Class Action

  • July 14, 2026

    7th Circ. Says TCPA Do-Not-Call Limit Doesn't Cover Texts

    The Telephone Consumer Protection Act's do-not-call restrictions do not apply to text messages, a Seventh Circuit panel declared Tuesday, roughly six weeks after the panel expressed skepticism during oral arguments that "telephone call" could also mean "text message."

  • July 14, 2026

    Security Co. Says Data Tracking Suit Didn't Allege Sharing

    A home security camera company has urged a Washington federal court to toss a proposed class action accusing it of tracking and sharing the activity of visitors to its site, saying the complaint didn't allege it shared any confidential or personal information.

  • July 14, 2026

    Capital One Says Terms Allow It To Void Card Rewards

    Capital One NA has asked a Virginia federal court to free it from a proposed class action accusing it of unlawfully canceling billions of dollars in earned credit card rewards by unilaterally closing customers' accounts, saying that all of its cardholders were informed that it could close their accounts at any time.

  • July 14, 2026

    StubHub, CEO Sued Over Ties To Big-Time Ticket Scalpers

    A proposed class action filed in New York federal court Monday accuses StubHub Holdings Inc. and its CEO, Eric H. Baker, of misleading consumers by promoting the ticket marketplace as a fan-to-fan platform while failing to disclose financial ties to large-scale professional ticket resellers.

  • July 14, 2026

    Texas 3% Corporate Law Unfit For Federal Courts, 5th Circ. Told

    A Southwest Airlines Co. shareholder told the Fifth Circuit that Texas' new corporate reform law cannot bar federal lawsuits just because a shareholder owns less than a certain amount of stock, saying the appellate court should revive his lawsuit.

  • July 14, 2026

    Jaguar Will Cover Diesel Filter Repairs To Resolve Defect Suit

    Jaguar Land Rover North America LLC agreed to provide reimbursement for up to $3,500 for any past repairs made to resolve claims that it sold vehicles with a defective diesel filter, according to a motion that included a $1.4 million cut for attorney fees.

  • July 14, 2026

    Mercedes Beats Suit Over Shattered Sunroofs

    Mercedes-Benz permanently beat a proposed class action alleging it sold vehicles with defective panoramic sunroofs that spontaneously shatter, with a Georgia federal judge saying Tuesday the plaintiffs bring no evidence that the automotive giant caused the purported manufacturing defect. 

  • July 14, 2026

    10th Circ. Revives False Ad Claims Against Hill's Pet Food

    The Tenth Circuit on Tuesday revived part of a proposed class action accusing a pet food maker of falsely claiming a link between grain-free dog food and canine heart disease, holding that some of its webpages and veterinary education materials could be viewed as promoting its grain-based products through unsupported scientific claims.

  • July 14, 2026

    Meta Employees Say AI-Tainted Layoffs Should Be Blocked

    Over two dozen Meta employees accused the tech giant of unlawfully picking them to be laid off using artificial intelligence tools that penalized people who took protected leave or received workplace accommodations, and they urged a California federal court to suspend their terminations until their legal claims are resolved.

  • July 14, 2026

    'Emotional Support' Pet IDs Not Legit, Suit Says

    A Florida company that sells "emotional support animal" identification cards and certificates to pet owners was hit with a proposed class action Monday by a woman who claims she bought a badge thinking it would let her keep her dog despite her landlord's pet restrictions.

  • July 14, 2026

    Kroger Says Flimsy Claims Doom Tobacco Fee Suit

    Grocery giant Kroger urged an Ohio federal judge to toss a suit challenging the legality of an extra health plan fee it charged tobacco users, stating it complied with federal benefits law by giving workers a 90-day window each year to dodge the fee by enrolling in a wellness program.

  • July 14, 2026

    RJ Reynolds Says TCPA Doesn't Apply To Texts, Cellphones

    Tobacco giant R.J. Reynolds is looking to duck a proposed class action accusing it of sending unsolicited text messages, saying a North Carolina federal judge should apply recent U.S. Supreme Court precedent on judicial deference to find the Telephone Consumer Protection Act doesn't apply to cellphones or texts.

  • July 14, 2026

    Migrants Say Anonymity Still Needed In Vineyard Flight Suit

    Three Venezuelan asylum-seekers who say they were lured by Florida officials onto a plane bound for Martha's Vineyard as a publicity stunt in 2022 argued that they should be allowed to sue in Massachusetts federal court anonymously because they are likely to face harassment if their names are exposed.

