Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
White Collar
-
March 02, 2026
4 Things That Likely Sealed Fate Of SCOTUSblog Founder
When 12 "guilty" verdicts were read aloud by the jury in SCOTUSblog founder Thomas Goldstein's tax evasion and mortgage fraud trial last week, it was the culmination of a 16-day trial that took jurors deep into Goldstein's ultra high-stakes poker playing, his lavish lifestyle and his former law firm's accounting. Here, Law360 looks at four key pieces of evidence that likely moved jurors to their decision.
-
March 02, 2026
SEC Drops Negligence Suit Against Ex-View CFO
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission agreed to dismiss with prejudice its negligence claim against a former chief financial officer of "smart" glassmaker View Inc., after the agency secured partial summary judgment on other claims in the case last year.
-
March 02, 2026
11th Circ. Says Court Can Enforce Restitution After Probation
A district court retains jurisdiction to enforce the payment of court-ordered restitution even after a criminal defendant has finished serving probation, the Eleventh Circuit ruled Monday in the case against a former IMG Worldwide employee who sold unauthorized tickets for the Sony Open tennis tournament.
-
March 02, 2026
Senate Banking Dems Call For Binance Deal Compliance Probe
Senate Democrats on the banking committee are pressing the U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Department of the Treasury to investigate reports that cryptocurrency exchange Binance Holdings Ltd. could be flouting the requirements of a 2023 settlement agreement.
-
March 02, 2026
NC Woman Appeals Criminal Contempt After Atty Assault Trial
A woman who claims an attorney drunkenly punched her in the face in a hotel lobby is urging a North Carolina appeals court to undo her jail sentence, arguing that a trial judge wrongly found her in contempt of court after she accidentally violated hearsay rules while testifying.
-
March 02, 2026
6th Circ. Upholds 12-Year Stint For Mich. Doc In 'Pill Mill' Case
The Sixth Circuit affirmed the convictions and 12-year prison sentence of a Michigan doctor accused of operating a cash-only "pill mill" that wrote thousands of opioid prescriptions, holding that the trial judge properly handled the jury instructions and key evidentiary rulings.
-
March 02, 2026
Attorney, Law Firm Seek Exit From EB-5 Fraud Suit
An attorney and his law firm urged a Florida federal judge to throw out fraud claims a proposed class of EB-5 investors lodged against them over what they called a sham real estate development in Orlando, Florida.
-
March 02, 2026
Physical Therapy Practice Owners Get 6 Years For Fraud
The owners of a defunct Erie, Pennsylvania, physical therapy practice were each sentenced to six years in prison for defrauding federal healthcare programs by overbilling, prosecutors announced Monday.
-
March 02, 2026
WilmerHale Rehires Former Va. Solicitor General
WilmerHale has rehired Virginia's former solicitor general, who left the firm in 2022 to work in government, to lend his perspective on state attorneys general matters and appellate and government litigation, the firm announced Monday.
-
March 02, 2026
Justices Won't Set Bar For Probation Violation Detentions
The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday it won't decide if a Pennsylvania county's practice of jailing people for long periods over alleged probation violations was a violation of their constitutional rights.
-
February 28, 2026
2nd Circuit Says IRS Can Apply Foreign Biz Reporting Penalty
The Internal Revenue Service may use administrative assessment to collect penalties from a taxpayer for failing to report control of a foreign business from 2005 to 2009, the Second Circuit held Friday, vacating a U.S. Tax Court ruling.
-
February 27, 2026
Otterbourg Chiefs' $20M Suit Against Atty Nixed For Now
A Connecticut federal judge Friday tossed a $20 million lawsuit by Otterbourg's leadership against an ex-partner they allege improperly accessed their personal files, saying New York law applies and that state doesn't recognize an "intrusion upon seclusion" claim, and they can replead with a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
-
February 27, 2026
Goldstein Testimony 'Solidified' Case, Juror Says
One of the 12 jurors who convicted SCOTUSblog founder Thomas Goldstein on a slew of tax and mortgage charges on Feb. 25 told Law360 that the key moment in the 16-day trial was when the famed U.S. Supreme Court lawyer took the stand, with the juror calling the testimony "a performance."
-
February 27, 2026
7th Circ. Rejects Firm's $237K Fee Bid From Investment Fund
Ballard Spahr LLP does not have a valid claim to roughly $237,000 in unpaid legal fees it sought from a Wisconsin-based gem and fine metal investment fund that went through bankruptcy, the Seventh Circuit said Friday.
