamo Bay facilities earlier this month, the Trump administration told a federal judge, but the American Civil Liberties Union disputed its assertions about how long people have been held there and their ability to correspond with attorneys.
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March 16, 2026
Trump Admin Wants Student Loan Forgiveness Suits Tossed
The Trump administration on Monday asked a Massachusetts federal judge to toss a pair of lawsuits challenging a change to eligibility requirements for student loan forgiveness, calling the potential repercussions from the new rule "speculative."
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March 16, 2026
Enviro Groups, Industry Sue EPA Over NOx Emission Standards
The Sierra Club challenged new U.S. Environmental Protection Agency rules on gas-fired power plant emissions, alleging Monday the amended regulations are "woefully inadequate" because they do little to protect the public from dangerous pollution, while an industry group sued separately over new source performance standards for turbines.
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March 16, 2026
FCC Urges 5th Circ. To Nix Latest Challenge To Telecom Fund
The Federal Communications Commission urged the Fifth Circuit to toss a conservative group's latest challenge to the Universal Service Fund, calling the suit "no more persuasive" than the last attempt to overturn the fund, which was rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court.
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March 16, 2026
SEIU Sues To Revive EPA Climate Endangerment Finding
One of the largest labor unions in the nation is asking the D.C. Circuit to block the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's move last month to rescind its landmark 2009 finding that greenhouse gases endanger public health, which allowed the agency to regulate vehicle emissions.
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March 16, 2026
Capital One's $5B Brex Purchase Must Be Blocked, Judge Told
A group of consumers wants a California federal judge to bar Capital One's proposed $5.15 billion acquisition of fintech company Brex, arguing it violates antitrust laws, after the group's first bid to halt the bank's purchase of Discover Financial Services failed.
Expert Analysis
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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.
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California's New Privacy Laws Demand Preparation From Cos.
An increase in breach disclosures is coinciding with California's most comprehensive privacy and artificial intelligence legislation taking effect, illustrating the range of vulnerabilities organizations in the state face and highlighting that the key to successfully managing these requirements is investing in capabilities before they became urgent, says Camilo Artiga-Purcell at Kiteworks.