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Corporate
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December 05, 2025
Google Search Judge Issues Finalized Antitrust Mandates
A D.C. federal judge Friday issued the finalized package of remedies in the U.S. Department of Justice's case targeting Google's search monopoly, mostly agreeing with the government's proposals for exactly what Google must do to prop up rivals and restore competition in the search engine market.
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December 05, 2025
Wells Fargo Unit Gets Judge To Trim Immigration Atty's Suit
A Nevada federal judge has largely trimmed claims out of an immigration attorney's lawsuit that alleged a Wells Fargo unit and adviser gave her bad investment advice, allowing the lawyer's fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation claims to go forward.
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December 05, 2025
Character.AI Exec Can't Exit Teen's Suicide Suit, Mom Argues
The co-founder of Character.AI should not be allowed to escape a wrongful death lawsuit accusing the platform and its creators of building a large language model that encouraged a 14-year-old boy to kill himself, the teen's mother argued in Florida federal court, saying the founder essentially controlled the company, so much so that it was his alter ego.
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December 05, 2025
Juror Who Alleged Misconduct Dismissed From Opioid Trial
A juror in Florida hospitals' $1.5 billion trial against the three major pharmacy chains over opioid dispensing was dismissed Friday after a judge found that her allegations of serious misconduct against another juror were largely unwarranted.
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December 05, 2025
Real Estate Recap: Energy-Dependent Deals
Catch up on this past week's key developments by state from Law360 Real Estate Authority — including how energy scarcity is affecting data center deals.
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December 05, 2025
Meta CEO Zuckerberg Fights Privacy Suit Depo At 9th Circ.
Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg urged a Ninth Circuit panel during a hearing Friday to scrap orders requiring him to give a limited deposition in privacy litigation over Facebook's alleged collection of health data, arguing the plaintiffs failed to exhaust alternative methods of getting the information they seek.
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December 05, 2025
Eaton's Position On Parental Support Conflicting, Judge Says
Eaton is telling "different stories at different times" about the ability of its foreign parent company to step in and pay the U.S. company's debt obligations to third parties, Tax Court Judge Albert Lauber said in questioning one of the company's experts Friday.
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December 05, 2025
Teamsters Challenge NLRB's Bid to Block California Law
The Teamsters have asked a California federal judge to preserve a state law that expanded the state labor board's power, telling the judge that the law can exist side by side with the National Labor Relations Act and that he should reject the National Labor Relations Board's bid to block it.
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December 05, 2025
Ex-Derailment Deal Admin Faces Irked Judge In Contempt Bid
The ex-administrator of Norfolk Southern's $600 million settlement over the East Palestine, Ohio, derailment met skepticism as it admitted to a federal judge Friday that it had made some mistakes in distributing funds, but denied class counsel's key contention that $120 million for personal injury claims had to be divided evenly among all the claimants.
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December 05, 2025
Employment Authority: The Push To Unionize Museums
Law360 Employment Authority covers the biggest employment cases and trends. Catch up this week with coverage on how workers at The Met are adding to a unionization wave in America's museums and why employers should heed warnings set by a $39 million settlement Starbucks reached with New York City to resolve alleged predictive scheduling violations.
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December 05, 2025
OCC, FDIC Scrap Obama-Era Leveraged Lending Guidance
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Friday formally withdrew from Obama-era guidance that sought to tighten bank leveraged lending standards, a policy that banks argued hamstrung them against nonbank rivals.
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December 05, 2025
Miss. Casino Owner Pressured Lowball Buyout, Suit Says
Former minority stockholders of a Mississippi-based gambling resort sued the casino operator's majority owner in the Delaware Chancery Court on Friday, alleging he used a coercive and information-starved tender offer to scoop up shares cheaply before the company issued a multimillion dividend.
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December 05, 2025
BofA Says Northrop 401(k) Suit Toss Backs 4th Circ. Appeal
Bank of America urged a North Carolina federal court Friday to let it appeal an earlier decision denying dismissal of a proposed class action alleging forfeitures were misspent from workers' employee 401(k) plan, arguing a Virginia federal court's decision tossing similar claims against Northrop Grumman supported its bid.
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December 05, 2025
ERISA Recap: 4 Rulings Worth Paying Attention To From Nov.
