Florida

  • February 15, 2024

    Restaurant Franchise Owner Hit With $30.7M Jury Verdict

    A Dallas County, Texas, jury has returned a $30.7 million verdict against major restaurant franchise company Sun Holdings Inc. and its owner in favor of an executive who claimed they refused to pay him his fair share of profits for operating nearly 150 Popeyes eateries.

  • February 15, 2024

    Ga. Univ. System Immune To Retaliation Suit, 11th Circ. Says

    An Eleventh Circuit panel on Thursday ruled Georgia's university system is immune from a former employee's retaliation suit since it acted as an arm of the state even while administering federal funding for a children's Head Start program.

  • February 15, 2024

    America First Legal Says Disney Favors Women, Minorities

    A group founded by former Trump adviser Stephen Miller accused the Walt Disney Co. of discriminating against white men in its hiring and promotion decisions and on Wednesday asked the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to investigate.

  • February 15, 2024

    Byju's Insiders Seek Ch. 11 Dismissal, Calling It Litigation Ploy

    Affiliates of Indian tech giant Byju's U.S. arm, which are embroiled in state court litigation with the company's lender, asked a Delaware bankruptcy judge to dismiss the company's Chapter 11 case, saying the bankruptcy petition was filed to stymie the ongoing state court litigation.

  • February 15, 2024

    Bogus NSA Worker To Pay SEC $2.2M In Crypto Scam Case

    An alleged crypto fraudster who told would-be investors he was a former Marine and a onetime employee of the National Security Agency will pay over $2.2 million to end U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission claims he faces in Florida federal court.

  • February 15, 2024

    What Rescheduling Pot Would Mean For Criminal Justice Reform

    While federal drug enforcers mull a recommendation from health regulators to loosen restrictions on marijuana, criminal justice reformers are warning that rescheduling the drug would not realize President Joe Biden's campaign promise to decriminalize marijuana.

  • February 15, 2024

    Judge Says Jurors Can See J&J Ads In Talc Trial

    A Florida judge on Thursday said decades-old advertisements for Johnson & Johnson baby powder are relevant to potential punitive damages in a talc trial and he would not shield jurors from seeing them, but he scolded the company for not opting for a two-part trial on liability and punitive damages.

  • February 15, 2024

    Real Estate Rumors: Brause Realty, Microsoft, AcadeMir

    A Brause Realty venture has reportedly scored $75 million in financing for a New York mixed-use project, Microsoft is said to have paid roughly $17.7 million for nearly 300 acres in Minnesota, and AcadeMir Charter Schools has reportedly paid $16.6 million for a Florida property.

  • February 15, 2024

    Lincare To Pay $25.5M To Settle FCA, Anti-Kickback Litigation

    Lincare Inc. has agreed to pay about $25.5 million as part of a settlement with the Department of Justice and others resolving litigation over allegations it violated the False Claims Act and Anti-Kickback Statute by mishandling the rental of respiratory equipment to patients.

  • February 15, 2024

    Fla. Couple Get 57 Mos. For Evading $42M In Plywood Duties

    A Florida couple were sentenced to nearly five years in prison each after confessing to disguising the Chinese origin of millions of dollars' worth of plywood imports to avoid paying $42 million in import tariffs.

  • February 15, 2024

    Fla. High Court Gives Law School Grads More Time To Practice

    Law school graduates participating in a practice program will now be able to stay in the program for longer and have another chance to pass the Florida Bar before their certification expires, according to a rule change published by the Supreme Court of Florida Thursday.

  • February 15, 2024

    Cole Scott Faces DQ Bid In Fla. Crash Suit Over Atty

    Cole Scott & Kissane PA should be booted from representing the defendants in a car wreck lawsuit because it failed to disclose that a firm attorney formerly represented the plaintiff in a different crash case that has become an issue in the current one, the plaintiff told a Florida federal court Thursday.

  • February 15, 2024

    Ex-Beauty Store Worker Says Boss's Tirade Was Bias

    A former beauty supply store worker is suing her ex-employer in Florida federal court, alleging she was discriminated against and wrongfully terminated following a tirade by her supervisor over a memory loss disability, and says the business could owe $482,000 in back pay despite her working there for only a month.

  • February 15, 2024

    Trump Social Media Blank-Check Merger Gets SEC Approval

    The blank-check company looking to take former President Donald Trump's social media platform public has obtained approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to move forward with the long-delayed merger, according to a recent regulatory filing.