  • July 14, 2026

    PetSmart Hit With Wage Suit By Colo. Pet Care Workers

    Four former pet care employees have sued PetSmart in Colorado state court alleging the company denied them meal breaks and rest periods, failed to pay them for off-the-clock work and improperly calculated their overtime pay.

  • July 14, 2026

    BakerHostetler Flips Holland & Knight's Antitrust Co-Lead

    An attorney with nearly 25 years of experience in commercial and antitrust litigation has moved his practice to BakerHostetler's Philadelphia office after five years with Holland & Knight LLP.

  • July 14, 2026

    5th Circ. Undoes BP Retirees' Pension Info Suit Win

    The Fifth Circuit unraveled a Texas court's judgment against BP that held the oil giant was liable to company retirees for miscommunicating their pension benefits' value following a plan conversion, holding on Tuesday that the lower court didn't perform a rigorous enough standing analysis.

  • July 14, 2026

    News Orgs Need To Show AI Uses More Than Just Facts

    News organizations suing artificial intelligence companies for allegedly infringing their copyrighted content for AI training must show that chatbots are using the organizations' prose as opposed to merely uncopyrightable facts, or that the practice is diluting the market for human-made journalism, experts told Law360.

  • July 14, 2026

    Mass. Students Say They Were Misled About Tennis Program

    A group of tennis players have accused Bentley University of luring them to play Division II tennis at the school with false assurances that the program was viable, only to later announce it would be terminated after the 2026 spring semester.

  • July 14, 2026

    Auto Parts Co., Workers Seek Wins In Shaved-Time Suits

    An auto parts maker and factory workers filed competing bids for early wins in parallel federal wage suits, with the workers alleging willful pay-shaving practices and the manufacturer arguing that the disputed minutes were too trivial to compensate, according to filings in North Carolina federal court.

  • July 14, 2026

    Google Faces Another AI Copyright Suit By Publishers

    Book publishers and legal novelist Scott Turow have lodged a copyright infringement suit alleging Google used their works to train its artificial intelligence model Gemini following an earlier suit they launched against Meta.

  • July 14, 2026

    NC City Moves To Break Up Police Officers' OT Collective

    A North Carolina city asked a federal court to dismantle a collective action brought by police officers alleging they were not properly compensated for preshift and postshift work, arguing the officers' claims are too individualized to proceed as a group.

  • July 14, 2026

    Trial, Appellate Judges Duel For Wash. Supreme Court Seat

    In one of the most-watched races for the five Washington State Supreme Court seats on the ballot this election season, a state appellate judge and a Seattle-area superior court judge are competing to succeed the high court's longest-sitting justice.

  • July 13, 2026

    BlackRock's Mutual Fund Accounting Inflated Fees, Suit Says

    Asset manager BlackRock Inc.'s accounting practices artificially inflated the values of more than 70 of its mutual funds, saddling investors with higher management fees and cutting into the dividends they might have collected, according to a proposed class action lodged Monday in New York state court.

  • July 13, 2026

    7th Circ. Nixes Clearview AI Privacy Deal Over Class Rift

    The Seventh Circuit has vacated a novel biometric privacy settlement between Clearview AI and classes of individuals who claim the company misused their public photos, saying a nationwide class representative should have signaled their agreement before the district court approved a deal containing such comparatively "meager" benefits.

  • July 13, 2026

    Court Economist Says Epic-Google Deal Isn't Evidence-Based

    U.S. District Judge James Donato has already told Epic and Google that he's "not going to keep" going back and forth with them about changes they want to an injunction he has to issue following Epic's antitrust trial win against Google, and now a court-appointed expert has informed him she has issues with the proposed changes as well.

Expert Analysis

  • Okla. Reforms Will Curb Oil, Gas Royalty Litigation Risk

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    Recent amendments to Oklahoma's Production Revenue Standards Act — the most comprehensive in decades — raise the stakes for true noncompliance with the state's oil and gas royalty payment framework, while offering operators clearer rules, defined interest boundaries and predictable exits from prolonged suspense situations, say attorneys at GableGotwals.

  • Why Highly Specialized Experts May Risk Exclusion At Trial

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    Expert witnesses with highly specific areas of focus may be vulnerable to exclusion in court, making it important for attorneys to check how potential witnesses' qualifications can be bolstered by their publications and other professional activities, say Evan Weisberg and Christopher Cunio at Hunton, and Kevin Cahill at FTI Consulting.

