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Transportation
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October 30, 2025
Pension Fund Says Yellow Plan Can't Reserve Claim Argument
A Teamsters pension fund is urging the Delaware bankruptcy court to reject Yellow Corp.'s liquidation plan, arguing the trucking company is reserving potential arguments against the fund's $17.8 million claim that have already been resolved and discharged.
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October 30, 2025
Mich. Justices Take Up Stellantis Supplier's Contract Dispute
The Michigan Supreme Court has agreed to take up a Stellantis supplier's appeal of a decision forcing it to continue supplying the automaker with parts at a loss, giving the court a chance to resolve the enforceability of a common supply contract term.
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October 30, 2025
3 Firms Steer $9B Terex-REV Specialty Equipment Deal
Fried Frank Harris Shriver & Jacobson LLP and Pryor Cashman LLP are advising Terex Corp. on a new agreement to merge with Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP-advised REV Group in a stock-and-cash transaction valued at about $9 billion, the companies announced Thursday.
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October 30, 2025
NHTSA To Probe 700K Hondas For Airbag, Seat Belt Issues
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has opened investigations into more than 700,000 Honda vehicles following safety reports regarding side airbags, rear seat belt warnings and loss of propulsion while moving at high speeds.
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October 30, 2025
Green Groups Can't Intervene In Feds' NY Superfund Suit
A New York federal judge won't let environmental groups intervene in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's suit challenging a New York state Superfund law, saying the addition of five defendants would overcomplicate the litigation.
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October 29, 2025
NY's Allstate Data Breach Case Sent Back To State Court
A New York federal judge has sent a data breach lawsuit against an Allstate Insurance Co. unit back to state court, ruling that he lacks subject matter jurisdiction in the suit because the causes of action in the litigation are not created by federal law.
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October 29, 2025
Royal Caribbean's Bartending Blamed For Passenger's Death
The family of a woman who fell overboard during a Royal Caribbean cruise last year is blaming her death on crew members who continued serving her alcohol despite her visible intoxication, according to a lawsuit filed in Florida federal court.
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October 29, 2025
Union Pacific Gets OK To Challenge BIPA Exemption Denial
An Illinois federal judge gave Union Pacific the green light on Tuesday to ask the Seventh Circuit to determine mid-case whether he correctly held the Biometric Information Privacy Act's government contractor exemption applies only when a violation occurs within the scope of a government contract.
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October 29, 2025
Flight Attendant Says United Airlines Ignored Sex Harassment
A United Airlines flight attendant has filed a federal sexual harassment lawsuit against her employer, alleging it subjected her to inappropriate conduct and perpetuated a hostile work environment where a former airline pilot distributed intimate images of her without her consent.
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October 29, 2025
Climate Change Heat Death Suit Returns To Wash. State Court
A Washington federal judge on Tuesday sided with the Seattle-area family of a woman who died during a 2021 heat wave, sending their first-of-its-kind wrongful death suit against oil and gas giants like Exxon back to state court.
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October 29, 2025
Del. Justices Mull Call To Revive Amazon-Blue Origin Suit
An Amazon.com stockholder attorney told Delaware's justices on Wednesday that the company's board "failed to do a thing" as founder Jeff Bezos convinced directors to pump billions into the Blue Origin space launch business with purportedly scant oversight, looking to salvage a Court of Chancery derivative suit dismissed in January.
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October 29, 2025
Chicago Metra Says Union Pacific's $2.3M Fees Claim Is Invalid
Chicago's commuter rail system Metra has asked an Illinois federal judge to toss Union Pacific's lawsuit alleging Metra owes more than $2.3 million for the use of three Union Pacific-owned lines amid an ongoing contract dispute, saying a federal rail regulator still needs to determine any owed compensation.
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October 29, 2025
Hertz Urges Del. Justices To Reverse $170M Insurance Ruling
Hertz Corp. urged the Delaware Supreme Court Wednesday to overturn a lower court's ruling that freed the car rental giant's insurers from covering $170 million in false-arrest settlements, arguing the settlements all stemmed from a faulty theft-reporting system and trigger just one self-insured retention.