The Ninth Circuit striking down a class action win for transgender employee health plan participants who said their gender-affirming care denials were discriminatory is just one noteworthy Employee Retirement Income Security Act ruling from November. Here's a recap of that ruling and three others.
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December 05, 2025
Mass. Justices Muse On Swift, 'FOMO' In Meta Addiction Case
Massachusetts' highest court appeared divided Friday as it wrestled with whether Meta Platforms Inc. should have to face a suit by the state attorney general claiming that it is illegally getting kids hooked on Instagram.
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December 05, 2025
2nd Circ. Backs Ex-Goldman Exec's 1MDB Conviction
Former Goldman Sachs managing director Roger Ng's attempt to overturn his conviction in the $6.5 billion 1MDB corruption scheme hit a wall Friday at the Second Circuit, where a panel categorically rejected his multipronged appeal.
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December 05, 2025
Insurance Broker Accuses Ex-Producers Of Client, Info Theft
Insurance brokerage Trucordia told the Delaware Chancery Court that it has lost tens of thousands of dollars in annual commission revenue after two former producers diverted clients, employees and confidential information to a competing firm and their new venture in violation of various employment and equity holder agreements.
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December 05, 2025
Medline Accused In Chancery Of Withholding $10M Earnout
A Florida-based holding company and its founder have sued medical supplier Medline in the Delaware Chancery Court, alleging it deliberately refused to make a $10 million payment tied to a 2023 acquisition, missed a hard deadline and is now acting in bad faith to avoid paying the key portion of the sale price.
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December 05, 2025
GC Cheat Sheet: The Hottest Corporate News Of The Week
An SEC panel has asked the agency to adopt regulations that could standardize the way publicly traded companies report details about AI use. Meanwhile, the FCC approved AT&T's $1 billion UScellular deal after AT&T became the latest of the big three mobile carriers to agree to do away with diversity, equity and inclusion policies. These are some of the stories in corporate legal news you may have missed in the past week.
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December 04, 2025
Class Cert. Denied In Splenda False Ad Suit
A California federal judge on Wednesday declined to certify a class of consumers who claim that Splenda falsely advertised that its sweetener packets were "suitable for people with diabetes," partly because the lead plaintiff is prediabetic.
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December 04, 2025
Starbucks Wants 2nd Shot To Nix Investors' 'Triple Shot' Suit
Starbucks is asking a Seattle federal judge to reconsider a ruling last month that flushed all but four claims in a proposed securities class action against the coffee giant, aiming to dismiss entirely the shareholder suit accusing company executives of lying about a struggling "reinvention" campaign.
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December 04, 2025
Insurance Broker Tech Leader Sued In Del. Over Market Power
Alleging potential "mid-nine figures" in damages, insurance broker software venture Ardent Labs Inc. has filed a five-count suit in Delaware's Court of Chancery accusing an industry leader — Applied Systems Inc. — of "anticompetitive conduct that violates the letter and spirit of antitrust law."
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December 04, 2025
Judge Skeptical Implicit Support Worthless To Eaton Investors
A U.S. Tax Court judge closely questioned Thursday an expert for Eaton who said potential investors would not have counted on financial support from the company's parent in the event it couldn't meet its obligations after acquiring an Irish entity and inverting in 2012.
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December 04, 2025
SEC Investor Panel Presses For Corporate AI Disclosures
A U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission working group is urging the agency to adopt regulations that could standardize the way publicly traded companies report the way they use artificial intelligence, arguing Thursday that investors are not always being kept informed about the risks of the technology.
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December 04, 2025
Kimmel Brouhaha Brings Out Levity At DC's 'Telecom Prom'
ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel's roller coaster ride at the hands of the Federal Communications Commission took center stage Wednesday at a light-hearted Washington dinner for telecom lawyers, as FCC Chair Brendan Carr served up a comedic bit over the controversy that followed Kimmel's recent war of words with the agency chief.
Expert Analysis
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How Fed. Circ. Shaped Subject Matter Eligibility In 2025
The Federal Circuit's most impactful patent eligibility decisions this year, touching on questions about obviousness and abstractness, provide a toolbox of takeaways that can be utilized during patent preparation and prosecution to guard against potential challenges, says Reilley Keane at Banner Witcoff.
