Government Contracts

  • May 15, 2026

    How US Policy, Capital Flows Are Reshaping Defense M&A

    Defense dealmaking is showing signs of broadening in 2026, with government-backed investment and expanded participation from smaller technology-focused players accelerating transactions even as headline deal values moderate from last year's highs.

  • May 15, 2026

    Veterans Group Asks Fed. Circ. To Toss VA Abortion Ban Rule

    The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs violated a federal rulemaking law when it enacted a 2025 regulation that banned abortion care and abortion counseling, a minority veterans group told the Federal Circuit on Friday, asking the court to toss out the rule because it's arbitrary and capricious. 

  • May 14, 2026

    'Drastic Overreach': Judge Nixes DOJ Trans Care Subpoena

    A Rhode Island federal judge has barred the U.S. Department of Justice from seeking or receiving gender-affirming care medical records from Rhode Island Hospital, chiding the DOJ's "drastic overreach" into the informational privacy of children who are the subject of the records.

  • May 14, 2026

    Takeda To Pay $13.6M Over Antidepressant Drug Kickbacks

    Takeda Pharmaceuticals will pay $13.6 million to end allegations that it caused false Medicaid claims by providing kickbacks to healthcare providers to push prescriptions of its antidepressant drug Trintellix, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Thursday.

  • May 14, 2026

    DOJ Says Yale's Medical School Discriminates Based On Race

    The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday accused the Yale School of Medicine of discriminating against white and Asian applicants, saying an investigation revealed Black and Latino students have a much higher chance of getting into the school.

  • May 14, 2026

    Infrastructure Can't Support ICE Detention Center, Ga. City Says

    Social Circle, a Georgia city of about 5,000, has asked a federal judge to block U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement from rapidly converting an empty warehouse into a 10,000-bed detention center, arguing the agency shirked its duty to consider the impacts.

  • May 14, 2026

    DOJ Asserts Broad Power In BigLaw Executive Order Appeal

    A Trump administration attorney told the D.C. Circuit on Thursday that the courts have no authority to review the president's decision to revoke someone's security clearance for any reason, including race, religion, or even refusal to pay a $1 million bribe.

  • May 14, 2026

    New Bill Would Ban Chinese Point-Of-Sale Tech For DOD

    The U.S. Department of Defense would be banned from using any Chinese-made point-of-sale technology — devices like those that allow people to tap their cards to pay — in its buildings, if one Republican congressman gets his way.

  • May 13, 2026

    Oversight Bill For FCC's High Cost Program Signed Into Law

    The Rural Broadband Protection Act, which aims to establish a vetting process for internet service providers who are taking part in the Federal Communications Commission's "high cost" program, has finally made it into law after being filed several times over the last couple of years.

  • May 13, 2026

    Army Contractor, Cable Co. Settle Missed-Delivery Suit

    A Texas federal judge agreed Wednesday to toss a lawsuit a U.S. Army contractor filed against a custom cable maker in California over undelivered cable sets after the companies reported that they had settled their dispute.

  • May 13, 2026

    HealthSplash CEO Found Guilty In $450M Medicare Fraud Trial

    A Florida federal jury found a former healthcare company executive guilty on Wednesday of swindling Medicare out of $450 million with software that created false prescriptions for orthotic braces.

  • May 13, 2026

    Colo. Jury Awards $1.3M To I-70 Project Subcontractor

    A Colorado state jury declined to award $32.5 million to the lead contractor of the reconstruction project of a 10-mile stretch of Interstate 70 in Denver, finding instead that the contractor breached a subcontract and owes its subcontractor $1.3 million in damages.

  • May 13, 2026

    Aluminum Tariff-Dodging Cos. Ink $550M FCA Deal With Feds

    A group of California businesses agreed to pay nearly $550 million to resolve civil allegations that they lied to U.S. Customs and Border Protection to avoid paying duties on extruded aluminum imported into the U.S. from China, the U.S. Department of Justice announced on Wednesday.

  • May 13, 2026

    Judge Denies Protest Of $1B DHS Procurement Exclusion

    The U.S. Court of Federal Claims rejected an air transportation company's protest over being excluded from a $1.4 billion immigration contract with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, saying the company lacked standing since it failed to show it could adequately perform the work needed.

