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Insurance
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									October 23, 2025
									Judge Orders State Farm To Restart Paying PIP Claims To Co.A Florida state judge has ordered State Farm to pay out benefits for its insureds to an automobile-crash-focused healthcare company, ruling that the insurer cannot unilaterally stop paying all of its policyholders' crash medical benefits to a provider unless it convinces a court that the provider is ineligible. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Electric Co. Says Contractor Owes $5M For Denver Airport JobAn electric infrastructure company accused a contractor in Colorado state court Wednesday of withholding over $5 million in payments for work completed in an expansion project at the Denver International Airport. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Geico Avoids Atty Fees In Florida Providers' SuitsGeico doesn't need to pay attorney fees or costs across two dozen lawsuits from medical providers that accused the insurer of insufficiently reimbursing them for diagnostic services performed, a Florida state appeals court ruled, agreeing with the company that various county judges' awards deprived it of due process. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Bradley Arant Adds Atlanta Attys From sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½, In-House RoleBradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP has boosted the firm's growing Atlanta office with the assistant litigation deputy for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the senior corporate counsel at GoTo Foods, the parent company of brands like Cinnabon. 
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									October 23, 2025
									Eaton To Defend Interest Rates, Fees Paid After 2012 InversionEaton is preparing to defend the interest rates and guarantee fees paid by entities in the U.S. to their newly formed Irish parent after the company's 2012 acquisition and inversion at a U.S. Tax Court trial scheduled to start Nov. 3. 
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									October 22, 2025
									Novo Nordisk Paid Patient Benefits, Not Bribes, Jury HearsNovo Nordisk Inc. paid benefits to patients with a rare form of hemophilia and not bribes as a group of plaintiffs in an alleged kickback scheme have claimed, a Washington jury was told Wednesday during emotional testimony on the third day of a multiweek trial. 
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									October 22, 2025
									State Farm Says Deal Offer Is Enforceable Under Ga. StatuteState Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. urged the Georgia Court of Appeals on Wednesday to find that a purported $25,000 settlement it reached with a man involved in a crash is enforceable because it accepted all the "material terms" outlined in a state statute related to settling automobile injury claims. 
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									October 22, 2025
									4th Circ. Seems Wary Of Under Armour's $100M Coverage WinThe Fourth Circuit didn't seem convinced Wednesday that it should affirm a lower court's finding that government investigations into Under Armour are unrelated to a securities class action against the sportswear company and thus trigger an additional $100 million in directors and officers coverage from Under Armour's excess insurers. 
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									October 22, 2025
									NJ Justices To Hear 3rd Circ.'s UIM Coverage QuestionsNew Jersey's justices will help the Third Circuit consider whether a resident can recover up to the full $2 million limit in his employer's auto policy with Zurich rather than its $15,000 limit for underinsured motorists, the New Jersey Supreme Court announced Wednesday, taking up two certified questions. 
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									October 22, 2025
									Sinkhole Coverage Dispute Up To Jury To Decide, Judge SaysA construction company and its insurer must go to trial over whether the company's invitation to a mediation constituted a defense tender for a now-settled counterclaim relating to a sinkhole discovered in December 2022 at a Seattle ship canal project, a Washington federal court ruled. 
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									October 22, 2025
									NC Biz Court Bulletin: COVID Coverage, A Suspect SignatureThe North Carolina Business Court has rounded the corner into fall with insurance disputes over COVID-19 coverage at a chain of outlet malls and the theft of over $900,000 in legal THC reportedly stolen from a warehouse in the Southwest. 
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									October 21, 2025
									Novo Nordisk Says Officials Not Qualified To Doubt Drug BillsAttorneys for Novo Nordisk Inc. on Tuesday sought to undercut witness testimony that Medicaid claims in Washington state for the company's hemophilia drug NovoSeven were shockingly high, leading one state auditor to suspect fraud. 
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									October 21, 2025
									Hertz Fights Colorado Law Labeling It As Insurer In High CourtAttorneys for the opposing parties in Hertz's Colorado Supreme Court petition contending it should not be considered an insurer under Colorado statute argued for dramatically differing readings of the state's insurance laws during oral argument Tuesday. 
