Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
White Collar
-
January 22, 2026
Trump Calls For Prosecution Of Jack Smith Post-Hearing
Shortly after former special counsel Jack Smith gave his first public congressional testimony on the Trump cases, in which he warned the rule of law should not be taken for granted, President Donald Trump said he should be prosecuted.
-
January 22, 2026
Designer Akris Settles FCA Claim Over Pandemic Loan
The U.S. subsidiary of Swiss designer Akris AG has agreed to pay $1.8 million to settle a False Claims Act complaint alleging the company improperly obtained a pandemic relief loan for which it was not eligible, the U.S. attorney's office in Boston announced Thursday.
-
January 22, 2026
Judge Severs Tax Charges From Ex-Rep's Foreign Agent Case
A former Florida congressman will get to contest tax charges against him separately from a criminal indictment alleging he and a political consultant failed to register as foreign agents while lobbying on behalf of Venezuela's state oil company, a federal judge ruled.
-
January 22, 2026
Sentencing Judge Blasts Ex-Mars Exec's 'Entitlement'
A former Mars Inc. risk executive was sentenced on Thursday to 63 months in prison and ordered to pay the candy company more than $28.4 million in restitution after pleading guilty to two counts of wire fraud and one count of tax evasion surrounding a decadelong fraud scheme.
-
January 22, 2026
10th Amtrak Worker Cops To Role In $11M Fraud Scheme
A former Amtrak employee has admitted to participating in a scheme that prosecutors claim defrauded the rail carrier out of $11 million in health benefits, making him the 10th defendant in a year to plead guilty in the case, the U.S. attorney's office in New Jersey said on Thursday.
-
January 22, 2026
Feds Won't Retry Landmark OpenSea NFT Fraud Case
Federal prosecutors won't retry their fraud claims against the former OpenSea manager accused of insider trading on his employer's nonfungible token platform, walking away from the case after the Second Circuit overturned the conviction last July.
-
January 22, 2026
Ga. Financial Firm CEO Cops To $380M Ponzi Scheme
The CEO of an Atlanta-area financial advisory group has pled guilty to conducting a $380 million Ponzi scheme, which is likely the largest in Georgia history, according to prosecutors.
-
January 22, 2026
Marketers Who Sold Fraudulent StraightPath Funds Plead Out
Two New York men who hawked pre-initial public offering shares for fraud-ridden vendor StraightPath from "boiler room" sales floors pled guilty Thursday to fraud charges, after Manhattan federal prosecutors charged them with raising $185 million by duping customers.
-
January 22, 2026
Agency Not Covered For Injury Suit Over Fraud, Carrier Says
A construction policy insurer agency and its owner aren't owed coverage for an underlying personal injury lawsuit, its professional liability carrier told a New York federal court, alleging a third-party lawsuit accusing the owner of fraud and misappropriating insurance funds triggered an exclusion in its professional liability policy.
-
January 21, 2026
Holmes Seeks Trump Clemency For Theranos Fraud Sentence
Former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes has asked President Donald Trump to commute an 11-year prison sentence she's been serving for defrauding investors with bogus blood-testing technology, according to the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of the Pardon Attorney.
-
January 21, 2026
Lawyer Testifies Goldstein Dodged $500K Poker Repayment
A former employee at Thomas Goldstein's law firm recounted in court Wednesday that a U.S. Internal Revenue Service levy was placed on the SCOTUSblog founder's accounts, while a lawyer at another firm said Goldstein dodged repaying him for money invested in his poker-playing exploits.
-
January 21, 2026
'Out Of Control': Coach Says He Placed Bets For Ex-MLB Star
A baseball coach who placed illegal sports wagers for former MLB star Yasiel Puig took the stand Wednesday in the player's obstruction of justice trial, telling a California federal jury that Puig's gambling got "out of control" and that the coach feared repercussions from bookies after Puig didn't pay his debts.
-
January 21, 2026
Ex-TD Bank Worker Cops To Taking Money Laundering Bribes
A former New Jersey-based TD Bank NA employee pled guilty on Wednesday to accepting bribes and leveraging his position to facilitate the movement of over $26 million to Colombia through TD Bank accounts.