  • May 13, 2026

    Engineers Drop General Dynamics From No-Poach Suit

    General Dynamics can walk away from a proposed class action accusing major shipbuilders of using no-poach agreements to suppress wages for engineers and architects, after the parties stipulated Tuesday to dropping the company from the Virginia federal court suit from which other defendants have settled.

  • May 13, 2026

    Crowell & Moring Opens Minneapolis Office With 8 Lawyers

    Crowell & Moring LLP announced Wednesday that it is deepening its commitment to Minnesota by opening a new office in Minneapolis with a team of eight attorneys and said it's expecting more growth in the near future.

  • May 12, 2026

    DOJ Playing 'Dirty Pool' With Hospital In Trans Care Subpoena

    A Rhode Island federal judge indicated Tuesday she's likely to quash a subpoena from the U.S. Department of Justice seeking to obtain gender-affirming care medical records from Rhode Island Hospital, saying the DOJ was playing "dirty pool" by filing a motion to enforce the subpoena in another jurisdiction.

  • May 12, 2026

    Fed. Circ. Vacates Order Making Army Corps Award Contract

    A Federal Circuit panel vacated an injunction on Tuesday requiring the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to award Anders Construction a $5 million diving services contract, saying the agency properly found that the company's proposal was technically unacceptable.

  • May 12, 2026

    Texas AG Targets CVS DEI Program, Threatens Fraud Probe

    Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton on Tuesday warned CVS Health its diversity, equity and inclusion program for suppliers may violate state and federal antidiscrimination laws and gave the company 14 days to respond or risk a Medicaid fraud investigation.

  • May 12, 2026

    GAO Denies Protest Over $803M TSA Security Task Order

    The U.S. Government Accountability Office has rejected an incumbent contractor's protest over the U.S. Transportation Security Administration's selection of an $803 million proposal to provide security screening at San Francisco International Airport, finding no issue with its price analysis.

  • May 12, 2026

    Cintas Gives FTC More Time To Review $5.5B UniFirst Deal

    Cintas Corp. is giving the Federal Trade Commission additional time to review its planned $5.5 billion acquisition of fellow uniform and facility services supplier UniFirst Corp. for its effect on competition.

  • May 12, 2026

    Detainees Fight GEO's 'Second Bite' Quick Appeal Bid

    A group of former immigrant detainees urged a Colorado federal judge to reject The GEO Group Inc.'s latest bid for a quick appeal in a forced labor class action, arguing the company is trying to relitigate a years-old ruling.

  • May 12, 2026

    Ship Managers Indicted Over Baltimore Bridge Disaster

    Federal prosecutors accused the management company and a supervisor of the container ship that slammed into Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge in March 2024 of recklessly operating the ship, forging inspection documents and misleading safety investigators, according to a Maryland federal grand jury's criminal indictment unsealed Tuesday.

  • May 11, 2026

    Wash. Says Novartis Isn't Harmed By 340B Drug Pricing Law

    Washington is objecting to Novartis' attempt to block a state law that expands the discounts the drugmaker must provide under the federal 340B Drug Pricing Program, telling a federal court that worry about losing money doesn't constitute irreparable harm.

  • May 11, 2026

    Ga. Christian Center Accuses Public School Of Retaliation

    An evangelical Christian learning center told a Georgia federal court that a public school district cut off its partnership on a biblical education program after the center's founder publicly criticized a proposed tax increase last year.

Expert Analysis

  • Tips For Handling DEI Clampdown In Gov't Contracts

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    A recent executive order and subsequent guidance from the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council reflect unified opposition to diversity, equity and inclusion in federal contracts, requiring contractors to, among other things, identify which entities are subject to flow-down obligations and prepare for near-term contract action and negotiations, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.

  • How Oregon Ruling Affects Federal Gender Care Crackdown

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    In a favorable development for healthcare providers, an Oregon federal court recently vacated certain U.S. Department of Health and Human Services restrictions on gender-affirming care for minors, but the government's broader campaign against this care, including proposed rulemaking and agency investigations, leaves significant uncertainty, say attorneys at Arnold & Porter.

