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October 08, 2025
Micron Files Patent Case In Calif. Day After Hit With Texas Suit
Chinese chipmaker Yangtze Memory Technologies Company Ltd. has accused Micron Technology Inc. of infringing a series of patents related to computer memory, prompting Micron to respond with its own suit asserting that it didn't infringe the patents.
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October 08, 2025
Judge To OK Neiman Marcus Trust's Altered Payout Scheme
A Texas bankruptcy judge said on Wednesday he would allow the liquidating trustee in reorganized debtor Neiman Marcus' bankruptcy case to make distributions to unsecured creditors largely along the trustee's requested lines but without an abbreviated deadline for unclaimed funds to revert to the trust.
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October 07, 2025
5th Circ. Queries If ChampionX Covered In $40M Oil Spill Suit
A Fifth Circuit panel Tuesday pressed ChampionX Corp. to explain how it can pursue a lawsuit in Texas seeking to make multiple insurers pay for its defense in a $40 million oil spill lawsuit if the underlying policies don't name it.
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October 07, 2025
Fed. Circ. Ponders Document Sealing In EDTX's Patent Cases
A Federal Circuit panel grappled Tuesday with document sealing practices in patent cases in the Eastern District of Texas, appearing at points skeptical about a digital rights nonprofit's efforts to unseal records in since-concluded litigation involving Charter Communications Inc.
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October 07, 2025
Prospect Medical Fights $1M Software Fee Claims In Ch. 11
Prospect Medical Holdings Inc. says the pending Chapter 11 proceedings for its hospitals in California and Connecticut should keep two technology companies from demanding more than $1 million in payment for disputed software and IT contracts, according to Prospect's filings with a Texas bankruptcy court on Monday.
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October 07, 2025
Drug Tax Outdoes Biblical Punishment, 5th Circ. Judge Says
A Fifth Circuit panel pressed the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to justify the basis for the Medicare drug pricing program's steep excise tax, asking Tuesday whether the government had ever levied a higher tax in the nation's history.
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October 07, 2025
Musk Atty Alex Spiro Faces DQ Bid Ahead Of Twitter Deal Trial
A certified class of former Twitter investors accusing Elon Musk of tanking the social media platform's stock during acquisition negotiations has urged a California federal judge to disqualify Musk's proposed lead trial counsel Alex Spiro before a January trial, arguing he's a "critical first-hand witness" and may testify, according to documents unsealed Monday.
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October 07, 2025
Rolls-Royce Can't Ditch Helicopter Crash Suit Before Trial
A Texas federal judge won't give Rolls-Royce Corp. a win before trial in a suit over a fatal helicopter crash in the U.S. Virgin Islands, finding that the company failed to show that Indiana law bars the plaintiff's claims.
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October 07, 2025
Texas Court Overturns Forfeiture Verdict For Lack Of Evidence
A Texas appellate panel on Tuesday reversed a civil-forfeiture judgment and ordered state officials to return nearly $42,000 in cash that sheriff's deputies seized from a driver, saying there was no direct evidence that he would have spent the money on illegal drugs.
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October 07, 2025
Global Wound Care Flags Medicare Delay Amid Shutdown
Specialty medical practice Global Wound Care has told a Texas bankruptcy judge it is waiting on $27.2 million in Medicare reimbursement payments, saying the risk that the delays could put it into a liquidity crisis is compounded by the federal government shutdown.
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October 07, 2025
Fitch Even's $1.2M Fee Fight Appears Headed To Arbitration
Fitch Even Tabin & Flannery LLP's $1.2 million fee dispute with a former client and a litigation funder's CEO may be paused and sent to arbitration before the firm can convince an Illinois federal judge to halt any alleged use or transfer of the money at issue.
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October 07, 2025
Litigation Funder, Ex-GC To Take Fight Out Of Texas Court
Litigation funder Siltstone Capital LLC has agreed to arbitration with a former general counsel it has accused in a Texas state lawsuit of diverting business opportunities and using confidential business information when secretly forming a new rival litigation funder, Signal Peak Partners LLC.