-
January 21, 2026
Gambler Gets 2 Years For NBA Bet-Rigging Scheme
A self-described compulsive gambler was sentenced in Brooklyn federal court Wednesday to two years in prison for conspiring with a now-former NBA player and others to place rigged bets on his performance with knowledge that the Toronto Raptors center and power forward would be taking a dive.
-
January 21, 2026
Schwab Nixed From DOL Enforcement Suit Against Other Firm
A Pennsylvania federal judge on Wednesday dismissed two Schwab companies from a U.S. Department of Labor enforcement case, finding the financial services providers' participation was no longer needed in the agency's dispute against another firm.
-
January 21, 2026
Feds Say Medicare Steering Case Meets FCA Legal Bar
The government said Wednesday that its False Claims Act complaint accusing insurers and brokers of participating in a kickback scheme to steer customers to Medicare Advantage plans doesn't conflict with a First Circuit decision last year setting out the standard for such cases.
-
January 21, 2026
Ga. Justices Deny Atty's Reprimand Bid After Jan. 6 Actions
A public reprimand may not be enough to discipline an attorney who was convicted and later pardoned of a felony and several misdemeanor federal offenses in connection with his participation in events at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, the Georgia Supreme Court said Wednesday.
-
January 21, 2026
FINRA Says Firm Broke Reg BI By Not Spotting Risky Trading
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority has accused a broker-dealer and its ex-CEO of violating Regulation Best Interest by failing to identify suspicious, excessive trading in a customer account by a representative of the firm, causing the client $1.2 million in losses.
-
January 21, 2026
Former Ga. State Rep. Cops To COVID Loan Fraud
A former Georgia Democratic lawmaker pled guilty Wednesday to charges that she fraudulently obtained pandemic-era unemployment benefits, the Department of Justice said.
-
January 21, 2026
SEC Wins $9.7M In Cemtrex Fraud Case After 2nd Circ. Remand
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has secured a $9.7 million judgment against the founder of an industrial manufacturer who allegedly diverted over $7.3 million of investor funds from his company to his private accounts, after the Second Circuit vacated the previous disgorgement award and remanded the case.
-
January 21, 2026
Feds Oppose Bail For Conn. Oil Trader During FCPA Appeal
Federal prosecutors are fighting an oil trader's bid for freedom while he appeals a 15-month Foreign Corrupt Practices Act prison sentence, arguing the trader should begin serving time by Feb. 9 because his jury conviction probably won't be reversed.
-
January 21, 2026
3rd Circ. Questions Mushroom Farmer's Tax Bill Accounting
A Third Circuit panel appeared skeptical Wednesday of a woman's bid to reduce her prison term for tax violations connected to her family's mushroom farm, with judges suggesting that different swaths of taxes she failed to pay the government could be grouped together as "relevant conduct" under federal sentencing guidelines.
-
January 21, 2026
Greenberg Traurig Builds Up Nat'l Security Group With 3 Hires
Greenberg Traurig LLP has hired the former cohead of Eversheds Sutherland's national security group in Washington, D.C., as the chair of its newly formed national security group, which is growing in the nation's capital with his addition and the hiring of a former CIA leader and a former deputy general counsel of the U.S. Cyber Command.
-
January 21, 2026
DOJ Outline Of New Fraud Role Doesn't Mention WH Oversight
A U.S. Department of Justice official explained the parameters of the new role of assistant attorney general for fraud in a recent letter to Congress, obtained Wednesday by Law360, but did not mention the individual will be overseen by the White House, as the vice president previously said.
-
January 21, 2026
Jefferies Steered Feds To $200M Water Ponzi Case, Judge Told
Two men charged in connection with an allegedly massive water-vending Ponzi scheme were investigated after counsel for investment giant Jefferies — one defendant's former employer — walked the case into the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office, a federal judge heard Wednesday.
Expert Analysis
-
OFAC Sanctions Will Intensify Amid Global Tensions In 2026
The Office of Foreign Assets Control will ramp up its targeting of companies in the private equity, venture capital, real estate and legal markets in 2026, in keeping with the aggressive foreign policy approach embraced by the Trump administration in 2025, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
-
5 E-Discovery Predictions For 2026 And Beyond
2026 will likely be shaped by issues ranging from artificial intelligence regulatory turbulence to potential evidence rule changes, and e-discovery professionals will need to understand how to effectively guide the responsible and defensible adoption of emerging tools, while also ensuring effective safeguards, say attorneys at Littler.
