Illinois

  • January 29, 2024

    Turkey Giants Look To Defeat Buyers' Cert. Bid In Illinois

    Butterball, Hormel, Perdue and other poultry producers fighting price-fixing claims in Illinois have argued the litigation's direct purchasers shouldn't receive class treatment because too many variables impact turkey prices for common evidence to support their claims.

  • January 29, 2024

    The Top Attys In Clinton's Impeachment Trial, 25 Years Later

    One of them just went to federal prison, and another famously beat a federal indictment. One has been seeking the White House, and another has been steering a BigLaw powerhouse. Each was among the two dozen attorneys who litigated President Bill Clinton's historic impeachment trial 25 years ago this month — and then saw their lives go in dramatically different directions.

  • January 29, 2024

    Chicago Beats Remaining Vaccine Mandate Challenges

    An Illinois federal judge on Friday threw out a lawsuit brought by Chicago employees challenging the city's COVID-19 vaccine mandate, finding the workers couldn't point to case law showing being denied an exemption was a burden on their religious practice.

  • January 29, 2024

    Union Shouldn't Fight Higher Pilot Retirement Age, Suit Says

    A pilots union breached its duty of fair representation by opposing a law that would raise the mandatory retirement age for pilots from 65 to 67, a group representing senior pilots said in a suit in Illinois federal court.

  • January 29, 2024

    ArentFox Schiff Allegedly Ousted IT Workers For Young Hires

    Two longtime ArentFox Schiff LLP information technology contractors have sued the firm in Illinois federal court for alleged violations of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, saying they were let go in favor of younger employees despite expertise and willingness to continue their roles.

  • January 26, 2024

    TikTok's $92M Biometric Deal Doesn't Bar Browser Claims

    TikTok can't use a $92 million biometric privacy settlement finalized in 2022 to duck 13 additional lawsuits over TikTok's in-app browser that were later transferred to a multidistrict litigation, an Illinois federal judge has ruled.

  • January 26, 2024

    'Are We Dating The Same Guy?' Guy's Meta Suit Gets Axed

    A Chicago-area resident's proposed class suit targeting allegedly false sexual misconduct accusations on an "Are We Dating The Same Guy?" Facebook page has been booted out of court for failing to demonstrate that he had properly established diversity jurisdiction under the Class Action Fairness Act.

  • January 26, 2024

    America First Legal Accuses Ill. Judges Of Favoring Women and Minorities

    A group founded by former Trump adviser Stephen Miller accused three Illinois federal judges of discrimination over their efforts to encourage younger, female and minority attorneys to handle oral arguments in their courtrooms, saying the policies amount to "oral-argument affirmative action for lawyers."

  • January 26, 2024

    ComEd Can't Slash $1.3M Live-Wire Bench Trial Judgment

    Exelon subsidiary Commonwealth Edison has lost its bid to convince an Illinois state appellate court that it should nix most of an apartment developer's $1.3 million bench trial award in a trespass suit targeting a live power line that delayed construction for nearly two years.

  • February 08, 2024

    Law360 Seeks Members For Its 2024 Editorial Boards

    Law360 is looking for avid readers of its publications to serve as members of its 2024 editorial advisory boards.

  • January 26, 2024

    Cannabis Co. Too Late To Sue Dinsmore Over Late Filing

    A Michigan appellate panel ruled Thursday that a cannabis company's suit against Dinsmore & Shohl LLP, alleging the firm missed the deadline to file the company's applications for Illinois cannabis dispensing licenses because it was "too busy" with other clients, was itself filed too late and properly thrown out.

  • January 26, 2024

    Teamsters Pension Fund Says Mich. Cos. Owe $18M, Not $15M

    A Michigan furniture manufacturer and its shipping partner owe a Teamsters-affiliated pension fund $18 million and not $15 million over the next 15 years in connection with their 2018 exit from the fund, the fund told an Illinois federal court.

  • January 25, 2024

    Petition Watch: Patent Obviousness, ADA Trials, Spoofing

    The U.S. Supreme Court receives thousands of petitions for review each term, but only a few make the news. Here, Law360 looks at four petitions filed in the past two weeks that you might've missed, including questions over pleading standards, the correct obviousness test to apply in patent disputes, whether Americans with Disabilities Act retaliation plaintiffs are entitled to jury trials, and how the government should prosecute spoofing.

  • January 25, 2024

    ADM Hit With Investor Suit Over Nutrition Biz Investigation

    Food and animal nutrition company Archer-Daniels-Midland was hit with a proposed class action by an investor in response to an accounting probe of its nutrition segment, and the administrative leave of its chief financial officer announced earlier this week.

  • January 25, 2024

    Cook County Can't Duck 300 Officers' Harassment Claims

    An Illinois federal judge on Wednesday refused to dismiss claims filed by most correctional officers alleging in three lawsuits that Cook County and its sheriff's office failed to address pervasive and relentless sexual harassment by county jail detainees, dismissing only three individual plaintiffs from one of the suits.

  • January 25, 2024

    Vet Fighting Volvo USERRA Win Faces Skepticism At 7th Circ.

    A U.S. Army veteran faces some "insurmountable legal obstacles" in her push to reinstate a $7.8 million trial win in a long-running case accusing Volvo of illegally firing her over military-related absences, a Seventh Circuit judge said at oral arguments Thursday.

  • January 25, 2024

    Aon, Ex-Partner Cut $1.5M SEC Deal Over Return Errors

    Chicago-based registered investment adviser Aon Investments USA Inc. and the firm's former partner have agreed to pay a total of $1.57 million to resolve U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations that they repeatedly misled a pension fund client about a discrepancy in its investment returns, according to a pair of orders by the agency Thursday.