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October 29, 2025
Tax Atty Group Backs Fund Manager's $1.9M Refund Bid
A tax attorneys professional association told the Eleventh Circuit that a Florida district court improperly blocked a fund manager and his wife's appeal to receive a $1.9 million tax refund under a rule that bars taxpayers from making new claims in federal court.
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October 29, 2025
Fla. Couple Sues GM, Alleging Defective Ultium EV Chargers
A Florida couple filed a proposed class action on Tuesday accusing General Motors of selling defective electric-vehicle home chargers that often trip breakers, fail to charge the cars, overheat and set off car alarms.
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October 29, 2025
Fed. Judge Bars US From Enbridge Pipeline Oral Argument
A Michigan federal judge has denied the U.S. government's bid to participate in an upcoming oral argument in an Enbridge lawsuit against the state's governor over an oil and gas pipeline, saying the parties in the suit are able to address the issues on their own.
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October 29, 2025
Insurer Says Co.'s 'Improper Underwriting' Cost It Over $10M
An insurer for auto dealerships accused its insurance program administrator of repeatedly refusing to undergo a full audit of the administrator's records and underwriting practices, telling a New York federal court that, in an independent auditor's limited review of files, "findings of improper underwriting were staggering."
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October 29, 2025
Spirit Airlines Gets Final OK For $1.23B Ch. 11 Financing
A New York bankruptcy judge gave final approval to Spirit Airlines' $1.23 billion Chapter 11 financing package, which includes $475 million of new money and a rollup of prepetition debt.
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October 29, 2025
Tesla Urges Del. Justices To Cut $176M Atty Fee In Options Suit
Warning of a "shaking of public confidence," a Tesla Inc. attorney on Wednesday asked Delaware's Supreme Court to cut a $176.2 million class attorney fee award to $40 million in a case that saw Delaware's chancellor cancel $730 million in the electric car company's director stock options.
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October 29, 2025
Calif. Co. Cites Export Ban In Bid To Block $490K Judgment
A Los Angeles boat builder that supplies law enforcement agencies and the U.S. military asked a California federal judge to block a Chinese company's attempt to enforce a $490,000 arbitral award, saying payment would violate federal export controls.
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October 28, 2025
States Ask Supreme Court To Resolve PFAS Removal Dispute
Maryland and South Carolina are asking the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn the Fourth Circuit's decision to move their state court lawsuits against 3M Co. over environmental contamination from consumer products containing forever chemicals to federal court.
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October 28, 2025
NC Justice Blasts Attacks On Counsel In Plane Crash Case
A visibly vexed chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court on Tuesday impugned a Philadelphia lawyer for seemingly making unsupported personal attacks against opposing counsel, including allegedly falsely accusing the opposing counsel of being in cahoots with a trade group that filed an amicus brief.
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October 28, 2025
Judge Tosses NASCAR's 'Cartel' Counterclaim Against Teams
Two auto racing teams, including one owned by basketball legend Michael Jordan, earned a major victory in their antitrust battle against NASCAR on Tuesday when a North Carolina federal judge threw out NASCAR's counterclaim that the teams were operating as a cartel.
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October 28, 2025
Engineer Must Give Shipbuilders No-Poach Witness Names
A Virginia federal magistrate judge ordered a naval engineer to name all the witnesses her attorneys spoke to, and all the information about those interviews, as the nation's largest military shipbuilders seek to argue she's too late to accuse them of agreeing not to poach each other's workers.
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October 28, 2025
Enviro Groups Seek Ruling To Block Ariz. Forest Road Project
Environmental groups are asking an Arizona federal judge to block a U.S. Forest Service road project in the Coronado National Forest, asserting the agency didn't adequately consider the risks to jaguar and other threatened species before approving the project.
Expert Analysis
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Series
Power To The Paralegals: How And Why Training Must Evolve
Empowering paralegals through new models of education that emphasize digital fluency, interdisciplinary collaboration and human-centered lawyering could help solve workforce challenges and the justice gap — if firms, educators and policymakers get on board, say Kristine Custodio Suero and Kelli Radnothy.
