Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Securities
-
November 10, 2025
Adobe Investors Can't Revive Suit Over $20B Figma Buy
Investors in design software giant Adobe Inc. can't revive claims that the company downplayed the threat it faced from competitor Figma Inc. before announcing a $20 billion deal to buy the rival, a Manhattan federal judge has determined, finding that the investors' new allegations regarding the company's market-size hypotheticals wouldn't have misled reasonable investors.
-
November 10, 2025
Former Iconix CEO Sues Company, Ex-Protegé For $45M
Iconix Brand founder and ex-CEO Neil Cole, whose criminal fraud conviction was recently thrown out, filed a $45 million malicious prosecution and breach of contract lawsuit Monday in New York federal court against the brand management company and one of its former executives.
-
November 10, 2025
Chancery Drops Claims In Murder-Linked Bio Co. Merger Fight
The Delaware Chancery Court dismissed a biotech company's claims against the husband and investment vehicle of convicted fraudster Serhat Gumrukcu, whose murder-for-hire plot allegedly helped conceal past misconduct ahead of a 2018 merger.
-
November 10, 2025
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
Delaware's top court issued a flurry of rulings last week and heard arguments on recently passed legislation that expanded liability shields for some corporate acts while the Court of Chancery passed on another round of arguments over control of Caribbean broadcaster Caribevision.
-
November 10, 2025
Justices Won't Hear Serta Simmons Ch. 11 Plan Challenge
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to take up a challenge by Serta Simmons lenders to a Fifth Circuit ruling last year that rejected the mattress maker's controversial "uptier" debt exchange, choosing not to consider whether the appellate court erred in altering Serta's Chapter 11 plan without allowing a new vote on it.
-
November 10, 2025
Justices Won't Hear Ex-Energy Exec's Insider Trading Appeal
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to consider arguments from a former executive of a Texas energy company that his insider-trading and fraud convictions were based on unconstitutionally vague statutes and violate the separation-of-powers doctrine.
-
November 07, 2025
Delaware Fee Inflation Worries Overblown, Study Says
A newly published report by two Stanford University researchers asserts that high-dollar attorney fee awards in Delaware courts make up "a very small minority of cases" and are "no basis for concern," throwing cold water on growing worries about so-called fee inflation in the First State.
-
November 07, 2025
Fed's Miran Says Stablecoins Spur Demand For Treasurys
Federal Reserve Gov. Stephen Miran said Friday that he believes stablecoins are already increasing demand for U.S. Treasury bonds, and that continued adoption of the stable-value tokens could lead to lower interest rates in the future.
-
November 07, 2025
Athena Bitcoin Hit With Class Action Over Consumer Fees
Athena Bitcoin Inc., an operator of so-called bitcoin automated teller machines, was hit with a consumer's proposed class action in Florida federal court accusing it of charging customers excessive and undisclosed fees and operating without a proper money transmitting license.
-
November 07, 2025
States Say Macquarie Not Applicable To NH High Court Case
State securities regulators are urging New Hampshire's Supreme Court to uphold a fine against a medical device company whose leader was alleged to have misled investors about his prior legal issues, arguing that the case bears no resemblance to one ruled on by the U.S. Supreme Court last year.
-
November 07, 2025
TaskUs $17.5M Investor Deal Should Get Final OK, Judge Says
Investors in outsourced digital customer service company TaskUs should get a final nod for their $17.5 million settlement of claims that the company improperly influenced its ratings on the employer review website Glassdoor, a federal magistrate judge has recommended.
-
November 07, 2025
Sleep Apnea Device Co. Investor Says Rollout Was Botched
Medical device company Inspire Medical Systems has been hit with a proposed investor class action alleging its shares dropped by nearly a third of their value after the public learned it concealed low demand and rollout shortcomings associated with its newest sleep apnea device.
-
November 07, 2025
AI Startup CEO Gets 1-Year Sentence For $40M Fraud
A California federal judge on Friday sentenced the founder of a company that purported to sell artificial intelligence-based business automation software to one year behind bars for defrauding investors in what the federal government called a "fake-it-til-you-make-it" scheme that never made it.
-
November 07, 2025
Unicoin Raised $100M Off 'Worthless' Investments, Suit Says
Cryptocurrency company Unicoin faces a proposed class action accusing it of fraudulently raising $100 million on the strength of claims that it planned to issue investors asset-backed cryptocurrency tokens, overstating its asset holdings and never issuing the tokens.