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									October 21, 2025
									NC Court Asked To Ignore Fla. Case In Lindberg Receiver RowAn insurer seeking to collect on a $524 million arbitration award against convicted insurance mogul Greg Lindberg urged a North Carolina state appeals court not to take judicial notice of his lawsuit in Florida federal court challenging the award, noting the Fourth Circuit already upheld it. 
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									October 21, 2025
									5th Circ. Revives Oil Co.'s Faulty Cement Coverage SuitThe Fifth Circuit revived an oil and gas producer's suit seeking coverage for a settlement it reached with a bankrupt oilfield services firm over faulty cement, saying a Texas federal court incorrectly tossed the company's duty to defend and indemnify claims against certain underwriters at Lloyd's of London. 
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									October 21, 2025
									Nationwide Settles $3.8M Ga. Storm Damage DisputeNationwide Insurance and a Georgia property owner reached a settlement Monday to end claims that the insurer tried to lowball the owner on $3.8 million worth of storm damage with an offer of less than $8,000. 
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									October 21, 2025
									Mich. AG Can Step Into Fire Insurance Policy ChallengeThe Michigan attorney general can intervene in a dispute over the constitutionality of the state's Fire Insurance Withholding Program, which allows participating municipalities to withhold part of a property owner's insurance payout until fire-damaged property is repaired, a federal court ruled. 
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									October 21, 2025
									Finance Co. Says Chubb Must Pay Its Part Of $5M Wire LossFinancial services company Robert W. Baird & Co. told a Wisconsin federal court that a Chubb unit has wrongly refused to cover any of the company's more than $5 million loss stemming from fraudulent wire instructions, noting that AIG, its primary insurer, already paid a $2.5 million sublimit. 
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									October 21, 2025
									Pa. Justices Will Probe 'Ambiguous' Auto Policy ExclusionThe Pennsylvania Supreme Court will consider whether insurance policy language blocking coverage for injuries "arising out of" the ownership or use of "autos" was unclear enough to be interpreted in favor of granting coverage for an accident involving a small terminal tractor truck. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Novo Nordisk Trial Kicks Off Over Kickback AllegationsLawyers in a federal whistleblower lawsuit against drugmaker Novo Nordisk Inc. on Monday offered to take jurors "behind the curtain" of what they claimed was an illegal scheme by the pharmaceutical company to bribe doctors and patients in order to boost sales of a pricey hemophilia drug, NovoSeven. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Judge Sides With Insurer Over Glass Door Injury DisputeA subcontractor's insurer owes no defense to the property management company for a BJ's Restaurant location in an ongoing lawsuit alleging that a glass door collapsed onto a patron, a New York federal court ruled, finding the management company is "at most" an additional insured. 
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									October 20, 2025
									5th Circ. Affirms Fraud Conviction Of Failed Bank's Ex-CEOA Fifth Circuit panel upheld the conviction of former First NBC Bank CEO Ashton J. Ryan Jr., who was sentenced to 14 years in prison and ordered to pay $215 million in restitution after a jury found him guilty of bank fraud and conspiracy related to the collapse of the Louisiana bank. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Surfacing Co. Says AIG Must Cover Acquisition LossesA decorative surface manufacturer told a Delaware state court that an AIG unit must cover losses incurred after the chemical company it acquired allegedly misrepresented the state of its relationship with the company's top customer. 
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									October 20, 2025
									Conn. Firm, Former Client End Cybersecurity DisputeA Connecticut personal injury firm and its former client have reached a joint stipulation of dismissal in a federal court dispute over the firm's hacked email system and a fraudulent email that resulted in the wiring of nearly $730,000 in closing costs on a residential property. 
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									October 20, 2025
									$2.5M Insurance Premium Row Headed To TrialAn insurer's claims that a policyholder owes nearly $2.5 million in unpaid premiums across three separate policies must go to trial, a West Virginia federal court ruled, noting that the policyholder already disputed the existence of one of them. 
Expert Analysis
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								Better Crypto Insurance Is Attainable Amid Regulatory Shifts  With regulatory clarity improving and insurance carriers taking an increasingly constructive approach, crypto industry participants can improve their insurance coverage and pricing if finance, legal and compliance teams take specific steps, say Walker Newell and Jacob Sawyer at Woodruff-Sawyer. 
