Securities

  • March 10, 2026

    Feds Want October Retrial For Tornado Cash Founder

    Federal prosecutors have requested an October retrial for the alleged operator of the Tornado Cash crypto mixer in a letter that told the Manhattan federal court the government intends to take another crack at bringing money laundering and sanctions charges that deadlocked a jury in August.

  • March 10, 2026

    Chancery Won't Block Precious Metals Deal In Earnout Fight

    The Delaware Chancery Court on Tuesday refused to temporarily block a planned acquisition by Bullion International Group LLC, a precious metals company formed in a 2023 merger between online gold retailer APMEX and global refiner MKS PAMP Group Inc., ruling that the dispute over potential earnout payments can be addressed through money damages rather than emergency injunctive relief.

  • March 10, 2026

    Mayer Brown Adds 6 McGuireWoods Attys In Houston, DC

    Mayer Brown announced Tuesday that it has hired six attorneys from McGuireWoods LLP for its litigation and dispute resolution and corporate and securities practices, including the former office managing partner of that firm's Houston office.

  • March 10, 2026

    Genworth Unravels 401(k) Fund Suit Class Cert. At 4th Circ.

    The Fourth Circuit on Tuesday reversed class certification for Genworth Financial Inc. employee 401(k) participants who alleged that their retirement savings were dragged down by underperforming BlackRock Inc. target date funds, holding that individual plan participants' investment performance was too varied for the court to sign off on their claims as a group.

  • March 10, 2026

    Atkins Promises End To 'Duplicative' SEC-CFTC Enforcement

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is in the process of updating its protocols for coordinating enforcement efforts with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission with an eye toward ending "duplicative enforcement actions," SEC Chair Paul Atkins said Tuesday.

  • March 09, 2026

    Musk's Team Warned 'WWIII' Over Twitter Deal, Atty Testifies

    After Twitter sued Elon Musk for terminating his $44 billion deal to buy the social media platform, Musk's legal team said their client would launch "World War III" against the company's board if forced to go through with the transaction, a Wilson Sonsini lawyer who led the deal for Twitter told a California federal jury Monday.

  • March 09, 2026

    Edison Dodges Investors' Wildfire Mitigation Suit, For Now

    A California federal judge tossed a proposed class action alleging the parent company of Southern California Edison misled investors about the effectiveness of the public utility company's wildfire-mitigation measures in the lead-up to last January's devastating fires north of Los Angeles, but allowed investors to rework part of the suit.

  • March 09, 2026

    Ohio Judge Won't Shield Kalshi's Sports Contracts

    An Ohio federal judge declined to block Kalshi's sports event contracts from state gambling regulators' scrutiny in a Monday order that found the wagers don't appear to be swaps under the exclusive jurisdiction of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

  • March 09, 2026

    Trump Media Investor's Venue Bid Rejected By Fla. High Court

    Florida's Supreme Court on Monday rejected a petition for review brought by an investor in President Donald Trump's Truth Social platform who challenged an order denying his motion to toss or transfer the company's lawsuit against him after he claimed it was filed in the wrong jurisdiction. 

  • March 09, 2026

    Pump.Fun Seeks Dismissal Of Meme Coin Buyers' Suit

    Meme coin launchpad Pump.fun, its officers and related blockchain projects asked a New York federal judge to dismiss users' latest complaint, which added racketeering allegations and accused the defendants of operating an illegal digital casino, arguing it fails to establish jurisdiction or demonstrate the tokens at issue are securities.

  • March 09, 2026

    2nd Circ. Says COVID Policy Saves Argentine Creditors' Case

    The Second Circuit on Monday revived a $5.5 million contractual dispute against Argentina, ruling that a New York state COVID-19 policy saved some bondholder claims from being time-barred.

  • March 09, 2026

    Receiver Enters Conspiracy Plea For Par Funding's Parent Co.

    The receiver for a Philadelphia company behind the $405 million Par Funding merchant cash advance Ponzi scheme reached a plea deal Monday, where the company pled guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and securities fraud, prosecutors said.

  • March 09, 2026

    Anthropic Sues Over Trump Admin's 'Campaign Of Retaliation'

    Anthropic sued the Trump administration on Monday, challenging the Pentagon's designation of the artificial intelligence company as a supply chain risk to national security after Anthropic refused to allow its technology to be used for mass domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons. 