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October 07, 2025
Estate's $17M Transfer Not Tax-Related, 5th Circ. Told
The estate of a woman who inherited her husband's oil business and was the victim of elder abuse told the Fifth Circuit that it had multiple reasons unrelated to avoiding estate tax for setting up a partnership and transferring $17 million into it just before she died.
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October 07, 2025
White & Case Lands Akin Energy Ace In Houston
White & Case LLP announced Tuesday that it has expanded its global mergers and acquisitions practice and global energy industry group with a partner in Houston who arrived from Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP.
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October 07, 2025
Hess Cuts Deal To End Suit Over 401(k) Investment Roster
Energy company Hess agreed to settle a proposed class action alleging it cost workers millions of dollars in retirement savings by loading its employee 401(k) plan with expensive and poorly performing investment options, according to filings in Texas federal court.
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October 06, 2025
Justices Wary Of Hard Rules On Recess Testimony Talks
The U.S. Supreme Court appeared reluctant Monday to rule that the Sixth Amendment allows defense counsel to freely discuss defendants' testimony with them during an intervening overnight recess, with justices questioning which topics should be off limits and which should not.
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October 06, 2025
Cisco Gets PTAB To Invalidate Ethernet Patent Claims
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board has invalidated all claims Cisco Systems Inc. had challenged of an Ethernet patent owned by Lionra Technologies Ltd.
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October 06, 2025
Pioneer Couldn't Deliver Gas During Storm, Court Hears
Pioneer Natural Resources USA Inc. told a Texas federal court Monday that Winter Storm Uri made it impossible to deliver about $9 million worth of natural gas to an energy trading company, saying during a Monday bench trial that the storm exempted it from its contractual obligations.
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October 06, 2025
Fed. Circ. Examines $41.8M Seagen Cancer Drug Patent Case
With a $41.8 million infringement verdict against Daiichi Sankyo at stake, a Federal Circuit panel Monday grappled with whether a Seagen breast cancer treatment patent adequately described the claimed invention and would enable a skilled person to use it.
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October 06, 2025
Nokia, Ericsson Lose PTAB Challenge To Wireless Patent
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board has refused to toss certain claims in a wireless communication technology patent challenged by Ericsson and Nokia, finding the companies failed to show the claims were obvious.
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October 06, 2025
Convicted Investor Puts More Properties Into Ch. 11
A company and several affiliates associated with convicted real estate investment fraudster Moshe "Mark" Silber filed for Chapter 11 on Monday in New Jersey bankruptcy court with up to 199 estimated creditors and up to $500 million in estimated liabilities.
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October 06, 2025
Cybertruck Design Trapped Rider In Flaming Wreck, Suit Says
The family of a college student who died while trapped in a Tesla Cybertruck has hit the electric-auto maker with a wrongful death lawsuit in California state court, alleging that Tesla knowingly kept Cybertrucks on the roads despite known risks of their allegedly defectively designed electric doors failing.
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October 06, 2025
AT&T, T-Mobile Settle Patent Suit Over 4G, 5G Tech
AT&T and T-Mobile have settled claims from Pegasus Wireless Corp. that they infringed patents with technology that runs on 4G and 5G standards.
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October 06, 2025
Texas Class Action Nixed Over Law Firm's La. Hurricane Ads
A federal judge in Texas has ruled that a litigation funder and a Houston-area attorney will not face a proposed class action alleging that a law firm engaged in deceptive advertising targeting hurricane victims in Louisiana, finding that a prior Texas Supreme Court ruling dooms the case.
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October 06, 2025
Womble Bond Adds Cybersecurity Pro From Texas AG's Office
Womble Bond Dickinson announced Monday that it has bolstered its privacy and cybersecurity practice and its artificial intelligence and machine learning team with a Houston-based partner who previously served as director of privacy and technology enforcement at the Texas attorney general's office.
Expert Analysis
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Previewing State Efforts To Regulate Mental Health Chatbots
New York, Nevada and Utah have all recently enacted laws regulating the use of artificial intelligence to deliver mental health services, offering early insights into how other states may regulate this area, say attorneys at Goodwin.
