Compliance

  • November 21, 2025

    Longtime Administrator Tapped For Conn. Trial Court Bench

    Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont has announced that he will be nominating a lawyer with a lengthy career in policy development and administration who is currently secretary of the state's Office of Policy and Management for a seat on the state's Superior Court bench.

  • November 21, 2025

    Conn. Banking Chief Says Private School Fraud Topped $5.1M

    Putnam Science Academy, a private high school in Northeastern Connecticut, owes an additional investor money in what is alleged to have been an affinity fraud scheme that topped $5.1 million, according to an amended order by the state banking commissioner.

  • November 21, 2025

    Alaskan Tribes Look To Void Gold Mining Project Permit

    Several Alaskan Native communities are asking a federal court to vacate a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers permit and record of decision for a suction dredge mining operation, saying the agency violated a number of federal laws in concluding the project would not harm an ecologically productive estuary.

  • November 21, 2025

    Justices Urged To Uphold $268M Tax Break For Truck Co.

    The U.S. Supreme Court should let stand the denial of $268 million in excise tax exemptions for a Tennessee truck company, the federal government urged, saying the case doesn't meet any of the traditional requirements for high court review and raises an isolated issue.

  • November 21, 2025

    Veolia Inks $3B US Waste Deal As Enviri Preps GC-Led Spinoff

    France's Veolia Environnement SA will buy Clean Earth from Philadelphia-based Enviri Corp. for $3.04 billion in cash, in a deal that will double Veolia's U.S. hazardous waste operations and create an Enviri spinoff headed by Enviri's general counsel, the companies said Friday.

  • November 21, 2025

    Court Ends Consent Decree Between DOJ And Newark Police

    The New Jersey federal court has terminated a nine-year, legally binding agreement between the U.S. Department of Justice and the City of Newark stemming from a pattern of unlawful stop-and-frisks and excessive-force practices by the Newark Police Department, the Justice Department said Friday.

  • November 21, 2025

    SEC, Virtu To Settle Customer Data Suit For $2.5M

    Virtu Financial Inc. has agreed to pay the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission $2.5 million for allegedly failing to safeguard customer information, according to a Friday proposed final order that would end the regulator's two-year-old suit against the broker-dealer.

  • November 20, 2025

    Renewed Federal Push To Block State AI Laws Faces Backlash

    The Trump administration is pushing to revive a failed effort to stop states from regulating artificial intelligence systems, drawing opposition from California's data privacy regulator, consumer advocates and others that argue it's crucial for states to retain their ability to put guardrails on the emerging technology in the wake of continued federal inaction.

  • November 20, 2025

    Fugees' Pras Gets 14 Years For Illegal Political Donation

    Former Fugees rapper Prakazrel "Pras" Michel was sentenced Thursday to 14 years in prison for illegally funneling money from a Malaysian billionaire into former President Barack Obama's 2012 reelection campaign and later lobbying the first Trump administration on behalf of China.

  • November 20, 2025

    Meta Will Pay $190M, Change Policies To End $8B Privacy Suit

    Meta Platforms Inc. has agreed to pay $190 million, as well as enhance its whistleblower program and implement a new code of conduct and insider trading policy, as part of a proposed settlement in an $8 billion privacy suit tied to the Cambridge Analytica scandal, according to several new filings Thursday.

  • November 20, 2025

    CFPB Will Shift Remaining Lawsuits Over To DOJ

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will be handing off its enforcement lawsuits and other litigation to the U.S. Department of Justice as the Trump administration prepares for the consumer agency to run out of money, Law360 has learned.

  • November 20, 2025

    Fed's Cook Says AI Could Either Steady Wall Street Or Rig It

    Federal Reserve Board Gov. Lisa Cook said Thursday that the use of artificial intelligence in algorithmic trading in financial markets has the potential to improve on current trading, but it also has the potential to create "risks that are difficult to monitor or mitigate."

  • November 20, 2025

    Target Investors' Pride Month Merch Suit Shipped To Minn.

    A consolidated set of shareholder class actions against Target Corp. over its 2023 Pride Month marketing campaign has been relocated from Florida to Minnesota, where the company is headquartered.

