White Collar

  • April 24, 2026

    Mass. Judge Tells Feds Not To Deport Harvard Researcher

    A Massachusetts federal judge on Friday ordered the government to act on a Harvard researcher's request to renew her expiring J-1 visa and to not take any steps toward deporting her while a criminal smuggling case is pending.

  • April 24, 2026

    Ex-Boxer's Attys DQ'd In Wake Of Juror Bribery Scheme

    A Brooklyn federal judge has disqualified three attorneys as counsel for a former heavyweight boxer whom prosecutors have accused of participating in a $1 billion cocaine trafficking scheme, citing what she found were "severe" potential and actual conflicts of interest, after a trial was called off due to an allegation of a juror bribery scheme.

  • April 24, 2026

    Feds Fight Ex-Rep.'s Acquittal Bid In Venezuela FARA Case

    Federal prosecutors urged a Florida U.S. district judge Thursday to reject an attempt by politician David Rivera and a political consultant to escape charges for allegedly failing to register as foreign agents while secretly representing Venezuela's state-owned oil company, saying the charges aren't too late.

  • April 24, 2026

    Jane Street Slams Terraform's Insider Trading Claims

    Jane Street is looking to escape a lawsuit accusing it of trading on insider information ahead of the collapse of cryptocurrency company Terraform Labs, telling a New York federal judge that it shouldn't have to "foot the bill" for a fraud that Terraform itself committed.

  • April 24, 2026

    Big Banks Say Investors' Beefed-Up Tricolor Claims Still Fail

    JPMorgan, Barclays and Fifth Third doubled down on their bid to dismiss an investor suit accusing them of facilitating an alleged auto loan fraud by Tricolor Holdings, saying they were also blindsided by Tricolor's actions.

  • April 24, 2026

    Alleged Plea Breaches In Abuse Case Prompt New Judge Bid

    The defendant in a child sexual abuse case in which a federal judge ordered the trio of attorneys then leading the New Jersey U.S. Attorney's Office to testify about who was in charge has asked for his sentencing to be reassigned to a new judge, arguing that the federal government has repeatedly breached his plea agreement.

  • April 24, 2026

    Ex-City Official To Pay $1.4M In Plea Deal Over Labor Scheme

    A former Sacramento City Council member has reached a plea deal regarding charges that he directed unauthorized immigrants employed at his grocery stores to lie to U.S. Department of Labor investigators, agreeing to pay over $1.4 million in restitution.

  • April 24, 2026

    DOJ Closing Probe Into Fed's Powell, Pirro Says

    The U.S. Department of Justice said Friday that it is dropping its criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, a reversal that could clear a path for the U.S. Senate to quickly confirm President Donald Trump's pick to succeed him.

  • April 23, 2026

    Expert Must Speak To Ruined Phone Claims In Antitrust Case

    A Washington federal judge said Wednesday that a digital forensics expert who was hired by a former Pilgrim's Pride employee facing bid-rigging allegations must testify in long-running civil antitrust litigation accusing poultry producers of price-fixing, finding the expert may be able to speak to claims that the worker destroyed evidence.

  • April 23, 2026

    Amazon Urges 9th Circ. To Uphold Block On Perplexity AI Bot

    Amazon on Wednesday pressed the Ninth Circuit to leave in place an injunction blocking a startup's artificial intelligence tool, Comet, from purchasing items on Amazon.com, calling the tool "a textbook violation" of federal and state law and arguing that the injunction is backed by a robust record.

  • April 23, 2026

    Transport Co. Says Broker, Insurer Cost It Gov't Contract

    An insurance broker submitted forged documents while obtaining an adjustment on a transportation company's insurance policy, causing it to lose coverage it needed to do business with a Washington, D.C., regional transit agency, according to a complaint filed in D.C. federal court.

  • April 23, 2026

    Soldier Aware Of Maduro Raid Bet On Polymarket, Feds Say

    A U.S. Army sergeant stationed in North Carolina who helped plan the capture of deposed Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro made lucrative, unlawful prediction market bets on the raid that saw Maduro brought to New York in January, Manhattan federal prosecutors charged on Thursday.

  • April 23, 2026

    Pair Accused Of Scheming To Dodge $2.5M IRS Tax Debt

    A Connecticut grand jury has charged an in-state businessman allegedly $2.5 million in debt to the Internal Revenue Service and a North Carolina man with engineering a series of financial transactions to keep tax authorities from collecting the debt, according to federal prosecutors.