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Series
Playing Softball Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My time on the softball field has taught me lessons that also apply to success in legal work — on effective preparation, flexibility, communication and teamwork, says Sarah Abrams at Baleen Specialty.
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And Now A Word From The Panel: Choosing MDL Venues
One of the most interesting yet least predictable facets of the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation's practice is venue — namely where the panel decides to place a new MDL proceeding — and its choices reflect the tension between neutrality and case-specific factors, says Alan Rothman at Sidley.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Time Management
Law students typically have weeks or months to prepare for any given deadline, but the unpredictability of practicing in the real world means that lawyers must become time-management pros, ready to adapt to scheduling conflicts and unexpected assignments at any given moment, says David Thomas at Honigman.
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How Hyperlinks Are Changing E-Discovery Responsibilities
A recent e-discovery dispute over hyperlinked data in Hubbard v. Crow shows how courts have increasingly broadened the definition of control to account for cloud-based evidence, and why organizations must rethink preservation practices to avoid spoliation risks, says Bree Murphy at Exterro.
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Series
Writing Musicals Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My experiences with writing musicals and practicing law have shown that the building blocks for both endeavors are one and the same, because drama is necessary for the law to exist, says Addison O’Donnell at LOIS Law.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: From Va. AUSA To Mid-Law
Returning to the firm where I began my career after seven years as an assistant U.S. attorney in Virginia has been complex, nuanced and rewarding, and I’ve learned that the pursuit of justice remains the constant, even as the mindset and client change, says Kristin Johnson at Woods Rogers.
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How 5th Circ.'s NLRB Ruling May Reshape Federal Labor Law
The Fifth Circuit's recent SpaceX National Labor Relations Board decision undermines the agency's authority, but it does not immediately shut down NLRB enforcement, so employers and labor organizations should expect more litigation, more uncertainty and a possible U.S. Supreme Court showdown, say attorneys at Goldberg Segalla.
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7 Document Review Concepts New Attorneys Need To Know
For new associates joining firms this fall, stepping into the world of e-discovery can feel like learning a new language, but understanding a handful of fundamentals — from coding layouts to metadata — can help attorneys become fluent in document review, says Ann Motl at Bowman and Brooke.
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How Trump's Space Order May Ease Industry's Growth
President Donald Trump's recent executive order aimed at removing environmental hurdles for spaceport authorization and streamlining the space industry's regulatory framework may open opportunities not only for established launch providers, but also smaller companies and spaceport authorities, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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Liability Lessons From Luxury Cruise Thwarted By Sanctions
An ongoing legal dispute over a canceled luxury cruise to the North Pole reminds attorneys that liability can surface even before a ship leaves the dock — and that U.S. sanctions law increasingly lurks in the background of global travel contracts, says Peter Walsh at The Cruise Injury Law Firm.
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Agentic AI Puts A New Twist On Attorney Ethics Obligations
As lawyers increasingly use autonomous artificial intelligence agents, disciplinary authorities must decide whether attorney responsibility for an AI-caused legal ethics violation is personal or supervisory, and firms must enact strong policies regarding agentic AI use and supervision, says Grace Wynn at HWG.
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Series
Being A Professional Wrestler Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Pursuing my childhood dream of being a professional wrestler has taught me important legal career lessons about communication, adaptability, oral advocacy and professionalism, says Christopher Freiberg at Midwest Disability.
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Restored Charging Project Funds Revive Hope For EV Market
While 2025 began with a host of government actions that prompted some to predict the demise of the U.S. electric vehicle market, the Trump administration's recent restoration of federal funding for EV charging infrastructure under new terms presents market participants with reason for optimism, says Levi McAllister at Morgan Lewis.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Adapting To The Age Of AI
Though law school may not have specifically taught us how to use generative artificial intelligence to help with our daily legal tasks, it did provide us the mental building blocks necessary for adapting to this new technology — and the judgment to discern what shouldn’t be automated, says Pamela Dorian at Cozen O'Connor.