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Securities
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March 03, 2026
OCC Clears Faster Merger, Licensing Path For Smaller Banks
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency on Tuesday expanded fast-track merger review and licensing pathways for banks under $30 billion in assets, its latest move to advance the Trump administration's deregulatory push for so-called community banks.
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March 03, 2026
Goldman, Former Execs Seek Early Win In 1MDB Bribery Suit
Goldman Sachs and two of its former executives have asked a New York federal judge to grant them an early win in an investor suit claiming losses from the 1MDB bond bribery scandal, saying that what remains in the suit is an "incoherent, reverse-engineered theory of securities fraud that the factual record does not sustain."
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March 03, 2026
Squires' Restrictions On Conflicts May Have Little Effect
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Director John Squires has barred patent examiners from evaluating applications for companies where they have any financial interest, rather than a former $15,000 cap, but attorneys raised concerns that the scope of his changes is small, and there are no consequences for not complying.
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March 03, 2026
SCANA Investors' $34M Deal, Atty Fees Get Final OK
Consulting giant Deloitte and investors in utility company SCANA Corp. have gotten a final nod for their $34 million settlement of proposed class action claims that Deloitte gave cover to SCANA as it hid delays and cost overruns for a $9 billion nuclear energy expansion project it eventually abandoned.
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March 03, 2026
EV Maker Lucid Investor Seeks Class Cert. In Production Suit
An investor in electric-vehicle maker Lucid Group Inc. is seeking certification of its proposed class in litigation alleging the company misled investors about how many cars it could make in 2022, hurting investors when it disclosed months later it was on track to make about a third of its earlier estimate.
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March 03, 2026
BioAge Investors Lose Last Bid At Obesity Drug-Linked Suit
Biopharmaceutical company BioAge Labs Inc. has escaped a suit accusing it of damaging investors by unexpectedly halting a clinical trial for a weight loss drug, with a California federal judge finding that the court already dismissed the claim that BioAge's risk disclosures were lacking.
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March 03, 2026
CFTC Chair Previews Perpetual Futures, Event Contract Rules
U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chairman Michael Selig said Tuesday that his agency is pressing forward with plans to clear the way for cryptocurrency-favored derivative perpetual futures in a matter of weeks and circulate a proposal addressing prediction markets "in the very near future."
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March 03, 2026
Produce Co. Employees' ESOP Suit Survives Early Exit Bid
A North Carolina federal judge has largely kept intact a lawsuit alleging lawyers, private equity firms and their founders conspired to drain a produce company's employee stock ownership plan of its value, trimming just two of the 13 claims from the sweeping complaint.
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March 03, 2026
Ex-SEC Attys Back Disgorgement Limits Before High Court
Nearly two dozen former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission attorneys are among those urging the U.S. Supreme Court to put an end to the agency collecting disgorgement from those accused of wrongdoing without first identifying victims of the alleged fraud at hand.
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March 03, 2026
CEO Of Trump-Tied SPAC Must Face SEC Suit
A former Trump business associate will have to face a U.S. Securities and Exchange lawsuit over his failure to disclose his SPAC's merger discussions with the president's media company to investors in 2021, after a Washington, D.C., federal judge denied his motion to dismiss the complaint.
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March 03, 2026
Hawaiian Electric Investors Get First OK Of $48M Wildfire Deal
Hawaiian Electric Industries Inc. and its investors have received initial approval of their nearly $48 million deal settling a California federal suit blaming it for the downturn in its stock price following a deadly 2023 fire on Maui.
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March 03, 2026
Ex-Morgan Stanley Adviser Guilty Of Defrauding NBA Clients
A Manhattan federal jury on Tuesday convicted a former Morgan Stanley investment adviser on fraud charges, for allegedly defrauding NBA player clients by overcharging them for life insurance investments and misappropriating funds.
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March 03, 2026
Apollo Faces Class Action Over Alleged Epstein Business Ties
Apollo Global Management and its billionaire co-founders Leon Black and Marc Rowan have been hit with a proposed class action in New York federal court alleging they misled investors about the firm's and their individual connections to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
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March 03, 2026
Kalshi Scrambles To Keep Betting Brawl In Federal Court
Kalshi made its latest push to keep the fracas over the legality of its sports offerings in federal court Tuesday, mere hours after the prediction market was ordered to litigate the dispute in state court.