  • April 23, 2026

    Fake Patients Got Braces Approved In Medicare Scheme

    An investigator with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services told jurors on Thursday that a telemedicine doctor signed off on unnecessary orthotic braces for two fake personas he created to test out a software system that the government claims bilked Medicare out of nearly half a billion dollars.

  • April 23, 2026

    Crypto.com Joins Arizona Prediction Markets Brawl

    Crypto.com has entered the Arizona battleground over prediction markets, joining Kalshi and the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission in a consolidated civil suit against the state, seeking an order protecting its own sports contract offerings from the reach of Arizona gaming regulators.

  • April 23, 2026

    Ex-First Liberty Chief Ran $140M Ponzi Scheme, DOJ Says

    The owner and former president of the now-defunct Georgia-based First Liberty Building & Loan LLC was arraigned Thursday in Georgia federal court for allegedly orchestrating a $140 million Ponzi scheme, according to the U.S. attorney's office in Atlanta.

  • April 23, 2026

    DOJ Says Beverly Hills Mansion Bought With Bribe Money

    The U.S. Department of Justice has asked a California federal court to allow the government to take possession of a Beverly Hills mansion alleged to have been purchased and then renovated with $30 million in illegally obtained and laundered funds.

  • April 23, 2026

    Huawei's Long-Awaited NY RICO Trial Moved To Fall

    A Brooklyn federal judge on Thursday said the racketeering trial of Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. will be delayed from June until September, after prosecutors filed streamlined charges over the weekend in one of two seven-year-old criminal cases the Chinese telecom company faces in the U.S.

  • April 23, 2026

    Judge Questions DOJ Bid To End Suit Over Trans Care Memo

    A Massachusetts federal judge appeared unmoved Thursday by a U.S. Department of Justice lawyer's argument that a suit challenging directives on prosecuting providers of gender-affirming care for transgender children is an abstract debate, noting that some providers have deemed the care too risky and stopped services. 

  • April 23, 2026

    Former Ga. State Rep. Avoids Prison For Unemployment Fraud

    A former Georgia state representative who stepped down this year amid allegations that she fraudulently obtained unemployment insurance during the COVID-19 pandemic avoided prison time Thursday as a federal judge sentenced her to time served.

  • April 23, 2026

    Another 'Inventing Anna' Attorney Gets Disbarred

    A New York state appeals court has accepted the resignation of a New York City attorney amid a misconduct investigation, reportedly leaving high-profile socialite scammer Anna Sorokin without legal counsel while facing fee claims from her former lawyer, according to a Thursday notice by opposing counsel.

  • April 23, 2026

    Prosecutor's Office Slips Contractors' Due Process Claims

    A New Jersey federal judge on Thursday tossed a suit brought against the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office by two contractors alleging they were illegally targeted in a criminal investigation over a business rivalry with an assistant prosecutor, ruling that the suit's remaining claims are time-barred.

  • April 23, 2026

    Pa. DA Offices Sued Over Interview Questions In Bias Suit

    A 61-year-old lawyer says members of the district attorney's offices in Montgomery and Chester counties asked him questions during job interviews intended to make him uncomfortable and to highlight age and racial disparities he faced as a Black attorney, according to a federal suit he filed in Pennsylvania.

  • April 23, 2026

    Baltimore Attorney Pleads Guilty In Real Estate Sales Scheme

    A Baltimore attorney has pled guilty to a federal bank fraud charge in connection with a real estate scheme that involved fake fees on property purchases inflated to deceive lenders.

  • April 23, 2026

    DOJ Final Order Loosens Rules For State-Legal Medical Pot

    The U.S. Department of Justice published a final order Thursday loosening federal restrictions on medical marijuana products that fall within the ambit of state-regulated programs or have approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Expert Analysis

  • Steps To Consider As DOJ Launches Fraud Division

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    The establishment this month of the National Fraud Enforcement Division within the U.S. Department of Justice is a significant reorganization that suggests an increase in enforcement activity involving federally funded programs but leaves a number of important questions unanswered, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.

