More Insurance Coverage

  • January 11, 2024

    For Employers, Healthcare Costs Are A 'Black Box,' Reps. Told

    Amid rising drug prices and medical premiums, industry experts told U.S. House representatives in a hearing Thursday that employers who sponsor health insurance are critical to efforts to make healthcare more affordable for Americans — but they need more federal support.

  • January 11, 2024

    Stephenson Harwood Adds 2 Partners In Hong Kong Office

    Stephenson Harwood has added two new partners to the law firm's Hong Kong office, saying it has strengthened its greater China commercial litigation practice as well as its Asia-Pacific mergers and acquisitions practice with the addition of the two lawyers.

  • January 11, 2024

    Cohen Ziffer Promotes Second Atty To Partner

    Cohen Ziffer Frenchman & McKenna LLP announced earlier this week it has elevated Nicholas R. Maxwell to partner, making him the second attorney the New York-based firm has promoted to partner since it launched in January 2021.

  • January 11, 2024

    Consolidated Return Tax Regs May Be Paired, Officials Say

    The U.S. Treasury Department is actively working on two consolidated return regulations — one on group continuation and the other on redetermination of unrealized gain or loss — that were recently revived and may publish them together or close to their release dates, officials said Thursday.

  • January 11, 2024

    Divorce Pauses Husband, Wife IP Row Over Insurance Co.

    The North Carolina Business Court halted a lawsuit alleging the husband of an insurance agency owner stole her business records to benefit his newly formed company while keeping $3 million meant for her, reasoning the case will be affected by divorce proceedings the two are going through.

  • January 11, 2024

    Judge Upholds IRS Guidance On Abusive Benefit Trusts

    Guidance from the Internal Revenue Service that requires disclosure of potentially abusive benefit plans is not unlawfully vague, an Arizona federal court ruled, rejecting arguments from a recruiting firm that claimed the guidance was confusing and wrongly labeled transactions as abusive.

  • January 11, 2024

    Doctor, Insurers Agree To End Wiretap Coverage Suit

    A former University of Pittsburgh Medical Center surgeon has settled with his insurers in a suit seeking coverage for defense in a fellow surgeon's wiretapping and defamation action against him, according to a stipulation of dismissal filed in Pennsylvania federal court.

  • January 11, 2024

    Nationwide Wins Dismissal After Pruning Billing Class Action

    Nationwide defeated a proposed class action brought by a Pennsylvania man who was seeking confirmation that the insurer was wrongly denying medical benefits related to vehicle crash injuries, with a Pennsylvania federal judge ruling that his breach of contract allegations were insufficient to survive dismissal.

  • January 11, 2024

    New York Life Adds GC, Deputy To Exec Committee

    New York Life Insurance Co. has appointed Michael McDonnell, senior vice president and general counsel, and Amy Miller, senior vice president, deputy general counsel and secretary, to its executive management committee, the company said in a Thursday announcement.

  • January 11, 2024

    Trump Speech Caps Chaotic NY Trial: 'I Am An Innocent Man'

    Former President Donald Trump spoke directly to the judge during closing statements in the New York attorney general's civil fraud trial Thursday, proclaiming his innocence and arguing that the state should pay him back for what he called a political "persecution."

  • January 11, 2024

    Bradley Arant Adds Litigator In Tampa, Ex-Prosecutor In Ala.

    Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP said this week that it had added two new partners with deep experience in both private practice and government to its litigation and government enforcement and investigations practice groups.

  • January 11, 2024

    NY Judge In Trump's Fraud Trial Receives Bomb Threat

    The New York state judge presiding over former President Donald Trump's civil fraud trial was targeted with a bomb threat Thursday morning before hearing closing arguments in the case, according to law enforcement and court officials.

  • January 10, 2024

    Allstate Owes $10M For Conn. Gunshot Injury, Victim Claims

    A Connecticut gunshot victim claims Allstate Insurance Co. must pay him $10 million, plus punitive unfair trade practices damages, after he settled an earlier state court personal injury lawsuit with an insured woman whose weapon discharged and severely wounded him in 2017.