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								Protecting Sensitive Court Filings After Recent Cyber Breach  In the wake of a recent cyberattack on federal courts' Case Management/Electronic Case Files system, civil litigants should consider seeking enhanced protections for sensitive materials filed under seal to mitigate the risk of unauthorized exposure, say attorneys at Redgrave. 
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								Series NC Banking Brief: All The Notable Legal Updates In Q3-(1).jpg)  There were several impactful changes to the financial services landscape in North Carolina in the third quarter of the year, including statutory updates, enforcement developments from Office of the Commissioner of Banks, and notable mergers, acquisitions and branch expansions, say attorneys at Moore & Van Allen. 
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								Series Judging Figure Skating Makes Me A Better Lawyer  Judging figure skating competitions helps me hone the focus, decisiveness and ability to process complex real-time information I need in court, but more importantly, it makes me reengage with a community and my identity outside of law, which, paradoxically, always brings me back to work feeling restored, says Megan Raymond at Groombridge Wu. 
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								Looking Beyond Property Damages For Wildfire Survivors  Personal injury attorneys seeking compensation for victims of wildfires like those in Los Angeles County must carefully apply a multidisciplinary approach that looks beyond obvious property loss to the full spectrum of damages, considering factors like emotional distress, disruption of community and the psychological toll of displacement, says Farid Yaghoubtil at Downtown L.A. Law Group. 
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								Wis. PFAS Insurance Ruling A Beacon In Sea Of Uncertainty  While a state court correctly ruled under Wisconsin law that a standard-form pollution exclusion in an insurance policy did not apply to PFAS liability claims from direct exposure, the decision nevertheless highlights the wide variations in state law when it comes to PFAS liability coverage, say attorneys at Haynes Boone. 
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								What Ethics Rules Say On Atty Discipline For Online Speech  Though law firms are free to discipline employees for their online commentary about Charlie Kirk or other social media activity, saying crude or insensitive things on the internet generally doesn’t subject attorneys to professional discipline under the Model Rules of Professional Conduct, says Stacie H. Rosenzweig at Halling & Cayo. 
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								Junior Attys Must Beware Of 5 Common Legal Brief MistakesExcerpt from.jpg)  Junior law firm associates must be careful to avoid five common pitfalls when drafting legal briefs — from including every possible argument to not developing a theme — to build the reputation of a sought-after litigator, says James Argionis at Cozen O'Connor. 
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								Montana Federal Ruling Takes Broad View Of 'Related Claims'.jpg)  A Montana federal court recently took a broad view of related claims, ruling that claims brought by different plaintiffs in different states alleging different legal theories were nevertheless under a directors and officers insurance policy, illustrating the range of interpretations courts may give these clauses, say attorneys at Hunton. 
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								Demystifying Generative AI For The Modern Juror  In cases alleging that the training of artificial intelligence tools violated copyright laws, successful outcomes may hinge in part on the litigator's ability to clearly present AI concepts through a persuasive narrative that connects with ordinary jurors, say Liz Babbitt at IMS Legal Strategies and Devon Madon at GlobalLogic. 
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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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								5 Years In, COVID-19 Fraud Enforcement Landscape Is Shifting  As the government moves pandemic fraud enforcement from small-dollar individual prosecutions to high-value corporate cases, and billions of dollars remain unaccounted for, companies and defense attorneys must take steps now to prepare for the next five years of scrutiny, says attorney David Tarras. 
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								Why Early Resolution Of Employment Liability Claims Is Key  A former Los Angeles fire chief's recent headline-grabbing wrongful termination suit against the city is a reminder that employment practices liability disputes can present risks to the greater business, meaning companies need a playbook for rapid, purposeful action, says Karli Moore at Intact Insurance Specialty Solutions. 
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								How New Rule On Illustrative Aids Is Faring In Federal Courts  In the 10 months since new standards were codified for illustrative aids in federal trials, courts have already begun to clarify the rule's application in different contexts and the rule's boundaries, say attorneys at Bernstein Litowitz. 