  • February 15, 2024

    8 Men Get Jail Time In $2M Hemp Wine Pump-And-Dump Ploy

    Ohio federal prosecutors have announced the convictions of eight men charged with participating in a pump-and-dump scheme meant to boost the Global Resource Energy Inc. stock price, which purportedly planned to offer hemp-infused wine.

  • February 15, 2024

    Starwood Capital Injects $850M Into Echelon Data Centres

    Real estate-focused private investment firm Starwood Capital Group on Thursday revealed that it acquired a 50% stake in Dublin, Ireland-based Echelon Data Centres through an $850 million investment, valuing Echelon at roughly €2.5 billion ($2.69 billion) in a deal built by three firms.

  • February 15, 2024

    Trump Gets March 25 Trial Date In NY Hush Money Case

    The Manhattan district attorney's hush money case against Donald Trump is on track to be the first of the former president's four criminal matters to go to trial, after a state judge on Thursday denied his motion to dismiss the charges and confirmed a March 25 date for jury selection.

  • February 14, 2024

    Split 11th Circ. Rules Against SEC On Penny-Stock Ban

    A "toxic lender" will have to disgorge nearly $1 million in profits made after he ran afoul of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission rules on trading in penny-stock debt, but his behavior was not egregious enough to warrant a permanent ban from penny-stock markets, a divided Eleventh Circuit ruled Wednesday.

  • February 14, 2024

    Fla. Condo Says Chubb Unit Stalled On $7M Storm Claim

    A Florida Keys condominium has sued a Chubb unit over coverage related to $7.3 million worth of damage sustained during a 2017 hurricane, saying the company breached "industry standards" by dragging its feet on a claim and issued an amount less than what was needed for repairs.

  • February 14, 2024

    Enviro Orgs Planning EPA Suit Over Phosphate-Mining Waste

    A coalition of conservation, public health and environmental justice groups told the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency they plan to sue it for failing to respond to a 3-year-old petition asking for stronger regulations governing toxic and radioactive phosphogypsum waste generated by the fertilizer industry.

  • February 14, 2024

    Ex-US Diplomat Pleads Not Guilty To Spying For Cuba

    A diplomat who served on the National Security Council during the Clinton administration and as U.S. ambassador to Bolivia entered a not guilty plea Wednesday to charges that he secretly acted as an agent of the Cuban government for decades.

  • February 14, 2024

    French-Door Fridge Buyers Sue Whirlpool Over Broken Panels

    Refrigerator buyers claim Whirlpool Corp. designed its french-door fridges in such a way that causes the front-facing ice and water control panel to become totally useless, often resulting in an expensive repair or the consumer buying a new one, according to a complaint filed in Delaware federal court.

  • February 14, 2024

    Chancery Flipped SeaWorld Stock Claims, Ex-Execs Tell Court

    A Chancery Court judge "got it backwards" when he concluded that 19 former executives of SeaWorld Entertainment Inc. weren't entitled to vesting rights in connection with a 2017 stock sale, because he read the executives' separation and equity agreements out of order, an attorney for the executives told Delaware's Supreme Court on Wednesday.

  • February 14, 2024

    Fla. Judge Says 'Felon Ban' Doesn't Harm Voter Organization

    A Florida federal judge has tossed a challenge to a "felon ban" provision in a state law that prohibits people convicted of felonies from handling voter registration applications on behalf of third-party organizations, saying harms claimed by the League of Women Voters of Florida Inc. are speculative and self-imposed.

  • February 14, 2024

    MLS Says Coach Aimed At Wrong Org In Race Bias Suit

    Major League Soccer has told a New York federal court it should toss a race bias suit brought by a coach, arguing the organization is the wrong defendant and the coach should be suing the individual teams who denied him head coaching positions instead.

Expert Analysis

  • Don't Forget Alumni Engagement When Merging Law Firms

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    Neglecting law firm alumni programs after a merger can sever the deep connections attorneys have with their former firms, but by combining good data management and creating new opportunities to reconnect, firms can make every member in their expanded network of colleagues feel valued, say Clare Roath and Erin Warner at Troutman Pepper.

  • Without Stronger Due Diligence, Attys Risk AML Regulation

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    Amid increasing pressure to mitigate money laundering and terrorism financing risks in gatekeeper professions, the legal industry will need to clarify and strengthen existing client due diligence measures — or risk the federal regulation attorneys have long sought to avoid, says Jeremy Glicksman at the Nassau County District Attorney’s Office.

