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Securities
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December 16, 2025
Judge Skeptical Of Trump-Tied SPAC's Defense In SEC Suit
A former Trump business associate appeared unlikely to win early dismissal of a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission suit accusing him of hiding advanced merger discussions with the president's media company from SPAC investors in 2021, as a federal judge wondered Tuesday how the talks could be considered immaterial.
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December 16, 2025
Fed Ends Goldman 1MDB, Metropolitan Card Consent Orders
The Federal Reserve announced Tuesday it has lifted consent orders against Goldman Sachs and Metropolitan Commercial Bank, closing matters tied to Goldman's purported role in the 1MDB scandal and Metropolitan's oversight of a prepaid-card program that government agencies alleged was fraud-ridden.
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December 16, 2025
Online Gun Co. Settles SEC Probe Over Sanctioned Ex-Exec
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has inked a nonmonetary penalty settlement with the corporate owner of an online firearm retailer and separately sued three of its former executives over allegations that the company allowed an SEC-sanctioned accountant to work as an executive officer in violation of his industry ban.
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December 16, 2025
SafeMoon CEO Seeks No Prison Time For Looting Conviction
The convicted former CEO of cryptocurrency company SafeMoon has asked a New York federal judge to spare him a prison sentence, pointing to mental health struggles related to his military service and childhood experiences.
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December 16, 2025
FDIC Floats Application Process For Stablecoin Issuance
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Tuesday took its first major step towards implementing the federal stablecoin law known as the Genius Act when it moved forward with plans for an application process by which insured depository institutions can seek to issue stable-value tokens.
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December 16, 2025
Dems Press DOJ On Concerns It's Favoring AG's Atty Brother
A group of Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday asked the U.S. Department of Justice to explain why it keeps intervening in or dismissing cases that involve clients represented by U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi's brother, saying the decisions "raise serious questions about whether impartiality has been compromised."
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December 16, 2025
2nd Circ. Tosses Ex-CFTC Atty's Religious Bias Case
The Second Circuit on Tuesday threw out a religious bias claim brought by a former U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission attorney, reasoning that he hadn't shown how he had been harmed by a temporary order at an agency he no longer works for.
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December 16, 2025
SEC Says No New 'Scalping' Trial For Penny Stock Trader
A penny stock trader found liable for a $2.5 million fraud scheme known as scalping should not get a new trial, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said, arguing that the trader's complaints about the verdict form came too late.
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December 16, 2025
No Jail For Controller Who Assisted Feds In FTE Fraud Case
A Manhattan federal judge allowed a former financial controller for FTE Networks to avoid prison Tuesday for participating in a $13 million revenue fraud at the Florida telecom, crediting the "reluctant conspirator" for an extensive, five-year course of cooperation.
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December 16, 2025
B. Riley Must Face Investor Suit Over Alleged Fraud Losses
A California federal judge has allowed to move forward a proposed investor class action accusing B. Riley Financial Inc. of failing to disclose risks related to its dealings with Brian Kahn, an investment manager who recently pled guilty to securities fraud, though some company executives were allowed to escape the suit.
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December 16, 2025
CFTC Drops Spoofing Case Against Texas Energy Trader
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has agreed to drop a lawsuit claiming a Houston-based energy trading firm manipulated the crude oil market, an outcome the firm hailed as "full and definitive vindication" on Monday.
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December 16, 2025
Investors Sue French YouTuber In Del. Over Alleged Fraud
An international group of investors has sued a French YouTuber in the Delaware Chancery Court, accusing him of running what they call a yearslong scheme that used false promises of high, "fully passive" returns and a purported ownership "buffer" to induce millions of euros in investments that were later diluted, diverted and concealed.
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December 15, 2025
Senate Banking Committee Pushes Crypto Markup To 2026
The Senate Banking Committee anticipates marking up a crypto market structure proposal in the new year as bipartisan negotiations on the bill continue, a spokesperson for committee chairman Tim Scott, R.-S.C, said Monday.
