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Transportation
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March 06, 2026
ITC Probes Chinese Imports Of Salt Used In Lithium Batteries
The U.S. International Trade Commission is investigating whether Chinese imports of an electrolyte salt used in lithium-ion batteries are hampering U.S. industry by potentially being sold at less than fair value, according to a notice.
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March 06, 2026
Companies In Limbo Over Calif. Climate Disclosure Laws' Fate
Companies that do business in California are stuck in no-man's-land as the Golden State implements sweeping laws requiring disclosure of financial risks tied to climate change, at the same time the Ninth Circuit is poised to decide whether to block the laws.
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March 06, 2026
Wash. High Court Won't Hear Co.'s Arbitration Pact Appeal
Washington state's highest court won't review a decision finding a logistics company imposed an unconscionable arbitration pact on two workers who lodged wage and hour claims against the company, according to a court filing.
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March 05, 2026
Judge Says TitleMax's Forgery Claim Can't Halt Arbitrations
A North Carolina federal judge declined to grant several TitleMax subsidiaries a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction to stay over 100 arbitration proceedings after the car title loan company said a key document may have been forged, ruling Thursday that the request was tantamount to an expansion of the court's jurisdiction.
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March 05, 2026
A Look At Four States' Tort Reform Legislation Fights
There are currently four states debating whether to install business-friendly tort reform legislation or medical malpractice guardrails. The issues include a potentially brutal showdown in California over auto collision litigation and efforts in Florida to expand wrongful death liability for healthcare providers.
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March 05, 2026
Grubhub's $24.8M Deal To End Driver Fight Nears Initial OK
A California federal judge told counsel during a hearing Thursday that Grubhub Inc.'s revised $24.75 million settlement to resolve claims it misclassified drivers as independent contractors is "getting closer," but she held off on preliminarily approving the deal and told counsel they must "clean up" aspects of the class notice.
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March 05, 2026
DC Circ. Urged To Pause DOT Immigrant Truck Driver Rule
Local governments, legal advocates, Teamsters California and others have urged the D.C. Circuit to suspend the U.S. Department of Transportation's new final rule containing sweeping restrictions on nondomiciled commercial driver's licenses for immigrants, saying nearly 200,000 drivers would be culled from the workforce and trigger a supply chain and critical services crisis.
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March 05, 2026
Mom Hit By Tesla-Driving Toddler Can't Undo Trial Loss
A California state appellate panel affirmed a midtrial win for Tesla in a suit brought by a mother who was struck by a Tesla driven by her toddler, saying she used the wrong legal standard to characterize her claim that certain features were defectively designed.
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March 05, 2026
Hyundai Faces $9.8M Sanction For Car Destruction
A Pennsylvania court has awarded two car dealerships nearly $9.8 million as a sanction against Hyundai Motor America after finding Hyundai "consciously" crushed cars they acquired before alleging, without evidence, that they intentionally damaged them to exploit Hyundai's vehicle repurchases.
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March 05, 2026
DOD Official Says 30,000 Small Drone Order Coming Soon
A U.S. Department of Defense official told lawmakers Thursday that the Pentagon plans to order 30,000 small one-way attack drones for $150 million over the next few days, amid concerns that the U.S. is lagging behind with regard to its drone capabilities.
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March 05, 2026
GM Sued Over 'Catastrophic' Failures That Can Cause Fires
Newer-model Buick and Chevrolet vehicles equipped with a 1.2-liter turbocharged engine can suffer "catastrophic internal failures," causing loss of power and even fires, according to a proposed class action filed in Delaware federal court accusing General Motors LLC of concealing the problem.
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March 05, 2026
Boeing Doesn't Owe Fees For Hauling Bias Suit To Fed. Court
Boeing won't have to pay attorney fees for a worker who got a discrimination case over bonuses sent back to Washington state court after the company yanked it into a federal venue, as a judge ruled Thursday that the aerospace giant's removal of the case wasn't egregious.
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March 05, 2026
Delta Evades OT Class Action Over Shift Swap Policy
Delta Air Lines defeated Thursday a proposed class action in Georgia federal court that alleged the airline unlawfully withheld increased pay for overtime hours that resulted from workers swapping shifts with each other.
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March 05, 2026
Tire Co. Can't Break Free From Ex-Worker's 401(k) Suit
An Arizona federal judge refused to dismiss a proposed class action against a tire and wheel retailer alleging mismanagement of a $1.2 billion employee 401(k) plan, holding that an ex-worker sufficiently backed up claims that an underperforming suite of target-date fund investments violated federal benefits law.
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March 05, 2026
ITC To Probe Whether ATV Imports Infringe Polaris Patents
The U.S. International Trade Commission will open an investigation into whether imports of multiple-occupant ATVs known as side-by-sides infringe five patents held by Polaris.
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March 05, 2026
ERISA Recap: 6 Developments To Remember From Feb.
The Second Circuit refused to boot a former Luxottica worker's proposed class claims into solo arbitration, a Texas federal judge declined to snuff out a tobacco fee suit against 7-Eleven and a healthcare company inked a $43 million deal to wrap a case over how it handled 401(k) plan forfeitures. Here's a look back at six noteworthy moves in Employee Retirement Income Security Act cases from last month.
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March 05, 2026
Fla. Court Allows Chubb's Salvage Claim On Stolen Planes
Chubb European Group SE can move forward with a counterclaim against an aircraft leasing company that alleges the insurer can claim 23 Boeing and Airbus aircraft stolen by Russia at the start of the Ukraine war as salvaged, a Florida state court ruled.