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March 03, 2026
Day Pitney Faces DQ Bid Over Ex-Justice's Role In $1.3M Case
Day Pitney LLP should be sidelined from a $1.3 million private equity management company's windup lawsuit because former Connecticut Supreme Court Chief Justice Richard A. Robinson, now a partner at the firm, heard the case before it was earmarked for a new trial, three company owners have argued.
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March 03, 2026
Judge Appoints Receiver For Crypto Co. Over $328M Scheme
A Florida judge appointed a receiver Tuesday in a lawsuit against cryptocurrency company Goliath Ventures Inc. after expressing concerns about the company's assets following the arrest last week of its CEO on charges that he was operating a $328 million Ponzi scheme at Goliath.
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March 02, 2026
Musk's Twitter Trash Talk Hurt Stock, Jury Told As Trial Starts
Musk "trashed" Twitter to tank the stock price and renegotiate his $44 billion deal to buy the company, Twitter investors' counsel told a California federal jury at the start of trial Monday, while Musk's lawyer said it wasn't securities fraud for Musk to air "legitimate" concerns about fake accounts on the platform.
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March 02, 2026
VIX Note Investors Denied Appeal Bid In Credit Suisse Suit
Investors who claimed Credit Suisse manipulated the market for certain exchange-traded notes can't immediately appeal an order blocking them from further amending their claims, in part because they sought review of a question "ill-suited to purely legal analysis," a federal judge in Manhattan held.
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March 02, 2026
FINRA Fines Goldman Subsidiary $1.3M Over Order Execution
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority fined Goldman Sachs subsidiary Folio Investments Inc. $1.3 million for allegedly failing to properly review order execution quality after changing the market center through which it routed a substantial amount of its customer orders.
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March 02, 2026
Uniswap, VC Backers Get Crypto Buyers' Suit Tossed Again
A New York federal judge on Monday tossed the remaining claims in a proposed class action against Uniswap Labs and its venture capital backers that sought to hold them liable for the sale of so-called scam tokens on the decentralized Uniswap exchange, after the Second Circuit last year sent the case back to the district court for reconsideration.
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March 02, 2026
5th Circ. Presses McDermott Shareholders On Direct Claim
A Fifth Circuit panel wanted to know why investors should get another shot at a direct class action alleging that McDermott International Inc. made misrepresentations about a $6 billion merger, asking Monday if the case before the court was "analogous" to a case alleging the company overpaid for the merger.
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March 02, 2026
Judge Signals Likely Trim Of Bitcoin Depot Data Breach Suit
A Georgia federal judge signaled Monday that he would likely trim the range of claims that cryptocurrency ATM operator Bitcoin Depot is facing over allegations that the personal information of tens of thousands of American customers was compromised in a 2024 data breach.
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March 02, 2026
AI Drugmaker BioXcel Eyes $9.8M Investor Settlement
BioXcel Therapeutics Inc., an artificial intelligence-driven drugmaker, has reached a $9.8 million settlement with investors to resolve claims that the company and its top brass deceived them about compliance problems with a clinical trial for a dementia drug.
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March 02, 2026
Bath & Body Works Brass Hid Growth Woes, Investor Claims
Current and former brass of personal care retailer Bath & Body Works face a shareholder derivative suit alleging they downplayed certain growth strategy flops, hurting the company and investors when disclosures of those fumbles caused share prices to slide.
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March 02, 2026
Chancery Orders Receiver As EpicentRx Fails To Pay $425K
The Delaware Chancery Court on Monday appointed a limited receiver to force clinical-stage biotech company EpicentRx to satisfy outstanding advancement and sanction obligations owed to its former corporate secretary Stephen Davis, finding that repeated contempt rulings and escalating fines failed to bring the company into full compliance.
Expert Analysis
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Investment Advisers Should Stay Apprised Of New AI Risks
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recently issued annual examination priorities reiterate a host of regulatory implications for investment advisers using artificial intelligence tools, highlighting that meaningful ongoing due diligence can help mitigate both operational and regulatory surprises amid AI's rapid evolution, says Christopher Mills at Sidley.
