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White Collar
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March 09, 2026
Kansas Tribe, Sheriff Seek Wins In Jurisdictional Dispute
A Kansas Indigenous nation is seeking a win in a dispute over tribal jurisdiction, arguing it has satisfied the burden to show that a Jackson County sheriff unlawfully infringed on its inherent sovereignty when he allegedly threatened to arrest tribal officials for reviewing an on-reservation business's tax records.
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March 09, 2026
NY Judge Tosses Terror Victims' Binance Suit, For Now
A lawsuit against Binance and Changpeng Zhao, its former CEO, brought by the victims of 64 terrorist attacks was dismissed on Friday when a New York federal judge determined that the plaintiffs have not directly linked any wrongdoing by the cryptocurrency exchange to their injuries.
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March 09, 2026
Ga. County DA Sidelined In Election Case Legal Fee Fight
The Fulton County district attorney's office cannot fight President Donald Trump and his co-defendants' bid for millions of dollars in legal fees incurred defending a now-dropped election interference case, a Georgia judge ruled Monday, saying District Attorney Fani Willis and her office had been "'wholly disqualified'" by an appeals court.
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March 09, 2026
Gorsuch Urges Jury Right Consideration In Release Violations
The U.S. Supreme Court should have reviewed the case of a man whose sentence for sex trafficking was eventually extended beyond the congressional maximum for violating the terms of his release, Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote Monday.
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March 09, 2026
3 Convicted Of Using Dental Practice To Defraud Medicare
A Pennsylvania jury on Monday convicted two of three brothers and an associate accused of using their dental practice to defraud Medicare by submitting bogus reimbursement claims, installing unapproved dental implants and doctoring visa paperwork to recruit workers from abroad.
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March 09, 2026
Kirkland Adds Ex-DOJ Criminal Division Leader In New York
Kirkland & Ellis LLP has hired the former head of the U.S. Department of Justice's Criminal Division, who most recently helped oversee corporate enforcement matters, cases dealing with foreign bribery, fraud, sanctions and more, the firm announced on Monday.
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March 09, 2026
Ex-City Official Admits Using Funds For Portrait, Steak Tips
A former Massachusetts city official pled guilty Monday to stealing public funds to pay for personal expenses that included hours of recording time at a music studio, a self-portrait and 153 pounds of steak tips.
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March 09, 2026
Barnes & Thornburg Adds 4 More Ballard Spahr Attys
Barnes & Thornburg LLP announced Monday that it has welcomed four more former Ballard Spahr LLP lawyers in a move that comes on the heels of Barnes & Thornburg hiring 35 public finance attorneys from Ballard Spahr last month.
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March 09, 2026
SCOTUSblog Founder Goldstein To Be Sentenced In June
SCOTUSblog founder Thomas Goldstein, currently under home confinement in Washington, D.C., after a Maryland jury convicted him on tax evasion and mortgage fraud charges, will face sentencing in June.
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March 09, 2026
Paul Hastings Adds A&O Shearman Securities Litigator Duo
Paul Hastings LLP announced Monday that it has hired two San Francisco-based securities litigation attorneys from Allen Overy Shearman Sterling as partners, including A&O Shearman's former managing partner of the California offices.
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March 09, 2026
Convicted Ex-Lobbyist Can't Get Early End To Supervision
A Michigan federal judge said maintaining a job and sobriety are not enough to warrant the end of early supervised release for a former marijuana industry lobbyist convicted of bribing a politician with cash and a sex worker.
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March 06, 2026
NYC Developers Accused Of $1.6M Housing Fraud Plead Out
Multiple real estate developers and their corporate entities Friday pled guilty over their roles in a $1.6 million scheme that Manhattan prosecutors say defrauded a New York state tax abatement program meant to support affordable housing.
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March 06, 2026
FCC Wants To Make It Easier To Kick People Out Of USF
The Federal Communications Commission wants to make it easier to boot people or entities from the Universal Service Fund, the agency's multibillion-dollar subsidy fund, if it believes they aren't following the rules they agreed to when they signed up.