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March 05, 2026
Third Spin The Charm On Chinese Truck Tire Duties, CIT Says
The U.S. Department of Commerce has, on its third try, correctly resolved the granting of separate duty rates in an "unusual case" involving a review of antidumping duties on Chinese tires, the U.S. Court of International Trade said.
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March 05, 2026
SpaceX Taps Citigroup For Planned IPO, Plus More Rumors
SpaceX has added Citigroup to its lineup of banks leading its planned blockbuster initial public offering, Thrive Capital and Andreessen Horowitz are co-leading an investment in defense company Andural Industries that could value it at $60 billion, and Indian payments platform PhonePe is preparing plans for an initial public offering that would value it at $10.5 billion.
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March 05, 2026
O'Reilly To Pay $5.6M To Settle Wash. Pregnancy Bias Suit
O'Reilly Auto Parts will pay $5.6 million to resolve claims that it failed to provide reasonable workplace accommodations to pregnant and postpartum workers and retaliated against them, the Washington Attorney General's Office announced.
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March 05, 2026
Calif. Privacy Agency Dings Ford Over Opt-Out 'Friction'
Ford Motor Co. has agreed to pay a fine of just over $375,000 and provide consumers with "easy methods" to stop the sharing and sale of their personal data in order to resolve the California privacy regulator's claims that the company added "unnecessary friction" to this opt-out process, the agency said Thursday.
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March 04, 2026
Split 4th Circ. Shields Musk From USAID Deposition, For Now
The Fourth Circuit on Wednesday ruled that Elon Musk and two former U.S. Agency for International Development officials will not, for now, have to testify in litigation ex-employees filed accusing the billionaire of illegally dismantling the foreign aid agency, saying no "extraordinary circumstances" justified the depositions.
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March 04, 2026
Wheeling & Appealing: The Latest Must-Know Appellate Action
If this month's circuit calendars were a March Madness bracket, we'd struggle to pick the top-seeded showdown. Big Pharma against the False Claims Act, or big business against President Donald Trump's visa fees? A big bank's view of "human life wagers," or en banc review in a State Farm class action?
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March 04, 2026
9th Circ. Spurns Uber's Bid To Halt Seattle Gig Worker Law
A divided Ninth Circuit panel on Wednesday rejected Uber and Instacart's attempt to block a Seattle law regulating deactivation of app-based worker accounts, rejecting the companies' contention that the ordinance amounts to a First Amendment violation.
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March 04, 2026
Feds, Wash. State Pitch $668M Cleanup Deal For Duwamish
The U.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Washington state asked a Washington federal court on Wednesday to approve an estimated $668 million proposed settlement involving more than 100 parties for cleanup work on Seattle's Duwamish River.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
Aviation Watch: Liability Lessons From 737 Max Blowout
The National Transportation Safety Board's recently released report on the 2024 door plug blowout on board a Boeing 737 Max airliner helps illuminate how a company's strategic mistakes can lead to flawed decision-making and supply chain oversight failures, ultimately increasing regulatory and legal exposure, says Alan Hoffman, a retired attorney and aviation expert.
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Series
Quilting Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Turning intricate patterns of fabric and thread into quilts has taught me that craftsmanship, creative problem-solving and dedication to incremental progress are essential to creating something lasting that will help another person — just like in law, says Veronica McMillan at Kramon & Graham.
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3rd Circ. FMLA Suit Revival Offers Notice Rule Lessons
In Walker v. SEPTA, the Third Circuit reinstated a former Philadelphia bus driver's Family and Medical Leave Act lawsuit, finding the notice standard is not particularly onerous, which underscores employers' responsibilities to recognize and document leave requests, and to avoid penalizing workers for protected absences, say Fiona Ong and Leah Shepherd at Ogletree.
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Utility Agency Suits May Rise As Calif. Justices Nix Deference
A recent California Supreme Court ruling rejecting the uniquely deferential standard of review accorded to California Public Utilities Commission decisions interpreting the Public Utilities Code will incentivize more litigation against the agency, as long as litigants can show their challenges meet certain requirements, says Thaila Sundaresan at Davis Wright.
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How Proposed FAA Rule May Streamline Drone Operations
The Federal Aviation Administration's recent proposed rule on autonomous drone delivery operations offers a more streamlined approach, by shifting away from the current pilot-centered framework and placing safety and operational responsibility at the level of the operator's organization, say Amanda Losacco and Jessica Monahan at Cozen O'Connor.
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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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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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8th Circ. Rulings Show Employer ADA Risks In Fitness Tests
Two recent Eighth Circuit decisions reviving lawsuits brought by former Union Pacific employees offer guidance for navigating compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, serving as a cautionary tale for employers that use broad fitness-for-duty screening programs and highlighting the importance of individualized assessments, says Masood Ali at Segal McCambridge.
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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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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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USPTO's AI Tool Redefines Design Patent Landscape
The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office's newly introduced DesignVision tool for artificial intelligence-powered image searching represents a dramatic shift in how design patent applications are examined, necessitating new strategies for patent practitioners, says Matthew Epstein at Dinsmore.
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Legal Jeopardy Looms Over Trump's Trade Negotiation Plans
Even as the Trump administration announces one trade deal after another, the legal authority of the executive branch to impose tariffs under consensual arrangements with leading trading partners is just as debatable as the unilateral imposition of U.S. tariffs under the president's executive orders, says Jeffrey Bialos at Eversheds Sutherland.
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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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Notable Q2 Updates In Insurance Class Actions
Vehicle valuation challenges regarding the use of projected sale adjustments continued apace in insurance class actions this quarter, where insurers have been scoring victories on class certification decisions in federal circuit courts, says Mathew Drocton at BakerHostetler.
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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.