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Justices' Age Verification Ruling May Lead To More State Laws
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton ruling, permitting a Texas law requiring certain websites to verify users’ ages, significantly expands states' ability to regulate minors’ social media access, further complicating the patchwork of internet privacy laws, say attorneys at Troutman.
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Rulings On Relevance Redactions
In recent cases addressing redactions that parties sought to apply based on the relevance of information — as opposed to considerations of privilege — courts have generally limited a party’s ability to withhold nonresponsive or irrelevant material, providing a few lessons for discovery strategy, say attorneys at Sidley.
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Opinion
Section 1983 Has Promise After End Of Nationwide Injunctions
After the U.S. Supreme Court recently struck down the practice of nationwide injunctions in Trump v. Casa, Section 1983 civil rights suits can provide a better pathway to hold the government accountable — but this will require reforms to qualified immunity, says Marc Levin at the Council on Criminal Justice.
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Courts Redefining Software As Product Generates New Risks
A recent wave of litigation against social media platforms, chatbot developers and ride-hailing companies has some courts straying from the traditional view of software as a service to redefining software as a product, with significant implications for strict liability exposure, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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Opinion
Premerger Settlements Don't Meet Standard For Bribery
Claims that Paramount’s decision to settle a lawsuit with President Donald Trump while it was undergoing a premerger regulatory review amounts to a quid pro quo misconstrue bribery law and ignore how modern legal departments operate, says Ediberto Román at the Florida International University College of Law.
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Texas Med Spas Must Prepare For 2 New State Laws
Two new laws in Texas — regulating elective intravenous therapy and reforming healthcare noncompetes — mark a pivotal shift in the regulatory framework for medical spas in the state, which must proactively adapt their operations and contractual practices, says Brad Cook at Munsch Hardt.
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Series
Playing Soccer Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Soccer has become a key contributor to how I approach my work, and the lessons I’ve learned on the pitch about leadership, adaptability, resilience and communication make me better at what I do every day in my legal career, says Whitney O’Byrne at MoFo.
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Compliance Changes On Deck For Banks Under Texas AI Law
Financial services companies, including banks and fintechs, should evaluate their artificial intelligence usage to prepare for Texas' newly passed law regulating AI governance, noting that the enforcement provisions provide for an affirmative defense to liability, say attorneys at Mitchell Sandler.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Learning From Failure
While law school often focuses on the importance of precision, correctness and perfection, mistakes are inevitable in real-world practice — but failure is not the opposite of progress, and real talent comes from the ability to recover, rethink and reshape, says Brooke Pauley at Tucker Ellis.
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AI Infrastructure Growth Brings Unique IP Considerations
The explosive rise of artificial intelligence has triggered an equally dramatic transformation in the supporting infrastructure required to meet growing AI demand, and the technology used in these data centers has its own intellectual property considerations to navigate, says Vincent Allen at Carstens Allen.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: From ATF Director To BigLaw
As a two-time boomerang partner, returning to BigLaw after stints as a U.S. attorney and the director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, people ask me how I know when to move on, but there’s no single answer — just clearly set your priorities, says Steven Dettelbach at BakerHostetler.
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New DOJ Penalty Policy Could Spell Trouble For Cos.
In light of the U.S. Department of Justice’s recently published guidance making victim relief a core condition of coordinated resolution crediting, companies facing parallel investigations must carefully calibrate their negotiation strategies to minimize the risk of duplicative penalties, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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A Look At Key 5th Circ. White Collar Rulings So Far This Year
In the first half of 2025, the Fifth Circuit has decided numerous cases of particular import to white collar practitioners, which collectively underscore the critical importance of meticulous recordbuilding, procedural compliance and strategic litigation choices at every stage of a case, says Joe Magliolo at Jackson Walker.
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7 Ways Employers Can Avoid Labor Friction Over AI
As artificial intelligence use in the workplace emerges as a key labor relations topic in the U.S. and Europe, employers looking to reduce reputational risk and prevent costly disputes should consider proactive strategies to engage with unions, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.