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March 06, 2026
ExThera Exec Hid Patient Deaths To Keep $10M Deal, DOJ Says
Medical device company ExThera concealed the deaths of two U.S. patients treated with its unapproved blood filtration device at a clinic in Antigua, according to federal prosecutors, with the company agreeing to forfeit nearly $5.7 million and one executive facing up to three years in prison.
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March 06, 2026
Calif. Judge Blasts Ex-Venture Capitalist In Axing SVB Suit
Convicted venture capitalist and self-described "Silicon Valley's party animal" Michael Rothenberg's conduct in his lawsuit against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., acting on behalf of the failed Silicon Valley Bank, "consisted almost entirely of ignoring or frustrating" his litigation obligations, a California federal judge ruled in throwing out the case.
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March 06, 2026
In Deepfake Era, NY High Court Probes Evidence Standards
A recent New York state high court decision hammering home the importance of video evidence authentication has been coined a "clarion call" for verification in the age of deepfakes by defense attorneys who say the ruling demands a change in tactics.
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March 06, 2026
Ex-Software CFO Gets 2 Years For $35M Crypto Fraud Scheme
The former chief financial officer of a Seattle software startup will spend two years behind bars after being found guilty of bilking $35 million from his ex-employer, according to the terms of a sentence handed down by a Washington federal judge.
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March 06, 2026
EisnerAmper Settles SEC Allegations Over Infinity Q Audit
Audit firm EisnerAmper LLP will not have to pay a fine to resolve U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations tied to its 2020 audit of an Infinity Q Capital Management LLC mutual fund at the center of a criminal overvaluation case.
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March 06, 2026
FinCEN Hits Canaccord With Record $80M Broker-Dealer Fine
Canaccord Genuity Group Inc.'s broker-dealer arm Friday agreed to pay $80 million in settlements with three financial regulators for "widespread compliance failures" that allowed some securities fraud schemes to go undetected, with the broker-dealer admitting it willfully violated the Bank Secrecy Act.
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March 06, 2026
Former Calif. Securities Atty Gets Year For Tax Evasion
A former Southern California securities attorney Friday was sentenced to a year and a day in prison for evading paying his personal taxes and was ordered to pay over $350,000 in restitution to the IRS.
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March 06, 2026
Ex-Girardi Keese Atty Pleads Guilty For Role In Client Scandal
Former Girardi Keese attorney Keith Griffin pled guilty to criminal contempt in Illinois federal court on Thursday for his role in the firm's failure to pay millions in client settlement funds to relatives of victims killed in the crash of Lion Air Flight 610.
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March 06, 2026
NYSE To Pay $9M SEC Fine Over Botched Market Opening
The New York Stock Exchange on Friday agreed to pay $9 million to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission following a hardware failure that caused thousands of trades to fail and dozens of stocks to be hit with price declines.
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March 06, 2026
NYC Politician Seeks ICE Docs To Defend Obstruction Charge
The ex-comptroller of New York City, Brad Lander, is urging a federal judge to require the federal government to disclose how it is using immigration holding rooms at 26 Federal Plaza in downtown Manhattan as he fights a ticket he received for allegedly obstructing federal immigration officials.
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March 06, 2026
Miami Developer Accused Of $85M Fraud Scheme, DOJ Says
Federal prosecutors have accused a Miami real estate developer of leading an $85 million investment fraud scheme and failing to pay both his personal income taxes and payroll taxes for his employees, the U.S. Department of Justice said Friday.
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March 06, 2026
Connecticut Man Admits To $3.5M Amazon Trucking Fraud
The owner of a Connecticut trucking company admitted Friday to ripping off Amazon for $3.5 million by manipulating the online retail giant into believing that he had completed more than 1,000 jobs that he did not actually perform.
Expert Analysis
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Cybersecurity Must Remain Financial Sector's Focus In 2026
In 2026, financial institutions face a wave of more prescriptive cybersecurity legal requirements demanding clearer governance, faster incident reporting, and stronger oversight of third-party and AI-driven risks, making it crucial to understand these issues before they materialize into crises, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Presidential Pardon Brokering Can Create Risks For Attys
The emergence of an apparent “pardon shopping” marketplace, in which attorneys treat presidential pardons as a market product, may invite investigative scrutiny of counsel and potential criminal charges grounded in bribery, wire fraud and other statutes, says David Klasing at The Tax Law Offices of David W. Klasing.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: 5 Tips From Ex-SEC Unit Chief
My move to private practice has reaffirmed my belief in the value of adaptability, collaboration and strategic thinking — qualities that are essential not only for successful client outcomes, but also for sustained professional satisfaction, says Dabney O’Riordan at Fried Frank.