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9th Circ. Ruling Clarifies Auditor Liability For IPO Errors
The Ninth Circuit's recent decision in Hunt v. PricewaterhouseCoopers elucidates the legal standard for claims against auditors in connection with a company's initial public offering, confirming that audit opinions are subjective and becoming the first circuit to review this precise question since the U.S. Supreme Court's 2015 Omnicare ruling, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Integrating Practice Groups
Enacting unified leadership and consistent client service standards ensures law firm practice groups connect and collaborate around shared goals, turning a law firm merger into a platform for growth rather than a period of disruption, says Brian Catlett at Fennemore Craig.
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The Tricky Issues Underscoring Prediction Market Regulation
Prediction markets are not merely testing the boundaries of commodities law — they are challenging the conventional divisions between gambling regulation and financial market oversight, and in doing so, may reshape both, says Braeden Anderson at Gesmer Updegrove.
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Opinion
Supreme Court Term Limits Would Carry Hidden Risk
While proposals for limiting the terms of U.S. Supreme Court justices are popular, a steady stream of relatively young, highly marketable ex-justices with unique knowledge and influence entering the marketplace of law and politics could create new problems, say Michael Broyde at Emory University and Hayden Hall at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
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The SEC Whistleblower Program A Year Into 2nd Trump Admin
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's whistleblower program continues to operate as designed, but its internal cadence, scrutiny of claims and operational structure reflect a period of recalibration, with precision mattering more than ever, say attorneys Scott Silver and David Chase.
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Key Crypto Class Action Trends And Rulings In 2025
As the law continued to take shape in the growing area of crypto-assets, this year saw a jump in crypto class action litigation, including noteworthy decisions on motions to compel arbitration and class certification, according to Justin Donoho at Duane Morris.
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How New SEC Policies Shift Shareholder Proposal Landscape
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins' recent remarks provide a road map for public companies to exclude nonbinding shareholder proposals from proxy materials, which would disrupt the mechanism that has traditionally defined how shareholders and companies engage on governance matters, say attorneys at Gunderson.
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Series
Knitting Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Stretching my skills as a knitter makes me a better antitrust attorney by challenging me to recalibrate after wrong turns, not rush outcomes, and trust that I can teach myself the skills to tackle new and difficult projects — even when I don’t have a pattern to work from, says Kara Kuritz at V&E.
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Series
The Biz Court Digest: Welcome To Miami
After nearly 20 years in operation, the Miami Complex Business Litigation Division is a pioneer upon which other jurisdictions in the state have been modeled, adopting many innovations to keep its cases running more efficiently and staffing experienced judges who are accustomed to hearing business disputes, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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Identifying And Resolving Conflicts Among Class Members
As the Fifth Circuit's recent decision in Nova Scotia Health Employees' Pension Plan v. McDermott International illustrates, intraclass conflicts can determine the fate of a class action — and such conflicts can be surprisingly difficult to identify, says Andrew Faisman, a clerk at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
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What Law Firm Liability Risks In 2025 Signal For Year To Come
Trends and statistics reveal that law firms of all sizes and practice areas remained attractive litigation targets this year, so firms must take concrete steps to avoid professional liability risks in the year to come, say Douglas Richmond and Andrew Ricke at Lockton Companies.
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Recent Proposals May Spell Supervision Overhaul For Banks
A slew of rules recently proposed by the federal banking agencies with approaching comment deadlines would rewrite supervision standards to be further tailored to banks' size and activities, while prioritizing financial risks over process, documentation and other nonfinancial risks, say attorneys at Davis Wright.
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What US Can Learn From Brazil's Securities Arbitration Model
To allay investor concerns about its recent approval of mandatory arbitration clauses in public company registration statements, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should look to Brazil's securities arbitration model, which shows that clear rules and strong institutions can complement the goals of securities regulation, say arbiters at the B3 Arbitration Chamber.
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AI Evidence Rule Tweaks Encourage Judicial Guardrails
Recent additions to a committee note on proposed Rule of Evidence 707 — governing evidence generated by artificial intelligence — seek to mitigate potential dangers that may arise once machine outputs are introduced at trial, encouraging judges to perform critical gatekeeping functions, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert & Wohl.