-
November 07, 2025
Mistrial Declared For MIT Bros In $25M Crypto Heist Case
The trial of two MIT-educated brothers accused of a $25 million crypto heist that capitalized on a software glitch on the Ethereum platform ended in a mistrial late Friday, after jurors made clear in an emotional note that they could not reach a unanimous verdict.
-
November 07, 2025
Fed Faces Dem Grilling Over 30% Supervision Staff Cut Plan
The Federal Reserve's plan to cut its bank supervision workforce by 30% is facing fresh scrutiny from the Senate Banking Committee's top Democrat, who is calling on the central bank to explain how the downsizing will affect its ability to police Wall Street.
-
November 07, 2025
9th Circ. Pushed To Revive Suit Over $3.8B Failed Tech Merger
A California federal judge erred in finding that investors in semiconductor company MaxLinear Inc. had no standing to sue it over what they say were misrepresentations about a $3.8 billion merger plan with chipmaker Silicon Motion Technology Corp., they told the Ninth Circuit in a bid to revive their suit.
-
November 07, 2025
Block Says Cash App Probe, Bigger SF Tax Bill Could Cost It
Jack Dorsey's fintech firm Block Inc. told investors that it may take a financial hit from a multistate probe into its mobile payments platform CashApp, and remains locked in a separate multimillion-dollar tax dispute with the County of San Francisco over its bitcoin sales.
-
November 07, 2025
Javice Tells Chancery JPMorgan Is Stalling Appeal Fees
Charlie Javice, the convicted founder of college financial aid startup Frank, has told a Delaware judge that JPMorgan Chase & Co. is effectively trying to cut off her ability to appeal her criminal conviction by refusing to advance the vast majority of her ongoing legal fees.
-
November 07, 2025
BNP Wants Plaintiffs Attys At Sudan Suit Misconduct Hearing
BNP Paribas has asked a New York federal judge to compel several plaintiffs' lawyers, including the eponymous founder of Hausfeld LLP, to testify at an upcoming hearing on withdrawn allegations of misconduct by their co-counsel, following a $20 million jury verdict against BNP in a suit brought by refugees accusing the bank of helping finance atrocities in Sudan.
-
November 07, 2025
Trump Media Q3 Loss Widens On Rising Legal Costs
Truth Social operator Trump Media & Technology Group Corp. on Friday reported larger third-quarter losses than in the year prior due to growing legal expenses related to a special purpose acquisition company merger that took President Donald Trump's media company public last year.
-
November 07, 2025
ERISA Recap: 6 Things Attys May Have Missed In Oct.
Two appeals court judges used a decision in an employee stock ownership plan case to urge the full Eleventh Circuit to rethink its requirements for filing federal benefits suits, a marketing company shut down a 401(k) forfeiture case, and CVS and Duke University were hit with new suits. Here, Law360 looks back at six noteworthy ERISA developments from last month.
-
November 06, 2025
Treasury Hears Banks, Crypto Orgs Spar Over Stablecoin Yield
A U.S. Treasury Department proposal on how stablecoins should be regulated has sparked a clash between banking groups and crypto advocates over whether issuers and others should be allowed to offer interest on the tokens, with banks and consumer watchdogs warning the activity could create unnecessary risks.
-
November 06, 2025
Amid Investor Cheers, Musk Gets His $1 Trillion Pay Package
In a landmark vote that turned corporate governance on its head, Tesla Inc. shareholders on Thursday thumbed their noses at both Delaware Chancery Court and top proxy advisers by awarding CEO Elon Musk an estimated $1 trillion compensation package, according to preliminary results.
-
November 06, 2025
Del. Justices Uphold Toss Of Trade Desk CEO's $5.2B Pay Suit
The Delaware Supreme Court Thursday affirmed a Chancery Court ruling that threw out a stockholder derivative challenge to an advertising technology company's multiyear compensation package for its co-founder, CEO and controlling stockholder, rejecting claims that the award, worth up to $5.2 billion, was a product of bad faith board conduct.
Expert Analysis
-
What's At Stake In High Court Review Of Funds' Right To Sue
The U.S. Supreme Court's upcoming review of FS Credit Opportunities v. Saba Capital Master Fund, a case testing the limits of using Investment Company Act Section 47(b) to give funds a private right of action to enforce other sections of the law, could either encourage or curb similar activist investor lawsuits, say attorneys at Goodwin.