  • Every Lawyer Can Act To Prevent Peer Suicide

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    Members of the legal industry can help prevent suicide among their colleagues, and better protect their own mental health, by learning the predictors and symptoms of depression among attorneys and knowing when and how to get practical aid to peers in crisis, says Joan Bibelhausen at Minnesota Lawyers Concerned for Lawyers.

  • Building On Successful Judicial Assignment Reform In Texas

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    Prompt action by the Judicial Conference could curtail judge shopping and improve the efficiency and procedural fairness of the federal courts by implementing random districtwide assignment of cases, which has recently proven successful in Texas patent litigation, says Dabney Carr at Troutman Pepper.

  • Do Videoconferences Establish Jurisdiction With Defendants?

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    What it means to have minimum contacts in a foreign jurisdiction is changing as people become more accustomed to meeting via video, and defendants’ participation in videoconferencing may be used as a sword or a shield in courts’ personal jurisdiction analysis, says Patrick Hickey at Moye White.

  • Pending Campaign Finance Ruling May Alter Nonprofit Activity

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    The Eleventh Circuit's upcoming New Georgia Project v. Carr decision, over whether Georgia's state campaign finance laws violate the First Amendment, could harbor nationwide effects for state registration and reporting requirements for nonprofits participating in political activity, resulting in less supervision of these entities, say Andrew Herman and Michelle McClafferty at Lawrence & Bundy.

  • Opinion

    Humanism Should Replace Formalism In The Courts

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    The worrying tendency for judges to say "it's just the law talking, not me" in American decision writing has coincided with an historic decline in respect for the courts, but this trend can be reversed if courts develop understandable legal standards and justify them in human terms, says Connecticut Superior Court Judge Thomas Moukawsher.

  • A Look At Florida's Aggressively Pro-Insurer Tort Reform

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    Florida's new tort reform law is an unwarranted gift to insurance companies that seeks to strip policyholders of key rights while doing little to curb excessive litigation, say Garrett Nemeroff and Hugh Lumpkin at Reed Smith.

  • Don't Let Client Demands Erode Law Firm Autonomy

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    As clients increasingly impose requirements for attorney hiring and retention related to diversity and secondment, law firms must remember their ethical duties, as well as broader issues of lawyer development, culture and firm integrity, to maintain their independence while meaningfully responding to social changes, says Deborah Winokur at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Fla. Restaurants Need To Prep For Liquor License Changes

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    As Florida restaurant operators face potential legislative changes to special food service liquor licenses, applicants should take care to ensure that their local zoning office will be able to issue clearance based on square footage and the number of people served at one time, says Grace Yang at GrayRobinson.

  • Workers, Labor Take Center Stage At ABA Antitrust Meeting

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    The American Bar Association’s antitrust spring meeting had a heavy emphasis on upstream markets affecting employees and talent, and prosecutors sent a clear message that they view no-solicitation, no-poach and no-hire agreements as criminal violations, even in the face of several jury trial setbacks, say attorneys at Perkins Coie.

  • As EVs Surge, Regs For Charger Warranties Remain Murky

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    Even as electric vehicles move rapidly into the mainstream, extended warranties for EV chargers do not always fit clearly into existing regulatory categories — but how such contracts are classified can have serious implications for the companies that issue and sell them, say attorneys at Locke Lord.

  • Opinion

    Federal Judge's Amici Invitation Is A Good Idea, With Caveats

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    An Arkansas federal judge’s recent order — inviting amicus briefs in every civil case before him — has merit, but its implementation may raise practical questions about the role of junior attorneys, economic considerations and other issues, says Lawrence Ebner at the Atlantic Legal Foundation.

  • Fox Ex-Producer Case Is A Lesson In Joint Representation

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    A former Fox News producer's allegations that the network's lawyers pressured her to give misleading testimony in Fox's defamation battle with Dominion Voting Systems should remind lawyers representing a nonparty witness that the rules of joint representation apply, says Jared Marx at HWG.

  • And Now A Word From The Panel: Baseball And MDLs

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    With the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation meeting on MLB opening day, Alan Rothman at Sidley explores connections between the national pastime and MDL, including sports-related proceedings in the areas of antitrust, personal injury, and marketing and sales.

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