  • November 20, 2025

    Texas Sues Bristol-Myers For Alleged Drug Misrepresentations

    The Texas Office of the Attorney General sued pharmaceutical companies Bristol-Myers Squibb and Sanofi in Texas state court, claiming Thursday the companies failed to disclose that a lucrative blood thinner used to prevent heart attacks and strokes does not work as well on certain minority patients.

  • November 20, 2025

    Conn. Agency GC Tried To 'Mislead The Court,' Judge Says

    A Connecticut judge said Wednesday that he notified ethics officials after finding the general counsel of the state's utilities authority tried to mislead the court and opposing counsel over deleted text messages in a rate dispute with a pair of natural gas suppliers.

  • November 20, 2025

    SEC's Uyeda Says ERISA Needs Litigation Reform To Curb Suits

    U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission member Mark Uyeda called for litigation reform Thursday aimed at stopping lawsuits filed under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act that he said discourage retirement plan fiduciaries from investing in the private markets.

  • November 20, 2025

    Crypto Orgs. Call On White House To Spur Agency Guidance

    A coalition of more than 65 crypto-focused organizations penned a letter to President Donald Trump asking the White House to encourage federal agencies to stop prosecuting developers of decentralized software, exempt decentralized projects from certain rules and clarify tax treatment.

  • November 20, 2025

    NY Judge Denies Feds' Bid To Review $230M Yacht Ruling

    A New York federal judge on Thursday refused the U.S. government's request that he reconsider his earlier ruling declining to require the owners of a seized $230 million superyacht to post a multimillion-dollar bond while they appeal his judgment of forfeiture.

  • November 20, 2025

    Trump's CFTC Pick Selig Advances To Senate Floor

    President Donald Trump's pick to lead the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission will advance to the U.S. Senate floor after a Thursday agriculture committee vote on Michael Selig's nomination passed along party lines.

  • November 20, 2025

    Bank Says Ex-Compliance Chief's Suit Belongs In Fla., Not NJ

    First National Bank of Pasco has urged a New Jersey federal judge to either toss a lawsuit its former chief compliance officer brought alleging he was fired without just cause or transfer it out of the state, arguing that any misconduct in question, if they occurred, were described to have taken place in Florida.

  • November 20, 2025

    Subletting Co. Settles NYC's Illegal STR 'Matchmaker' Claims

    A subletting company has agreed to resolve claims that it was used as a "'matchmaker'" of sorts for advertising and setting up illegal short-term rentals in New York City, the Mayor's Office of Special Enforcement announced.

  • November 20, 2025

    Pharma Cos. Seek Early Win In States' Price-Fixing Lawsuit

    A collection of states failed to prove an overarching conspiracy among 25 separate pharmaceutical companies to fix the prices of generic drugs, most of them dermatology formulations, the drugmakers argued Wednesday in support of a bid for an early win on one element of dozens of antitrust claims.

  • November 20, 2025

    FERC Looks To Put LNG Project Work On A Faster Track

    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on Thursday said it will explore speeding up its permitting of liquefied natural gas projects by creating a blanket authorization process for certain project activities that wouldn't require individual approvals.

  • November 20, 2025

    Chinese Logistics Co. Investors Sue Over 95% Stock Crash

    Investors of China-based Jayud Global Logistics have filed suit in New York federal court, alleging the company's stock price was artificially inflated through fake social media posts before it suddenly collapsed by 95% in one day, leaving everyday shareholders holding the bag.

  • November 20, 2025

    7th Circ. Halts Order Releasing Hundreds Of ICE Detainees

    The Seventh Circuit on Thursday paused two Chicago federal court rulings ordering the release on bond of hundreds of civil immigration detainees arrested during the Trump administration's surge of immigration enforcement operations in Illinois.

Expert Analysis

  • SEC's Dual Share Class Approval Signals New Era For ETFs

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's recent approval of the dual share class structure marks a landmark moment for the U.S. fund industry, opening the door for asset managers to benefit from combining mutual fund and exchange-traded fund share classes under a single portfolio, say Ilan Guedj at Bates White and Brian Henderson at George Washington University.

  • Calif. Species Protections Will Increase Compliance Burdens

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    California's recently enacted A.B. 1319 automatically protects species when the federal government rolls back its own protections — which could mean an onslaught of state-level compliance mandates for the regulated community that come with no advance notice or public hearings, says attorney David Smith.