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December 15, 2025
Starbucks Investors Get Claims Against Ex-CFO Revived
A federal judge in Seattle has reinstated claims against Starbucks' former chief financial officer in a suit accusing the coffee giant's leaders of misleading shareholders about its struggling plan to reinvent itself, saying the investors plausibly allege the ex-executive was a controlling person under the securities laws.
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December 15, 2025
PCAOB Challenger Tells DC Circ. He Should Stay Anonymous
An anonymous accountant challenging the constitutionality of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board has told the D.C. Circuit he should be allowed to proceed in district court as a John Doe plaintiff, aiming to reverse a ruling that he cannot continue to litigate the suit pseudonymously.
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December 15, 2025
Trustee Sues SafeMoon Leaders Over Alleged Fraud Scheme
The liquidating trustee for cryptocurrency asset company SafeMoon has filed a lawsuit in Utah bankruptcy court accusing former top executives of looting tens of millions of dollars from "liquidity pools" and ultimately doing at least $100 million in damage to the company.
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December 15, 2025
Danske Bank Exits DOJ Probation Under $2B AML Deal
Danske Bank announced Monday that it has finished a three-year corporate probation imposed by the U.S. Department of Justice as part of a $2 billion settlement over allegations the Danish lender misled U.S. banks about its anti-money laundering controls for high-risk customers in Estonia.
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December 15, 2025
DouYu Investors Get Final OK For $2.25M Settlement
Investors in Chinese livestreaming platform DouYu International Holdings Ltd. have gotten final approval for their $2.25 million deal ending claims the company took risky measures to gin up user engagement, causing share prices to fall after Chinese authorities cracked down on the company over gambling and pornography on the platform.
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December 15, 2025
Cooley Adds Crypto-Focused Atty From Waymaker
A fintech litigator whose clients have included Mango Markets trader Avraham Eisenberg and Tornado Cash co-founder Roman Storm is heading to Cooley LLP after 12 years at Waymaker LLP, Cooley announced Monday.
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December 15, 2025
SEC Settles With Digital Ad Co. Accused Of $2.8M Fraud
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said Monday that the founder of a purported social media advertising company will pay $125,000 to end the agency's claims they misled potential investors about the company's revenue and growth prospects.
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December 15, 2025
Catching Up With Delaware's Chancery Court
Litigation in Delaware's Court of Chancery sprawled from a dispute over control of banana plantations along Africa's Congo River to a fight over the late musician Prince's estate last week. Along the way, a court ruling rejected a motion for a quick decision favoring Blue Bell Creameries director and officer calls for liability releases in a tainted ice cream saga that dates to 2015.
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December 15, 2025
Texas, Toronto Stock Exchanges End Trademark Dispute
The Texas Stock Exchange has buried the hatchet with the Toronto Stock Exchange and ended its suit seeking a court finding that the two exchanges' logos are dissimilar.
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December 15, 2025
Sen. Tim Scott's Ex-Chief Of Staff Joins Holland & Hart
Holland & Hart LLP has tapped the former chief of staff for Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., to serve as a senior director of federal affairs in the firm's Washington, D.C., office, according to a Monday announcement.
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December 12, 2025
30 Years On, PSLRA Debates Still Rage In Securities Cases
Thirty years ago this month, Congress overrode a presidential veto to enact a law that changed the landscape of shareholder class action lawsuits. How the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act will continue to change that landscape remains a live issue as courts continue to wrestle with the question of how investors can prove that they've been injured by alleged corporate malfeasance.
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December 12, 2025
SEC, Ex-Advisers Settle Unregistered Securities Sales Claims
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has reached a settlement with a pair of former investment advisers it accused of participating in a fraudulent scheme to sell unregistered oil and gas securities, according to a motion filed on Friday.
Expert Analysis
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What 2 Profs Noticed As Transactional Law Students Used AI
After a semester using generative artificial intelligence tools with students in an entrepreneurship law clinic, we came away with numerous observations about the opportunities and challenges such tools present to new transactional lawyers, say professors at Cornell Law School.