  • January 25, 2024

    Investors Call Prison 'The Only Solution' For Collection Bid

    EB-5 investors who've been chasing settlement and sanction judgments for years in an Illinois federal fraud case are arguing that imprisonment "is the only bullet left in the court's gun" against real estate developers who've consistently played "a shell game" to avoid paying up.

  • January 25, 2024

    Loeb & Loeb Hires 20-Year McDermott Tax Partner In Chicago

    Loeb & Loeb LLP has hired a McDermott Will & Emery LLP partner who spent the past 20 years at the platform working on tax and estate planning matters, according to a Thursday announcement.

  • January 24, 2024

    5 Universities Cut $104.5M Deal In Student Aid-Fixing Suit

    A group of students is asking an Illinois federal judge to sign off on a $104.5 million deal with five universities in a proposed antitrust class action claiming that 17 universities conspired to limit student aid.

  • January 24, 2024

    Bid To Swap Chevron For An Old Standby Raises Doubts

    Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court debated whether a World War II-era doctrine encouraging courts to strongly consider agency statutory interpretations could replace the court's controversial so-called Chevron doctrine that requires judges to defer to those interpretations if a statute is ambiguous.

  • January 24, 2024

    7th Circ. Ponders If Faulty Steel Damaged O'Hare Project

    The Seventh Circuit questioned Wednesday whether cracked welds in a Chicago O'Hare International Airport canopy damaged the larger structure in a way that would trigger property damage coverage, after a lower court ruled that the canopy's general contractor wasn't covered for over $37.5 million in costs.

  • January 24, 2024

    Ex-Union Fund Trustees Ask 7th Circ. To Undo DOL Takeover

    The Seventh Circuit should reverse the U.S. Department of Labor's preliminary injunction win that put an independent fiduciary in charge of a multiemployer benefit fund at the center of mismanagement claims, former trustees contended, saying a lower court doesn't have jurisdiction.

  • January 24, 2024

    Software Co. Says Data Breach Victims Aren't Customers

    NextGen Healthcare is asking a Georgia federal court to dismiss a proposed consolidated class action because the plaintiffs don't have a relationship with the software company that would make it liable for damages, even as it acknowledged their health information was compromised by a cyberattack. 

  • January 24, 2024

    Orrick Brings In First-Chair IP Trial Lawyer From Venable

    Timothy Carroll joined Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP as a partner and first-chair intellectual property trial lawyer from Venable LLP on Wednesday, bringing his expertise in federal court and U.S. International Trade Commission trials to the firm's IP litigation practice, Orrick said.

Expert Analysis

  • Opinion

    Thomas Report Is Final Straw — High Court Needs Ethics Code

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    As a recent report on Justice Clarence Thomas' ongoing conflicts of interest makes evident, Supreme Court justices should be subject to an enforceable and binding code of ethics — like all other federal judges — to maintain the credibility of the institution, says Erica Salmon Byrne at Ethisphere.

  • Joint Representation Ethics Lessons From Ga. Electors Case

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    The Fulton County district attorney's recent motion to disqualify an attorney from representing her elector clients, claiming a nonconsentable conflict of interest, raises key questions about representing multiple clients related to the same conduct and highlights potential pitfalls, say Hilary Gerzhoy and Grace Wynn at HWG.

  • Lawyer Discernment Is Critical In The World Of AI

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    In light of growing practical concerns about risks and challenges posed by artificial intelligence, lawyers' experience with the skill of discernment will position them to help address new ethical and moral dilemmas and ensure that AI is developed and deployed in a way that benefits society as a whole, says Jennifer Gibbs at Zelle.

  • Opinion

    It's Time For Lawyers To Stand Up For Climate Justice

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    The anniversary this week of the Deepwater Horizon disaster offers an opportunity for attorneys to embrace the practice of just transition lawyering — leveraging our skills to support communities on the front lines of climate change and environmental catastrophe as they pursue rebuilding and transformation, says Amy Laura Cahn at Taproot Earth.

  • 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.

  • The Legal Consequences Of High PFAS Background Levels

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    As federal and state regulations around per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances proliferate, emerging scientific literature is showing that PFAS exist in many environments at background levels that exceed regulatory limits — and the potential legal implications are profound, say Grant Gilezan and Paul Stewart at Dykema and Dylan Eberle at Geosyntec Consultants.

  • Cannabis Labor Peace Laws Lay Fertile Ground For Unions

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    State legislatures are increasingly passing cannabis laws that encourage or even mandate labor peace agreements as a condition for licensure, and though open questions remain about the constitutionality of such statutes, unionization efforts are unlikely to slow down, says Peter Murphy at Saul Ewing.

  • 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.

  • What To Watch In High Court's FCA Scienter Standard Case

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    Depending on what role subjective intent plays in False Claims Act liability after the U.S. Supreme Court decides SuperValu and Safeway — to be argued April 18 — FCA defendants may be able to successfully move for dismissal prior to discovery or, conversely, find that internal discussions about legal exposure have become discoverable, say attorneys at Bryan Cave.

  • AmEx Ruling Proves A Double-Edged Sword In Labor Antitrust

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    Though the U.S. Supreme Court's 2018 decision in Ohio v. American Express was a defense victory, both the plaintiff and defense bars have learned to use the case's holdings to their advantage, with particularly uncertain implications for labor antitrust cases, say Lauren Weinstein and Robert Chen at MoloLamken.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Employment-Related Litigation Risks Facing Hospitality Cos.

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    A close look at recent hospitality industry employment claims highlights key issues companies should keep an eye out for, and insurance policy considerations for managing risk related to wage and hour, privacy, and human trafficking claims, say Jan Larson and Huiyi Chen at Jenner & Block.

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