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DC Circ. Decision Reaffirms SEC Authority Post-Loper Bright
The recent denial of a challenge to invalidate 2024 amendments to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's tick size and fee-cap rules reinforces the D.C. Circuit's deference to SEC expertise in market structure regulation, even after Loper Bright, though implementation of the rules remains uncertain, say attorneys at Sidley.
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10 Commandments For Agentic AI Tools In The Legal Industry
Though agentic artificial intelligence has demonstrated significant promise for optimizing legal work, it presents numerous risks, so specific ethical obligations should be built into the knowledge base of every agentic AI tool used in the legal industry, says Steven Cordero at Akerman LLP.
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NY Tax Talk: New ALJs, New Rules, Apportionment, Bundling
Attorneys at Eversheds review the top New York tax law developments from last quarter, including appointments to the New York City Tax Appeals Tribunal and the city's proposed rules to clarify income taxation of foreign corporations, and highlight two litigation matters to watch.
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Series
Preaching Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Becoming a Gospel preacher has enhanced my success as a trial lawyer by teaching me the importance of credibility, relatability, persuasiveness and thorough preparation for my congregants, the same skills needed with judges and juries in the courtroom, says Reginald Harris at Stinson.
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Why Digital Asset Treasuries Are Drawing Regulator Concerns
Financial regulators’ recent focus on potential insider trading and investor risk at hundreds of publicly traded digital asset treasuries may have been summoned by how quickly this rapidly expanding market responds to asset allocation decisions, as well as variations in risk disclosure practices across the sector, say attorneys at The Brattle Group.
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FTC Focus: Amazon's $2.5B Pact Broadens Regulatory Span
Amazon's $2.5 billion deal with the Federal Trade Commission offers takeaways for counsel managing risk across both consumer protection and competition portfolios, including that design strategies once evaluated solely for conversion may now be scrutinized for their competitive effects, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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SEC Penalties Trended Down In FY 2025, Offering 2026 Clues
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's settled corporate penalties in fiscal year 2025 show a clear dividing line, as the largest penalties all came before Inauguration Day, a trend that may continue as the types of cases that lead to the biggest penalties seem to be no longer favored by the commissioners, say attorneys at Dentons.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Practicing Client-Led Litigation
New litigators can better help their corporate clients achieve their overall objectives when they move beyond simply fighting for legal victory to a client-led approach that resolves the legal dispute while balancing the company's competing out-of-court priorities, says Chelsea Ireland at Cohen Ziffer.
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A Close Look At The Evolving Interval Fund Space
Interval funds — closed-end registered investment companies that make periodic repurchase offers — have recently moved to the center of the conversation about retail access to private markets, spurred along by President Donald Trump's August executive order incorporating alternative assets into 401(k) plans and target date strategies, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Meta Monopoly Ruling Highlights Limits Of Market Definition
A D.C. federal court's recent ruling that Meta is not monopolizing social media raises questions, such as why market definition matters and whether we have the correct model of competition, which can aid in making a stronger case against tech companies, says Shubha Ghosh at the Syracuse University College of Law.
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Perspectives
Nursing Home Abuse Cases Face 3 Barriers That Need Reform
Recent headlines reveal persistent gaps in oversight and protection for vulnerable residents in long-term care, but prosecution of these cases is often stymied by numerous challenges that will require a comprehensive overhaul of regulatory, legal and financial structures to address, says Veronica Finkelstein at Wilmington University.
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9th Circ. Robinhood Ruling May Alter Intraquarter Disclosures
By aligning with the Second Circuit and rejecting the First Circuit's extreme-departure standard, the Ninth Circuit recently signaled in its decision to revive a putative securities class action against Robinhood a renewed emphasis on transparency when known trends that can be considered material arise between quarterly reports, say attorneys at MoFo.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: How To Build On Cultural Fit
Law firm mergers should start with people, then move to strategy: A two-level screening that puts finding a cultural fit at the pinnacle of the process can unearth shared values that are instrumental to deciding to move forward with a combination, says Matthew Madsen at Harrison.
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OFSI Proposals Signal Greater Focus On Enforcement Activity
The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation’s proposed financial sanctions reforms, with risks of higher penalties and more stringent disclosure requirements for U.K. banks and companies, reflect the agency’s evolution into a more sophisticated and robust enforcement regulator, says Irene Polieri at Gibson Dunn.