  • March 09, 2026

    Steve Aoki, DraftKings Founder Seek Exit From NFT Fraud Suit

    DraftKings co-founder Matthew Kalish and electronic music artist Steve Aoki told a Florida federal court Friday that a proposed class action accusing them of promoting "worthless" nonfungible tokens without disclosing they were getting paid for it does not allege any wrongdoing, and asked the court to toss the suit.

  • March 09, 2026

    Biopharma Brass Hid Drug Trial Risks, Derivative Suit Says

    Brass of Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical Inc. are facing shareholder derivative claims they caused the company to overstate prospects for a drug to treat a bone disease, hurting investors and opening the company up to liability when its share prices fell following disappointing clinical trial news.

  • March 09, 2026

    Brookfield Strikes $83.75M TerraForm Merger Deal

    A proposed $83.75 million settlement has been filed in the Delaware Chancery Court to resolve long-running shareholder litigation accusing Brookfield Asset Management of exploiting minority investors during its 2020 take-private merger with renewable energy company TerraForm Power Inc.

  • March 09, 2026

    NY Judge Tosses Terror Victims' Binance Suit, For Now

    A lawsuit against Binance and Changpeng Zhao, its former CEO, brought by the victims of 64 terrorist attacks was dismissed on Friday when a New York federal judge determined that the plaintiffs have not directly linked any wrongdoing by the cryptocurrency exchange to their injuries.

  • March 09, 2026

    Bitcoin Classes Should Be Modified, Judge Says In Opinion

    A New York federal judge narrowed the class definitions in a suit accusing Tether and Bitfinex of rigging the cryptocurrency market and costing investors hundreds of billions of dollars, after finding that there is no "clear-cut" injury for some investors. 

  • March 09, 2026

    Paul Hastings Adds A&O Shearman Securities Litigator Duo

    Paul Hastings LLP announced Monday that it has hired two San Francisco-based securities litigation attorneys from Allen Overy Shearman Sterling as partners, including A&O Shearman's former managing partner of the California offices.

  • March 09, 2026

    Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court

    The Delaware Chancery Court's docket last week featured disputes spanning alleged forged board approvals at a telecom startup, evidence-destruction claims tied to WWE's blockbuster merger with UFC and investor scrutiny of a multibillion-dollar deal between Intel and the U.S. government.

  • March 06, 2026

    Breyer Urges Attys In Heated Twitter Investor Trial To Cool Off

    The judge overseeing a California federal trial over Twitter investors' allegations that Elon Musk intentionally tanked the company's stock urged lawyers to cool down over the weekend and "gain composure," after a heated fight in which a lawyer for the investors called a Musk attorney's conduct disgraceful.

  • March 06, 2026

    Calif. Judge Blasts Ex-Venture Capitalist In Axing SVB Suit

    Convicted venture capitalist and self-described "Silicon Valley's party animal" Michael Rothenberg's conduct in his lawsuit against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., acting on behalf of the failed Silicon Valley Bank, "consisted almost entirely of ignoring or frustrating" his litigation obligations, a California federal judge ruled in throwing out the case.

  • March 06, 2026

    EisnerAmper Settles SEC Allegations Over Infinity Q Audit

    Audit firm EisnerAmper LLP will not have to pay a fine to resolve U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations tied to its 2020 audit of an Infinity Q Capital Management LLC mutual fund at the center of a criminal overvaluation case.

  • March 06, 2026

    FinCEN Hits Canaccord With Record $80M Broker-Dealer Fine

    Canaccord Genuity Group Inc.'s broker-dealer arm Friday agreed to pay $80 million in settlements with three financial regulators for "widespread compliance failures" that allowed some securities fraud schemes to go undetected, with the broker-dealer admitting it willfully violated the Bank Secrecy Act.

  • March 06, 2026

    Former Calif. Securities Atty Gets Year For Tax Evasion

    A former Southern California securities attorney Friday was sentenced to a year and a day in prison for evading paying his personal taxes and was ordered to pay over $350,000 in restitution to the IRS.

Expert Analysis

  • A Shift To Semiannual Reporting May Reshape Litigation Risk

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    While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's proposed change from quarterly to semiannual reporting may reduce the volume of formal filings, it wouldn't reduce litigation risk, instead shifting it into less predictable terrain — where informal disclosures, timing ambiguities and broader materiality debates will dominate, says Pavithra Kumar at Advanced Analytical Consulting Group.