-
February 27, 2026
Calif. Bar Charges Atty With Misconduct In LA Utility Case
The California State Bar has lobbed disciplinary charges against veteran plaintiffs attorney Paul Kiesel, accusing him of helping divert class action litigation against the city of Los Angeles over a botched utility billing system, allegations which he vigorously denied and slammed as "unfounded, misguided and fundamentally wrong."
-
February 27, 2026
SEC Issues Final Rules For Foreign Private Issuer Reporting
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday adopted final rules requiring directors and officers of foreign private issuers to begin disclosing their holdings and transactions of the issuer's securities on March 18, as mandated under a new law aimed at cracking down on foreign insider trading.
-
February 27, 2026
Geofence Warrants Harm 'Privacies Of Life,' Amici Tell Justices
Geofence warrants violate Fourth Amendment protections against government surveillance by being imprecise and overbroad in the information they obtain, civil rights and public interest groups argued Friday, urging the U.S. Supreme Court to prevent the warrants' use.
-
February 27, 2026
Developer Admits Stealing From Investors, On Hook For $13M
A Florida developer told a Manhattan federal judge Friday that he misappropriated the proceeds of membership interests in real estate projects he pitched to investors, copping to a count of securities fraud and agreeing to forfeit up to $13 million.
-
February 27, 2026
White Collar Group Of The Year: Morrison Foerster
Morrison Foerster LLP's white collar attorneys were selected as independent FDIC monitors, helped free a client wrongfully detained by the Nigerian government and adeptly guided McKinsey though both opioid and bribery investigations, earning them a spot as one of the 2025 Law360 White Collar Groups of the Year.
-
February 27, 2026
Tricolor Noteholders Say Big Banks Ignored Auto Loan Fraud
Securitized auto loan investors are suing JPMorgan, Barclays and Fifth Third in New York federal court, alleging the banks ignored glaring red flags and helped conceal a sprawling subprime auto loan fraud by Tricolor Holdings that collapsed in bankruptcy last year.
-
February 26, 2026
Ex-Morgan Stanley Pro's NBA Fraud Rap Falls Short, Jury Told
An attorney for a former Morgan Stanley investment adviser accused of defrauding NBA stars by feeding them overpriced insurance investments and stealing funds told a Manhattan federal jury Thursday the players' own words and other evidence belie the government's claims.
-
February 26, 2026
Maduro Says Charges Must Be Nixed Due To US 'Interference'
Former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro urged a New York federal court on Thursday to dismiss the U.S. government's narco-terrorism conspiracy case against him, saying the government was interfering with his constitutional right to present a defense by not letting the Venezuelan government pay his legal fees with "untainted funds."
-
February 26, 2026
Goldstein Placed Under Home Confinement Until Sentencing
SCOTUSblog founder Thomas Goldstein was placed under home confinement by a Maryland federal judge until his sentencing, but will likely be able to keep his $3 million D.C. home after the jury that convicted him separately found there wasn't a clear nexus between the property and his mortgage fraud conviction.
-
February 26, 2026
Conn. High Court Snapshot: Transcripts, Signatures & Lyrics
When the Connecticut Supreme Court opens its new term Monday, the justices will consider if prosecutors were wrong to introduce a rap video into a murder trial and whether a former Democratic party bigwig was wrongfully denied an opportunity to challenge the expert witness in his voter fraud case.
-
February 26, 2026
$100M AI Token Dump Suit Can't Be Heard In NY, Founders Say
Co-founders of a digital asset issuer and an associated crypto organization seek to shed a lawsuit accusing them of conspiring to improperly extract over $100 million from an open-source artificial intelligence coalition, arguing Wednesday that a Manhattan federal court doesn't have jurisdiction over the Romania- and Germany-based defendants or the decentralized organization.
Expert Analysis
-
What DOJ's New Trade Fraud Push Means For Cos.
The U.S. Department of Justice's announcement this week that it is elevating trade fraud to an economic and national security imperative sends an unmistakable message to multinational corporations, importers, compliance professionals and supply chain managers that the days of laissez-faire enforcement are over, says Markus Funk at White & Case.
-
3 Cases Highlight SEC Distinction Between Exec, Co. Liability
Three recent enforcement actions against Spero Therapeutics, Lottery.com and Archer-Daniels-Midland demonstrate that while public companies are subject to liability for misrepresentations, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is focused on individual liability when disclosure violations involve so-called half-truths, say attorneys at Cooley.