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Despite SEC Reset, Private Crypto Securities Cases Continue
While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission under the Trump administration has charted a new approach to crypto regulation, the industry still lacks comprehensive rules of the road, meaning private plaintiffs continue to pursue litigation, and application of securities laws to crypto-assets will be determined by the courts, say attorneys at Skadden.
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State AGs Are Turning Up The Antitrust Heat On ESG Actions
Recent antitrust developments from red state attorneys general continue a trend of environmental, social and governance scrutiny, and businesses exposed to these areas should conduct close examinations of strategy and potential material risk, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Crypto Custody Guidelines Buoy Both Banks And Funds
A statement released last month by banking regulators — highlighting risks that the agencies expect banks holding crypto-assets to mitigate — may encourage more traditional institutions to offer crypto-asset safekeeping and thereby offer asset managers more options for qualified custodians to custody crypto-assets for their clients, say attorneys at Dechert.
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Navigating Executive Perk Enforcement Under Trump Admin
While the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission recently signaled a softer approach to executive perks, companies should remain vigilant due to the bipartisan and lengthy nature of executive perquisite cases and Chairman Paul Atkins' previous support for disclosure requirements, say attorneys at Gibson Dunn.
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Rebuttal
BigLaw Settlements Should Not Spur Ethics Deregulation
A recent Law360 op-ed argued that loosening law firm funding restrictions would make BigLaw firms less inclined to settle with the Trump administration, but deregulating legal financing ethics may well prove to be not merely ineffective, but counterproductive, says Laurel Kilgour at the American Economic Liberties Project.
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What FinCEN's AML Rule Delay Means For Advisers
Even with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network's statement last month delaying the compliance date for a rule requiring advisers to report suspicious activity, advisers can expect some level of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission oversight in connection with anti-money laundering compliance, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Liquidity Rule Compliance Still Vital Even After SEC Dismissal
Despite its recent dismissal of a novel case against Pinnacle Advisors over liquidity rule violations, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has continued to bring enforcement actions involving investment advisers, making compliance with the rule important for registrants, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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5 Ways Lawyers Can Earn Back The Public's Trust
Amid salacious headlines about lawyers behaving badly and recent polls showing the public’s increasingly unfavorable view of attorneys, we must make meaningful changes to our culture to rebuild trust in the legal system, says Carl Taylor at Carl Taylor Law.
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Class Actions At The Circuit Courts: August Lessons
In this month's review of class action appeals, Mitchell Engel at Shook Hardy discusses key takeaways from federal appellate decisions involving topics including antitrust, immigration, consumer fraud, birthright citizenship under the Fourteenth Amendment, and product defects.
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A Look At Justices' Rare Decision Not To Limit Agency Powers
The Supreme Court's recent denial of Alpine's cert petition in its long-running case against the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority sends a strong signal that litigation strategies dependent on the elimination of government agencies merit caution, even from a court that lately hasn't been shy about paring back agency authority, say attorneys at Venable.
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Series
Hiking Makes Me A Better Lawyer
On the trail, I have thought often about the parallels between hiking and high-stakes patent litigation, and why strategizing, preparation, perseverance and joy are important skills for success in both endeavors, says Barbara Fiacco at Foley Hoag.
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White House Report Strikes An Optimistic Note On Crypto
Taking seriously President Donald Trump's pledge to adopt a pro-innovation mindset toward digital assets and blockchain technologies, a recent benchmark White House report on crypto provides a comprehensive regulatory framework that takes into account the products' novel characteristics within the high-tech ecosystem, say attorneys at Davis Wright.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Negotiation Skills
I took one negotiation course in law school, but most of the techniques I rely on today I learned in practice, where I've discovered that the process is less about tricks or tactics, and more about clarity, preparation and communication, says Grant Schrantz at Haug Barron.
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Opinion
Andreessen Horowitz's Take On Delaware Is Misguided
Hostility toward incorporation in Delaware, as expressed in Andreessen Horowitz's recent announcement that it has moved its primary business from the First State to Nevada, is based on a basket of arguments that fail to stand up to harsher scrutiny, say attorneys at Alto Litigation.