  • January 10, 2024

    Judge Axes Bellwether Cases In 'Frankenstein' BCBS Fight

    A Texas federal judge has handed Blue Cross Blue Shield a win in 182 bellwether claims set for a February jury trial in litigation over unpaid medical coverage, comparing the litigation to "Frankenstein's monster" while also invoking Monty Python in observing that the case is not "dead yet."

  • January 10, 2024

    Trump Can't Give Own Closing Argument In NY Fraud Trial

    Donald Trump failed to respond by a court-mandated deadline Wednesday to accept conditions under which he would be allowed to speak during closing arguments in the New York attorney general's civil fraud case.

  • January 09, 2024

    Lloyd's Loan Fight Over Ex-MLB Pitcher Sent To Arbitration

    A California federal judge ruled Tuesday that a $3.16 million dispute between loan service provider RockFence Baseball LLC and Lloyd's of London underwriters must go to arbitration over certain questions related to the coverage of a former Minnesota Twins pitcher.

  • January 09, 2024

    Creditor Brings Law Firm Fraud Payout Fight To 3rd Circ.

    A creditor of a defunct factoring company on Tuesday urged the Third Circuit to give him a cut of a bankruptcy settlement ending the business's fraud claims against its former consultant and law firm Reger Rizzo & Darnall LLP, arguing that a district court erred in determining that his money wasn't among the funds allegedly stolen.

  • January 09, 2024

    DeSantis Proposes Tax Cuts, Tax Holidays, Small Biz Relief

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis proposed tax cuts, the continuation of sales tax holidays and tax relief for small businesses in his State of the State address Tuesday.

  • January 09, 2024

    Hinshaw Adds 6-Atty Insurance Team In LA, San Francisco

    Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP announced Tuesday that it has brought on six insurance attorneys in San Francisco and Los Angeles, including three partners and three senior counsel, from now-closed Coddington Hicks & Danforth.

  • January 09, 2024

    Real Estate Rumors: Craig Realty, Maverick Capital, Brummer

    A California mall owned by Craig Realty has reportedly secured $140 million in refinancing, Maverick Capital is said to be opening a 10,000-square-foot New York City office, and Brummer Properties has parted with a Minneapolis apartment complex for $30 million.

  • January 09, 2024

    Car Care Provider Wants 'Fact-Phobic' Class Action Tossed

    A vehicle care protection provider and its insurer urged a Washington state federal court to toss a "fact-phobic" proposed class action accusing the provider of illegally selling noncompliant service contracts, saying the agreement at issue is not a service contract.

  • January 09, 2024

    Insurance Boutique Co-Founder Joins McGuireWoods

    A founding partner of insurance boutique Pasich LLP and former adviser at consultancy AECOM is joining McGuireWoods LLP's national insurance recovery team, the firm said Monday.

  • January 08, 2024

    Claims Against LA Ad Firm Trimmed In $10M Fraud Row

    An Ohio federal judge trimmed claims of fraudulent misrepresentation and conversion against a Los Angeles-based advertising firm and its chief executive officer, leaving intact seven other counts in an insurer's $10 million racketeering fraud suit against an ex-executive and, the suit says, his co-conspirators.

  • January 08, 2024

    Store Says Insurers Owe $2.7M In Jewelry Heist Coverage Row

    A California jewelry store that won a $2.7 million judgment against a security company it accused of negligence after the store was burglarized said the security company's insurers must pay the judgment, arguing the insurers wrongly denied coverage for the security company.

  • January 08, 2024

    5th Circ. Zeroes In On Standing In ACA Trans Health Fight

    A Fifth Circuit panel appeared skeptical Monday of two Texas doctors' capacity to sue over nondiscrimination-in-healthcare policy from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, with judges questioning how an HHS notice and a proposed rule put the physicians at legal risk when treating transgender minor patients.

Expert Analysis

  • Mental Health Parity Act: A Compliance Wake-Up Call

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    Recent developments, including the U.S. Department of Labor’s settlement with UnitedHealth, suggest that the DOL is taking a renewed and more aggressive approach to enforcing the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act, say Tim Kennedy and Anne Hall at Hall Benefits Law.