-
The Road Ahead For Digital Assets Looks Promising
With new legislation expected to accelerate the adoption of blockchain technology, and with regulators taking a markedly more permissive approach to digital assets, the convergence of traditional finance and decentralized finance is closer than ever, say attorneys at Dechert.
-
How Securities Defendants Might Use New Wire Fraud Ruling
Though the Second Circuit’s recent U.S. v. Chastain decision — vacating the conviction of an ex-OpenSea staffer — involved the wire fraud statute, insider trading defendants might attempt to import the ruling’s reasoning into the securities realm, says Jonathan Richman at Brown Rudnick.
-
M&A Ruling Reinforces High Bar For Aiding, Abetting Claims
The Delaware Supreme Court's recent decision in In re: Columbia Pipeline may slow the filing of aiding and abetting claims against third-party buyers in situations where buyers negotiate aggressively, putting buy-side dealmakers' minds at ease that they likely won't be liable for seeking the best possible deal, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
-
Series
Creating Botanical Art Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Pressing and framing plants that I grow has shown me that pursuing an endeavor that brings you joy can lead to surprising benefits for a legal career, including mental clarity, perspective and even a bit of humility, says Douglas Selph at Morris Manning.
-
Del. Dispatch: Conflicted Transactions And New Safe Harbors
Two recent Delaware Court of Chancery decisions involving conflicted transactions underscore that the new safe harbors established by the Delaware General Corporation Law amendments passed in March, going forward, provide a far easier route to business judgment review of conflicted transactions than were previously available, say attorneys at Fried Frank.
-
Opinion
The Legal Education Status Quo Is No Longer Tenable
As underscored by the fallout from California’s February bar exam, legal education and licensure are tethered to outdated systems, and the industry must implement several key reforms to remain relevant and responsive to 21st century legal needs, says Matthew Nehmer at The Colleges of Law.
-
The Int'l Compliance View: Everything Everywhere All At Once
Changes to the enforcement landscape in the U.S. and abroad shift the risks and incentives for global compliance programs, creating a race against the clock for companies to deploy investigative resources across worldwide operations, say attorneys at Dentons.
-
Unpacking Notable Details From FTC's 'AI Washing' Cases
The Federal Trade Commission has brought many cases involving allegedly deceptive artificial intelligence claims over the past couple of years, illustrating overlooked aspects of AI washing generally and a few new types of AI marketing claims that may line up in regulatory crosshairs down the road, says Michael Atleson at DLA Piper.
-
'Pig Butchering' Seizure Is A Milestone In Crypto Crime Fight
The U.S.' recent seizure of $225 million in crypto funds in a massive "pig butchering" scheme highlights the transformative impact of blockchain analysis in law enforcement, and the increasing necessity of collaboration between law enforcement agencies, cryptocurrency exchanges and stablecoin issuers, says David Zaslowsky at Baker McKenzie.
-
The Pros, Cons Of A Single Commissioner Leading The CFTC
While a single-member U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission may require fewer resources and be more efficient, its internal decision-making process would be less transparent to those outside the agency, reflect less compromise between competing viewpoints and provide the public with less predictability, says former CFTC Commissioner Dan Berkovitz.
-
E-Discovery Quarterly: Rulings On Relevance Redactions
In recent cases addressing redactions that parties sought to apply based on the relevance of information — as opposed to considerations of privilege — courts have generally limited a party’s ability to withhold nonresponsive or irrelevant material, providing a few lessons for discovery strategy, say attorneys at Sidley.
-
Opinion
Section 1983 Has Promise After End Of Nationwide Injunctions
After the U.S. Supreme Court recently struck down the practice of nationwide injunctions in Trump v. Casa, Section 1983 civil rights suits can provide a better pathway to hold the government accountable — but this will require reforms to qualified immunity, says Marc Levin at the Council on Criminal Justice.
-
Why Bank Regulators' Proposed Leverage Tweak Matters
Banking agencies' recent proposal to modify the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio framework applicable to the largest U.S. banks shows the regulators are keen to address concerns that the regulatory capital framework is too restrictive, say attorneys at Moore & Van Allen.
-
Now Is The Time To Prep For SEC's New Data Breach Regs
Recent remarks from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s acting director of the Division of Examinations suggest that the commission will support exams for compliance with its new data breach detection and reporting regulations, and a looming deadline means investment advisers and broker-dealers must act now to update their processes, say attorneys at McGuireWoods.