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June 23, 2026
New Jersey Transit alleged in federal court that a railway electronics company must fund the transit agency's defense against patent infringement claims in an underlying suit, claiming that the company provided the infringing systems and that its agreement with the company requires it to cover the defense.
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June 23, 2026
A doctrine limiting tort claims over contract losses did not bar a fraud claim tied to a fracking wastewater treatment project, the Colorado Supreme Court ruled Tuesday, affirming a more than $215 million judgment for Antero.
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June 23, 2026
The Social Security Administration told the D.C. federal court that the Freedom of Information Act does not authorize the court to override the fee determinations the agency made when producing public records related to its involvement with technology company Palantir.
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June 23, 2026
A Pittsburgh-area township is suing a neighboring borough and sewer authority, asking a Pennsylvania state court to declare that the township has authority to update or terminate decades-old sewer service agreements that locked in rates that no longer reflect the cost of maintaining the system.
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June 23, 2026
Federal authorities said Tuesday that artificial intelligence and sophisticated data analysis helped them detect and prosecute healthcare fraud as part of a national crackdown that resulted in charges against 455 defendants.
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June 23, 2026
A Virginia federal court dismissed nearly all the claims the operator of a camp in Afghanistan raised against a defense contractor for allegedly abandoning a cache of illegal weapons the Taliban seized, allowing only the operator's negligence claim to proceed.
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June 22, 2026
Fluor Corp. is urging a D.C. federal court to not let a former federal prosecutor pursue a newly amended False Claims Act lawsuit accusing it of labor trafficking under a military logistics contract in Afghanistan, arguing his lawsuit alleges nothing new.
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June 22, 2026
An information technology contractor accused its former vice president and his new company of scheming to recruit employees, steal trade secrets and withhold critical information to sabotage the company's Federal Aviation Administration data analytics contract.
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June 22, 2026
The Hunterdon County Prosecutor's Office improperly shared a video of a meeting with its investigators about a now-suspended police officer's gender discrimination and internal affairs complaints against her department, according to a lawsuit filed in New Jersey state court.
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June 22, 2026
The U.S. Department of Justice said an Alabama-based government contractor has agreed to pay over $500,000 to resolve claims that it knowingly failed to abide by cybersecurity requirements in support contracts for the U.S. Navy.
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June 22, 2026
The U.S. Department of Justice has told the Federal Circuit that multibillion-dollar patent infringement litigation should be directed at the government, instead of Moderna, for the drugmaker's development and supply of COVID vaccines during the pandemic.
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June 18, 2026
The Federal Circuit won't revive an ex-Wells Fargo employee's suit alleging the U.S. Department of Justice won't pay her share of a $2 billion payout that settled allegations the bank misled investors about troubled loans behind its residential mortgage-backed securities, ruling Thursday the U.S. Court of Federal Claims lacks jurisdiction to review the DOJ's decision.
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June 18, 2026
The Defense Logistics Agency's decision to not consider a company's bid for supplying fuel products to a Virginia airport after it got stuck in email filter system purgatory was not arbitrary nor capricious, a U.S. Court of Federal Claims judge has ruled.
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June 18, 2026
The Trump administration's imposition of export controls against Anthropic should serve as a warning to other technology companies that missteps, and a lack of industrywide guidance on what the government considers national security risks, could result in unexpected sanctions.
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June 18, 2026
Fluor Federal Services Inc. told a Texas federal court that a subcontractor used generative text in its brief asking the court to keep intact its suit accusing Fluor of antitrust violations, saying the subcontractor shouldn't get to amend its filing to cure the resulting errors.
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June 18, 2026
A man who stole COVID-19 relief money from a Connecticut city asked a federal judge on Thursday to reduce his "unusually lengthy" eight-year prison sentence to time served, noting that he has been behind bars for more than three years while all others involved in the scam, including a former state representative, walk free.
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June 18, 2026
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has abandoned plans to convert a suburban Detroit warehouse into a 500-bed immigration detention center and will instead sell the facility, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced Thursday.
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June 18, 2026
An engineering and design company has asked a Colorado state judge to order a new trial after jurors found it liable for more than $1.3 million in damages for breaching a subcontract linked to an Interstate 70 construction project in Denver.
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June 18, 2026
An Arizona Indigenous nation is asking a D.C. federal court to block the Department of Homeland Security from constructing a 62-mile border wall through its reservation, alleging that reports of federal contractors destroying ancestral sites in adjacent areas confirm the tribe's decision to oppose the wall construction.
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June 18, 2026
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has terminated a 2022 consent order with Bank of America NA over its handling of prepaid unemployment benefit cards during the COVID-19 pandemic, closing out a key part of a Biden-era joint enforcement action against the bank.
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June 18, 2026
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. told a North Carolina federal court that a construction company owes about $1.5 million for losses Liberty incurred in connection with the contractor's work on a school construction project for which Liberty executed bonds.
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June 17, 2026
A California federal judge said Wednesday he's inclined to block at least three federal agencies from conditioning certain grants to California and Oregon municipalities on compliance with Trump administration priorities — including immigration enforcement and anti-diversity, equity and inclusion restrictions — saying they'd established harm when it comes to grants for which they'd applied.
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June 17, 2026
United Power Trades Organization, which represents hundreds of hydropower dam workers employed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, launched a lawsuit in Seattle federal court Tuesday seeking to preserve its collective bargaining rights after the Trump administration ended its union contract pursuant to a March 2025 executive order.
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June 17, 2026
Attorneys for the Trump administration argued Congress never meant for the General Services Administration's choice of a new FBI headquarters site to be final when it instructed the agency to choose between three proposed sites, defending the agency's sudden shift in choosing to convert the Ronald Reagan Building instead Wednesday.
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June 17, 2026
The Trump administration asked a Colorado federal judge Wednesday to toss the state's challenge to the administration's decision to move U.S. Space Command's headquarters from Colorado Springs to Huntsville, Alabama, saying Colorado has no veto power over the administration's implementation of federal law.