-
Reinventing Bank Risk Mgmt. After 2025's Cartel Crackdown
The Trump administration's 2025 designation of certain transnational drug cartels as terrorists means that banks must adapt to a narrowing margin of error in their customer screening and transaction assessments by treating financial crime prevention as a continuous and cross-enterprise concern with national security implications, says Jack Harrington at Bradley Arant.
-
2026 Enforcement Trends To Expect In Maritime And Int'l Trade
The maritime and international trade community should expect U.S. federal enforcement to ramp up in 2026, particularly via Office of Foreign Asset Control shipping sanctions, accelerating interagency investigations of trade fraud, and U.S. Coast Guard narcotics and pollution inspections, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
-
Reviewing Historical And Recent NYDFS Blockchain Guidance
Excerpt from Practical Guidance
An industry letter released in the fall by the New York State Department of Financial Services, together with guidance issued over the past decade, signals a heightened regulatory expectation for covered institutions regarding the use of blockchain analytics and requires review, says Nicole De Santis at Nomadis Consulting.
-
SEC Virtu Deal Previews Risks Of Nonpublic Info In AI Models
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent settlement with Virtu Financial Inc. over alleged failures to safeguard customer data raises broader questions about how traditional enforcement frameworks may apply when material nonpublic information is embedded into artificial intelligence trading systems, says Braeden Anderson at Gesmer Updegrove.
-
Series
Judges On AI: How Courts Can Boost Access To Justice
Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Samuel A. Thumma writes that generative artificial intelligence tools offer a profound opportunity to enhance access to justice and engender public confidence in courts’ use of technology, and judges can seize this opportunity in five key ways.
-
Examining Privilege In Dual-Purpose Workplace Investigations
The Sixth Circuit's recent holding in FirstEnergy's bribery probe ruling that attorney-client privilege applied to a dual-purpose workplace investigation because its primary purpose was obtaining legal advice highlights the uncertainty companies face as federal circuit courts remain split on the appropriate test, say attorneys at Proskauer.
-
Opinion
The Case For Emulating, Not Dividing, The Ninth Circuit
Champions for improved judicial administration should reject the unfounded criticisms driving recent Senate proposals to divide the Ninth Circuit and instead seek to replicate the court's unique strengths and successes, says Ninth Circuit Judge J. Clifford Wallace.
-
4 Ways 2026 Will Shift Corporate Compliance And Ethics
As we begin 2026, ethics and compliance functions are being reshaped by forces that go far beyond traditional regulatory risk, and there are key trends that will define the landscape, with success defined less by activity and volume, and more by impact, judgment and credibility, says Hui Chen at CDE Advisors.
-
Targeted Action, Rule Tweaks Reflect 2025 AML Priority Shifts
Though 2025’s anti-money-laundering landscape was characterized not by volume of penalties but by the strategic recalibration of how illicit finance risk is handled, a series of targeted enforcement actions signaled that regulators aren't easing off the accelerator, even as they refine the rules of the road, say attorneys at MoFo.
-
3 DC Circ. Rulings Signal Shift In Search And Seizure Doctrine
A trio of decisions from courts in the District of Columbia Circuit, including a recent order compelling prosecutors to return materials seized from James Comey’s former attorney, makes clear that continued government possession of digital evidence may implicate the Fourth Amendment, says Gregory Rosen at RJO.
-
Series
Muay Thai Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Muay Thai kickboxing has taught me that in order to win, one must stick to one's game plan and adapt under pressure, just as when facing challenges by opposing counsel or judges, says Mark Schork at Feldman Shepherd.
-
Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Intentional Career-Building
A successful legal career is built through intention: understanding expectations, assessing strengths honestly and proactively seeking opportunities to grow and cultivating relationships that support your development, say Erika Drous and Hillary Mann at Morrison Foerster.
-
Citgo Ruling Offers Award Enforcement Road Map
A recent opinion from the Delaware federal court approving a $5.892 billion bid for Citgo Petroleum shares brings the long-running enforcement of the Crystallex arbitration award against Venezuela closer to resolution and offers crucial lessons for creditors pursuing sovereign debt, says Vitaly Morozov at Pierson Ferdinand.