  • UK Tribunal's Clearview Decision Expands GDPR Application

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    The Upper Tribunal’s recent decision in Information Commissioner v. Clearview AI is an important ruling on the extraterritorial reach of the European Union and U.K. General Data Protection Regulations, broadening behavioral monitoring to include not only activity by the company, but also its client, says Edward Machin at Ropes & Gray.

  • E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On Dynamic Databases

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    Several recent federal court decisions illustrate how parties continue to grapple with the discovery of data in dynamic databases, so counsel involved in these disputes must consider how structured data should be produced consistent with the requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Assessing The SEC's Changing Approach To NFT Regulation

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    Early U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission actions on nonfungible tokens pushed for broad regulation, but subsequent court decisions — including a recent California federal court ruling in Adonis Real v. Yuga Labs — and SEC commissioners' statements have narrowed the regulatory focus toward a more fact-specific approach, say attorneys at Wilson Elser.

  • Where Crypto Mixing Enforcement Is Headed From Here

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    Recent developments involving crypto mixers, particularly the Tornado Cash verdict, demonstrate that the Justice Department's shift away from regulation by prosecution does not mean total immunity, rather reflecting an approach that prioritizes both innovation and accountability, says David Tarras at Tarras Defense.

  • Stadium Security Takeaways Amid Gaps In Drone Regulation

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    As the risk of drones to sports stadium security grows, legal practitioners in the industry should focus on the need for rapid deployment of emergency services, crowd control, communications, strong organizational structure, and engagement across local, state and federal authorities, says Jennifer Daskal at Venable.

  • The Legal Issues With AI Agents In Consumer Transactions

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    Enabling artificial intelligence agents to handle not just research and recommendations, but the execution of purchases themselves, fundamentally alters commercial relationships and introduces new practical and legal questions for card issuers, merchants, acquirers and consumers, say attorneys at Davis Wright.

  • Breaking Down Article 12 Of The Uniform Commercial Code

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    Thirty-two states and the District of Columbia have enacted Article 12 of the Uniform Commercial Code, providing the alternative to perfection by control of assets like cryptocurrency and nonfungible tokens, but before accepting these assets as collateral, lenders and creditors should consider how to best maintain priority, say attorneys at Miller Nash.

  • Why Foreign Cos. Should Prep For Increased SEC Oversight

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    With the recent trading suspensions of 10 foreign-based issuers listed on the Nasdaq, an enforcement action against a U.K. security-based swap dealer and the announcement of a cross-border task force, it's clear that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will expand oversight on foreign companies participating in the U.S. capital markets, says Tejal Shah at Cooley.

  • Prison Body Cams Raise Health Privacy Compliance Issues

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    The increasing use of prison staff body cameras to enhance transparency and safety presents correctional healthcare partners with new risk management questions where they must carefully reconcile the benefits of surveillance with the imperative to protect patient privacy, say attorneys at Gordon Rees.

  • Wash. Email Subject Line Ruling Puts Retailers On The Hook

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    The Washington state Supreme Court's ruling in Brown v. Old Navy, finding that a state law prohibits misleading email subject lines, has opened the door to nationwide copycat litigation, introducing potential exposure measured not in thousands, but in millions or even billions of dollars for retailers, say attorneys at Benesch.

  • How Nasdaq, SEC Proposals May Transform Listing Standards

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    Both Nasdaq and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission have increasingly focused their recent regulatory efforts on small and foreign issuers, particularly those from China, reflecting an intention to strengthen the overall quality of companies accessing U.S. markets, but also potentially introducing a chilling effect on certain issuers, say attorneys at Norton Rose.

  • New NCAA Betting Policy Fits Trend Of Eased Restrictions

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    Allowing NCAA student-athletes to bet on professional sports fits into a decade-long trend of treating college athletes more like adults in a commercial system, but decreasing player restrictions translates to increased compliance burdens for schools, say attorneys at Robins Kaplan.

  • Legal Guardrails For AI Tools In The Hiring Process

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    Although artificial intelligence can help close the gaps that bad actors exploit in modern recruiting, its precision also makes it subject to tighter scrutiny, meaning new regulatory regimes should be top of mind for U.S.-centric employers exploring fraud-focused AI-enabled tools, say attorneys at Ogletree.

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