  • 2 AI Snafus Show Why Attys Can't Outsource Judgment

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    The recent incident involving Sullivan & Cromwell where citations in a filed motion were fabricated by artificial intelligence, as well as a punitive ruling from the Sixth Circuit in U.S. v. Farris, demonstrate that the obligation to supervise AI has belonged and always will belong to lawyers, says John Powell at the Kentucky School Boards Association.

  • Series

    Playing Magic: The Gathering Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    The competitive card game Magic: The Gathering offers me a training ground for the strategic thinking skills crucial to litigation, challenging me to adapt to oft-updated rules, analyze text as complicated as any statute and anticipate my opponent’s next moves, says Christopher Smith at Lash Goldberg.

  • Improving Well-Being In Law, 10 Years After Landmark Study

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    An important 2016 study revealed significant substance abuse and mental health issues among lawyers, and while the findings helped normalize the conversation around these topics, a decade later, structural change is still needed, says Denise Robinson at PLI.

  • Managing Tort Risk After Justices' War Zone Immunity Ruling

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Hencely v. Fluor changes the tort landscape for battlefield contractors, whose liability for employee injury will now turn on compliance with battlefield directives — a question that will require discovery into highly sensitive details of combat operations and military decision-making, says Warren Bianchi at Fluet.

  • Steps To Consider As DOJ Launches Fraud Division

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    The establishment this month of the National Fraud Enforcement Division within the U.S. Department of Justice is a significant reorganization that suggests an increase in enforcement activity involving federally funded programs but leaves a number of important questions unanswered, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.

  • What We Did And Didn't Learn From DOJ's 1st Illegal DEI Deal

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    IBM's recent $17 million deal with the U.S. Department of Justice marks the first resolved False Claims Act enforcement action under the Civil Rights Fraud Initiative, and while it validates the core of the government's FCA antidiscrimination enforcement road map, it leaves its most aggressive theories untested, say attorneys at Nutter.

  • New DEI Clauses Will Reshape FCA Exposure For Contractors

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    As federal agencies mandate new procurement language aimed at curbing contractors' DEI practices and embedding False Claims Act materiality concepts into antidiscrimination obligations, contractors should account for both compliance and litigation risks before signing, and understand the legal constraints that govern FCA materiality, say attorneys at Seyfarth.

  • DOD Contractors May Be Overlooking Import Duty Exemption

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    In today's high-tariff environment, defense contractors and subcontractors should consider a nontraditional application of the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement’s duty-free exemption clause that might substantially reduce their import costs, says Jason Monahan at Honigman.

  • Series

    Officiating Football Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Though they may seem to have little in common, officiating football has sharpened many of the same skills that define effective lawyering in management-side labor and employment: preparation, judgment, composure, credibility and ability to make difficult decisions in real time, says Josh Nadreau at Fisher Phillips.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Draft Pleadings

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    Most law school graduates step into their first jobs without ever having drafted a complaint, answer, motion or other type of pleading, but that gap can be closed by understanding the strategy embedded in every filing, writing with clarity and purpose, and seeking feedback at every step, says Eric Yakaitis at Haug Barron.

  • E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On ESI Control

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    Several recent federal court decisions have perpetuated a split over what constitutes “control” of electronically stored information — with judges divided on whether the standard should turn on a party's legal right or practical ability to obtain the information, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • 2 Discovery Rulings Break With Heppner On AI Privilege Issue

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    While a New York federal court’s recent ruling in U.S. v. Heppner suggests that some litigants’ communications with AI tools are discoverable, two other recent federal court decisions demonstrate that such interactions generally qualify for work-product protection under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, says Joshua Dunn at Brown Rudnick.

  • Bid Protest Spotlight: Evidence, Tailored Talks, Materiality

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    In this month's bid protest roundup, Brian Doll at MoFo delves into three recent decisions from the Government Accountability Office about the evidentiary standards necessary to sustain a protest, discussions tailored to individual proposals, and misrepresentation claims involving factors irrelevant to the agency's decision.

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