  • How Novel Del. Ruling Tackled Crypto Jurisdiction

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    As courts grapple with cryptocurrency's borderless nature, the Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in Timoria v. Anis highlights the delicate balance between territorial jurisdiction and due process, and reinforces the need for practitioners to develop sophisticated, multijurisdictional approaches to digital asset disputes, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • What CFTC Push For Tokenized Collateral Means For Crypto

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    The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's recent request for comment on the use of tokenized products as collateral in derivatives markets signals that it is expanding the scope and form of eligible collateral, and could broaden the potential use cases for crypto-assets held in tokenized form, say attorneys at Dechert.

  • Lessons From Del. Chancery Court's New Activision Decision

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    The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in AP-Fonden v. Activision Blizzard, declining to dismiss certain fiduciary duty claims at the pleading stage, offers takeaways for boards considering a sale, including the importance of playing an active role in the merger process and documenting key board materials, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • Series

    Practicing Stoicism Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Practicing Stoicism, by applying reason to ignore my emotions and govern my decisions, has enabled me to approach challenging situations in a structured way, ultimately providing advice singularly devoted to a client's interest, says John Baranello at Moses & Singer.

  • How Courts Treat Nonservice Clauses For Financial Advisers

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    Financial advisers considering a job change should carefully consider recent cases that examine controlling state law for nonservice and nonacceptance provisions to prepare for potential legal challenges from former firms, says Andrew Shedlock at Kutak Rock.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: Texas, One Year In

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    A year after the Texas Business Court's first decision, it's clear that Texas didn't just copy Delaware and instead built something uniquely its own, combining specialization with constitutional accountability and creating a model that looks forward without losing touch with the state's democratic and statutory roots, says Chris Bankler at Jackson Walker.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Educating Your Community

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    Nearly two decades prosecuting scammers and elder fraud taught me that proactively educating the public about the risks they face and the rights they possess is essential to building trust within our communities, empowering otherwise vulnerable citizens and preventing wrongdoers from gaining a foothold, says Roger Handberg at GrayRobinson.

  • Shifting Crypto Landscape Complicates Tornado Cash Verdict

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    Amid shifts in the decentralized finance regulatory landscape, the mixed verdict in the prosecution of Tornado Cash’s founder may represent the high-water mark in a cryptocurrency enforcement strategy from which the U.S. Department of Justice has begun to retreat, say attorneys at Venable.

  • 5 Crisis Lawyering Skills For An Age Of Uncertainty

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    As attorneys increasingly face unprecedented and pervasive situations — from prosecutions of law enforcement officials to executive orders targeting law firms — they must develop several essential competencies of effective crisis lawyering, says Ray Brescia at Albany Law School.

  • Blockchain May Offer The Investor Protection SEC Seeks

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    As the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission moves to control the ballooning costs of the consolidated audit trail and attempts to finally give regulators a unified, real-time picture of trading, blockchain demonstrates what it looks like when that kind of transparency is a baseline feature, not an aspirational overlay, says Tuongvy Le at Veda Tech Labs.

  • $2B PDVSA Ruling Offers Insight Into Foreign-Issued Debt

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    A New York federal court's recent decision denying a request by PDVSA, Venezuela's state-owned oil company, to refuse enforcement of $2 billion in defaulted bonds serves as a guide for the scope of review required in assessing the validity of foreign-issued securities with New York choice-of-law provisions, say attorneys at Cleary.

  • Del. Dispatch: Chancery Expands On Caremark Red Flags

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    The Delaware Court of Chancery’s recent Brewer v. Turner decision, allowing a shareholder derivative suit against the board of Regions Bank to proceed, takes a more expansive view as to what constitutes red flags, bad faith and corporate trauma in Caremark claims, say attorneys at Fried Frank.

  • Opinion

    It's Time For The Judiciary To Fix Its Cybersecurity Problem

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    After recent reports that hackers have once again infiltrated federal courts’ electronic case management systems, the judiciary should strengthen its cybersecurity practices in line with executive branch standards, outlining clear roles and responsibilities for execution, says Ilona Cohen at HackerOne.

  • Who Will Regulate Insider Trading In Prediction Markets?

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    The possibilities for insider trading have greatly expanded in the brave new world of prediction markets, and both the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and U.S. Department of Justice could bring enforcement actions in the space, so businesses should revisit their insider trading and confidential information policies, say attorneys at Fenwick.

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