  • Gatorade Suit Offers Lessons On Product Performance Claims

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    A proposed class action in New York federal court disputing PepsiCo's claim that Gatorade "hydrates better than water" presents a broad challenge to the way food and beverage companies communicate product benefits — and the risks that arise when marketing claims outpace the evidence supporting them, says Pejman Javaheri at Juris Law Group.

  • Steps For Employers After 7th Circ. BIPA Retroactivity Ruling

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    The Seventh Circuit's recent ruling in Clay v. Union Pacific sharply limits per-scan statutory damages theories in pending Biometric Information Privacy Act cases by retroactively applying a 2024 amendment, but employers should not mistake the holding for a broad safe harbor, say attorneys at Thompson Coburn.

  • Drawing A Line Between Settlement Pressure And Extortion

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    U.S. v. Luo, pending in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, may force courts to address anew when settlement negotiations become criminal extortion, particularly in the age of easily fabricated digital evidence, says attorney Denis Kiely.

  • Recent Cases Clarify When Risk Disclosures Trigger Liability

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    Several recent decisions highlight circumstances where risk disclosures can constitute actionable misrepresentations, providing clarity on how the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act's safe harbor and the common-law bespeaks caution doctrine apply to risk disclosures, and how publicly traded companies can guard against such claims, say attorneys at Katten.

  • Securities Class Cert., 5 Years After Goldman Ruling

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's 2021 decision in Goldman Sachs Group v. Arkansas Teacher Retirement System has not only armed defendants in securities cases with more arguments in individual class certification fights, but may also be providing greater certainty and finality in class certification battles, say attorneys at Skadden.

  • Risk Reduction Lessons For PE Firms From PowerSchool Suit

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    A California federal court's recent orders allowing claims against Bain Capital to proceed based on a data breach at its subsidiary PowerSchool indicate that private equity firms need to strategically approach acquisition activities to avoid cybersecurity risks, say attorneys at Womble Bond.

  • Why Ultra-Processed Foods May Be The Next Big Mass Tort

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    With multiple federal lawsuits filed already this year over the alleged harms caused by ultra-processed foods, and policymakers targeting UPFs for increasingly strict regulation, the sector exhibits the same structural characteristics identified historically in major mass torts, say Ruth Levy at Womble Bond and Elizabeth Epes at Financial Asset Recovery Analytics.

  • Class Actions Have Entered The Fight Over Prediction Markets

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    While disputes brought by states over the regulation of prediction markets have claimed most of the headlines, class actions brought by ordinary citizens, particularly in Kentucky and Massachusetts, represent another avenue to challenge the legality of the prediction markets themselves, says Laura Chiu at DarrowEverett.

  • Series

    Founding An Autism Academy Made Me A Better Lawyer

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    Starting a nonprofit autism school with no building, no funding model and no guarantee that families would trust us taught me the importance of mission, patience and purpose — lessons that sharpened my practice and showed how meaningful work outside the office can make lawyers better, says Phillip Russell at Ogletree Deakins.

  • Why Private Sector Should Watch Gov't DEI Firing Class Bid

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    Former federal employees' class certification attempt in Fell v. Trump is worth following, as their challenge of the Office of Personnel Management's elimination of DEI positions raises questions about commonality in employee classes and protections for nonminority advocacy that reach beyond the public sector, says Shaun Southworth at Southworth PC.

  • Opinion

    Rule Of Law Requires Gov't Engagement With Bar, Not Retreat

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    A federal agency's absence from national and local bar conferences, most recently illustrated by the U.S. Department of Justice's withdrawal from a New York City Bar Association white collar conference, disserves the bar, the government lawyers themselves and, ultimately, the administration of justice, says Muhammad Faridi at Linklaters.

  • How Boards Can Shrink The AI Governance Gap

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    While companies have overwhelmingly embraced artificial intelligence, most lack corresponding governance structures and director-level fluency to oversee these programs, highlighting the importance of board and executive supervision to keep pace with growing litigation risk, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • The Paradoxical Duty To Adopt AI When You Can't Bill For It

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    Both billing for hours saved using artificial intelligence and preserving billable time by not adopting AI may violate rules of professional conduct, but until bar associations' ethics rules catch up to this emerging economic dilemma, firms must decide how to adjust fee structures themselves, says Ines Lassalle at Peyrot & Associates.

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