-
AI-Generated Doc Ruling Guides Attys On Privilege Risks
A New York federal court's ruling, in U.S. v. Heppner, that documents created by a defendant using an artificial intelligence tool were not privileged, can serve as a guide to attorneys for retaining attorney-client or work-product privilege over client documents created with AI, say attorneys at Sher Tremonte.
-
To Survive FCA Actions, Small Cos. Must Take Offensive Steps
A fumbled response to False Claims Act allegations can doom lower-middle-market businesses, and with FCA enforcement hitting record levels for two years, smaller companies must have offensive strategies ready that focus their limited resources on defeating civil qui tam and federal criminal actions, says Derrelle Janey at Olshan Frome.
-
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: Leadership Strategy After Day 1
For law firm leaders, ensuring a newly combined law firm lives up to its promise, both in its first days of operation and well after, includes tough decisions, clear and specific communication, and cheerleading, says Peter Michaud at Ballard Spahr.
-
The Challenges Of Detecting Event Contract Manipulation
While concerns about possible manipulation and insider trading in event contracts have increasingly been raised by market observers, distinguishing a speculative position from a hedge and effective surveillance make regulation difficult, particularly as the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission argues for exclusive jurisdiction to do so, say economic consultants at the Brattle Group.
-
Perspectives
DC Circ. Gag Order Rulings Reveal A Digital Privacy Paradox
A pair of rulings from the D.C. Circuit reveal a growing dilemma in digital privacy jurisprudence for investigative targets, technology companies and transparency advocates — even when courts set the bar higher for broad nondisclosure requests, the public may never be allowed to learn why orders get approved, say attorneys at RJO.
-
Record FCA Recoveries Signal Intensified Healthcare Focus
In its recently released False Claims Act statistics, the U.S. government's emphasis on record healthcare recoveries and government-initiated healthcare matters last year indicates robust enforcement ahead, though the administration's focus on current policy objectives also extends beyond the healthcare sector, say attorneys at Epstein Becker.
-
Clearing US Legal Hurdles To Biz Opportunities In Venezuela
Companies evaluating foreign investment or activity in Venezuela given the U.S. government's recently announced plans to reinvigorate its natural resources should take specific steps to minimize risks connected to interactions with restricted parties given the web of U.S. counterterrorism, anticorruption and sanctions controls, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
-
Reel Justice: 'Sentimental Value' And Witness Anxiety
"Sentimental Value" reminds us that anxiety can interfere with performance, but unlike actors, witnesses cannot rehearse their lines or control the script, so a lawyer's role is not to eliminate stress, but to create conditions where the accuracy of a witness's testimony survives under pressure, says Veronica Finkelstein at Wilmington University.
-
Calif.'s Civility Push Shows Why Professionalism Is Vital
The California Bar’s campaign against discourteous behavior by attorneys, including a newly required annual civility oath, reflects a growing concern among states that professionalism in law needs shoring up — and recognizes that maintaining composure even when stressed is key to both succeeding professionally and maintaining faith in the legal system, says Lucy Wang at Hinshaw.
-
Should Prediction Markets Allow Trading On Nonpublic Info?
Recent trading activity, such as the Polymarket wager on the U.S. capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, has raised questions about whether some participants may be engaging in trading that is based on material nonpublic information, and highlights ongoing uncertainty about how existing derivatives and anti-fraud rules apply to event-based contracts, say economic consultants at the Brattle Group.
-
Series
Trivia Competition Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Playing trivia taught me to quickly absorb information and recognize when I've learned what I'm expected to know, training me in the crucial skills needed to be a good attorney, and reminding me to be gracious in defeat, says Jonah Knobler at Patterson Belknap.
-
Clarifying A Persistent Misconception About Settlement Talks
An Indiana federal court’s recent Cloudbusters v. Tinsley ruling underscores the often-misunderstood principle that Rule 408 of the Federal Rules of Evidence does not bar parties from referencing prior settlement communications in their pleadings — a critical distinction when such demands further a fraudulent or bad faith scheme, say attorneys at Hanson Bridgett.
-
Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: What Cross-Selling Truly Takes
Early-career attorneys may struggle to introduce clients to practitioners in other specialties, but cross-selling becomes easier once they know why it’s vital to their first years of practice, which mistakes to avoid and how to anticipate clients' needs, say attorneys at Moses & Singer.