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Prisoners' Access To Health Info Should Have No Bars
To safeguard against unnecessary deaths in custody, courts and policymakers should clarify that incarcerated individuals’ constitutional right to medical care also includes access to sufficient information about their medical conditions, lifting current restrictions that can lead to crucial information being withheld, says Jaehyun Oh at Jacob Fuchsberg Law.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Start A Law Firm
Launching and sustaining a law firm requires skills most law schools don't teach, but every lawyer should understand a few core principles that can make the leap calculated rather than reckless, says Sam Katz at Athlaw.
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5 Compliance Takeaways From FINRA's Oversight Report
The priorities outlined in the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's recently released annual oversight report focus on the organization's core mission of protecting investors, with AI being the sole new topic area, but financial firms can expect further reforms aimed at efficiency and modernization, say attorneys at Armstrong Teasdale.
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How SEC Civil Penalties Became Arbitrary: 3 Potential Fixes
Data shows that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's seemingly unlimited authority to levy monetary penalties on market participants has diverged far from the federal securities laws' limitations, but three reforms can help reverse the trend, say David Slovick at Kopecky Schumacher and Phil Lieberman at Vanderbilt Law.
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Key False Claims Act Trends From The Last Year
The False Claims Act remains a powerful enforcement tool after some record verdicts and settlements in 2025, and while traditional fraud areas remain a priority, new initiatives are raising questions about its expanding application, says Veronica Nannis at Joseph Greenwald.
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Reel Justice: 'Die My Love' And The Power Of Visuals At Trial
The powerful use of imagery to capture the protagonist’s experience of postpartum depression in “Die My Love” reminds attorneys that visuals at trial can persuade jurors more than words alone, so they should strategically wield a new federal evidence rule allowing for illustrative aids, says Veronica Finkelstein at Wilmington University.
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Opportunities Amid The Challenges Of Trump's BIS Shake-Up
The Trump administration’s continuing overhaul of the Bureau of Industry and Security has created enormous practical challenges for export compliance, but it potentially also offers a once-in-a-generation opening to advocate for simplifying and rationalizing U.S. export controls, say attorneys at Gibson Dunn.
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How SEC Civil Penalties Became Arbitrary: The Data
Data regarding how the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has adhered to its own civil penalty rules over the past 20 years reveals that awards are no longer determined in accordance with the guidelines imposed on the SEC by the securities laws, say David Slovick at Kopecky Schumacher and Phil Lieberman at Vanderbilt Law.
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Series
Hosting Exchange Students Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Opening my home to foreign exchange students makes me a better lawyer not just because prioritizing visiting high schoolers forces me to hone my organization and time management skills but also because sharing the study-abroad experience with newcomers and locals reconnects me to my community, says Alison Lippa at Nicolaides Fink.
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Postconviction Law In 2026: A Recalibration, Not A Revolution
As the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to issue decisions in several federal postconviction cases in the coming months, the justices appear focused on restoring coherence to a system in which sentencing modification, collateral review and finality increasingly overlap, and success for practitioners will depend on strategic clarity, say attorneys at the Law Offices of Alan Ellis.
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How SEC Civil Penalties Became Arbitrary: The Framework
An examination of how the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has recently applied guidelines governing the imposition of monetary penalties in enforcement actions shows that civil penalty awards in many cases are inconsistent with the rules established to structure them, say David Slovick at Kopecky Schumacher and Phil Lieberman at Vanderbilt Law.
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How A 1947 Tugboat Ruling May Shape Work Product In AI Era
Rapid advances in generative artificial intelligence test work-product principles first articulated in the U.S. Supreme Court’s nearly 80-year-old Hickman v. Taylor decision, as courts and ethics bodies confront whether disclosure of attorneys’ AI prompts and outputs would reveal their thought processes, say Larry Silver and Sasha Burton at Langsam Stevens.