  • 5 Trial Lessons You Learn By Losing

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    Exploring insights that are usually gained only after trial loss can expose the gaps between what we intend to communicate and what lands with the fact-finder, including why being right isn't always a win and how winning a cross‑examination can help you lose your case, says Allison Rocker at Baker & McKenzie.

  • What We Did And Didn't Learn From DOJ's 1st Illegal DEI Deal

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    IBM's recent $17 million deal with the U.S. Department of Justice marks the first resolved False Claims Act enforcement action under the Civil Rights Fraud Initiative, and while it validates the core of the government's FCA antidiscrimination enforcement road map, it leaves its most aggressive theories untested, say attorneys at Nutter.

  • What To Expect From The SEC's New SOX Group

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    In a potential shift away from Public Company Accounting Oversight Board enforcement, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's formation of a new group to investigate and litigate potential violations of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act brings both risks and benefits for auditors, say attorneys at King & Spalding.

  • Why Justices Seem Skeptical Of Curbing SEC Disgorgement

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    Sripetch v. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission presents an opportunity for the U.S. Supreme Court to clarify the disgorgement limits it set six years ago in Liu v. SEC, with recent oral arguments suggesting the court sees disgorgement as an equitable remedy akin to unjust enrichment, say attorneys at Hueston Hennigan.

  • 3 Factors Shifting Criminal Defendants' Cooperation Decisions

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    Several factors, including a recent decline in assistant U.S. attorneys at the U.S. Department of Justice, new offense level changes to the sentencing guidelines and a swift uptick in presidential pardons, are prompting federal criminal defendants to rethink cooperation with the government, says Ben Schrader at Bass Berry.

  • OFAC Signals Sanctions Diligence Can't Stop At 50% Rule

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    Recent guidance from the Office of Foreign Assets Control, along with several enforcement actions looking beyond the 50% formal ownership requirement, sends a clear message that sanctions due diligence must consider a variety of factors, including degree of control, practice of actual dealings and the involvement of proxies, say attorneys at Jenner & Block.

  • Hungary CPAC Funding Probe Could Implicate US Entities

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    A Hungarian anti-corruption investigation into claims that the former prime minister used taxpayer funds to support the Conservative Political Action Conference could include potential cross-border political and financial dimensions that create multiple touchpoints for U.S. regulatory and enforcement interest, say attorneys at Ballard Spahr.

  • Series

    Officiating Football Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Though they may seem to have little in common, officiating football has sharpened many of the same skills that define effective lawyering in management-side labor and employment: preparation, judgment, composure, credibility and ability to make difficult decisions in real time, says Josh Nadreau at Fisher Phillips.

  • Prediction Market Platform Probes Merit Strategic Responses

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    As the battle over the regulation of prediction markets is being waged between states and the federal government, investigations into insider trading allegations are increasingly originating from inside the exchanges themselves, creating obvious risks for market participants — as well as opportunities, say attorneys at Kobre & Kim.

  • Shifts At DOJ Alter Corporate Self-Disclosure Calculus

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    Though the Justice Department's new criminal enforcement policy clarifies the benefits of corporate self-disclosure, recent changes to prosecutorial priorities and resources mean that companies should reassess whether cooperation incentives still outweigh the risks of nondisclosure, says Hui Chen at CDE Advisors.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Draft Pleadings

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    Most law school graduates step into their first jobs without ever having drafted a complaint, answer, motion or other type of pleading, but that gap can be closed by understanding the strategy embedded in every filing, writing with clarity and purpose, and seeking feedback at every step, says Eric Yakaitis at Haug Barron.

  • Evaluating Congressional Investigation Risk In Deal Diligence

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    Given the increasing frequency and sophistication of congressional investigations into corporate business practices, companies conducting transactional due diligence should add procedures to assess and mitigate the unique challenges and wide-ranging risks that can arise from Capitol Hill’s scrutiny, say attorneys at Covington.

  • E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On ESI Control

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    Several recent federal court decisions have perpetuated a split over what constitutes “control” of electronically stored information — with judges divided on whether the standard should turn on a party's legal right or practical ability to obtain the information, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Record Penalty Sets Stage For FinCEN Whistleblower Awards

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    The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network’s record $80 million penalty against Canaccord, together with the agency's recently proposed rule on whistleblower awards, signals an increasingly aggressive enforcement posture and illustrates the significant financial stakes associated with reporting violations, says Marlene Koury at Constantine Cannon.

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