  • Insurance Commissioner's Agenda

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    State insurance commissioners discuss their enforcement and regulation priorities in this Expert Analysis series.

  • Takeaways From DC Circ. Medicare Overpayment Ruling

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    The D.C. Circuit's recent decision in UnitedHealth v. Becerra, reinstating a rule that requires Medicare Advantage organizations to refund certain overpayments, is a near-complete victory for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, but arguably abandons the rule's negligence standard, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.

  • Why The Future Of Telehealth Parity Remains Murky

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    Though the federal government, states and private insurers have united during the pandemic in recognizing the value of expanding telehealth access, there is no consensus on the merits of long-term telehealth parity, say Adriana Riviere-Badell and Alexandria Swette at Kobre & Kim.

  • A Primer On DOL Probes For ERISA Plan Service Providers

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    As the U.S. Department of Labor shifts its enforcement resources from Employee Retirement Income Security Act plan sponsors to financial institutions that service such plans, nonfiduciary providers should know what to expect and how to respond to agency investigations, say attorneys at Groom Law Group.

  • 5th Circ. Opinion Is Right To Question ERISA Review Norms

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    A concurrence in the Fifth Circuit’s recent J. P. v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas decision rightly criticizes the standard of review in Employee Retirement Income Security Act cases as misplaced, nearly impossible for claimants to meet, and at odds with the holistic assessment required by the U.S. Supreme Court, says Mark DeBofsky at DeBofsky Sherman.

  • Benefits Ruling Raises Jury Trial Question For ERISA Cases

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    An Ohio federal court's recent ruling in Phillips v. Sun Life Assurance has reopened the debate over the utility of jury trials in Employee Retirement Income Security Act benefit denial cases, highlighting how the law’s silence on the issue leads courts to make up rules that lack statutory support, says Mark DeBofsky at DeBofsky Sherman.

  • Bankruptcy Eligibility Is Expanding For Small Biz Debtors

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    A Florida bankruptcy court's recent decision in Vertical Mac Construction expands the scope of "just enough" commercial or business activity for Subchapter V eligibility, and potential debtors should consider this evolving boundary, says Nicholas Koffroth at Fox Rothschild.

  • Imposing Insurance Surcharges On Unvaccinated Workers

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    Employers that are not covered by President Joe Biden’s new COVID-19 action plan or that want to further encourage vaccination may consider imposing a health insurance premium surcharge on unvaccinated workers, but compliance with myriad federal, state and local laws must be addressed before raising rates, say attorneys at Reed Smith.

  • ERISA Ruling Reveals Big-Picture Health Benefit Issues

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    While a California federal court’s recent ruling in Asner v. SAG-AFTRA Health Fund concerned fiduciary duty claims under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, a closer look at the details raises broad questions about retirees’ rights to lifetime health benefits and the staying power of employer-sponsored health care, says Mark DeBofsky at DeBofsky Sherman.

  • What's At Stake In High Court's CVS Disability Bias Case

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    In its upcoming review of CVS Pharmacy Inc. v. Doe, the U.S. Supreme Court will likely address at least one circuit split concerning the availability of disparate-impact claims under the Rehabilitation Act and Affordable Care Act, say attorneys at Weil.

  • Vehicle Service Contracts Present Opportunities For EV Cos.

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    As the electric vehicle market grows faster than ever, manufacturers, dealers and even aftermarket participants can use vehicle service contracts to open up new revenue streams and maintain a touchpoint with customers — but contract providers must be aware of applicable laws and regulations, says Matthew R. Wagner at Frost Brown.

  • SEC Cyber Disclosure Actions Point To Merciless Scrutiny

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    Recent U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission actions over cyber-related disclosure failures show what to expect from a newly invigorated SEC and offer fresh insights on how to counter potentially unmerciful post-breach scrutiny from the agency, even in immaterial, nonfraudulent matters, says cybersecurity consultant John Reed Stark.

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