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Public Policy
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December 05, 2025
FTC's Abandoned Pepsi Pricing Case Will Be Mostly Unsealed
A New York federal court agreed to largely unseal the Federal Trade Commission's price discrimination complaint against PepsiCo Inc. despite protests from the beverage company and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce after enforcers dropped the case earlier this year.
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December 05, 2025
Panel Says NJ County Illegally Awarded $13.5M Jail Contract
A New Jersey county violated the state's public contracts law when it awarded a $13.5 million contract to provide medical care and other services at a county jail, a state appeals court has ruled, backing a determination from the Office of the State Comptroller.
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December 05, 2025
5th Circ. Halts Order To Revive Texas College Women's Teams
The Fifth Circuit has struck down a court order requiring Stephen F. Austin State University to reinstate three women's sports teams while a Title IX suit against the school proceeds, finding that the directive was too vague.
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December 05, 2025
Mass. IOLTA Panel Says It's Owed Slice Of Residual Funds
A Massachusetts panel that oversees Interest on Lawyers' Trust Accounts asked the state's highest court Friday to at least partially unwind a $4 million class action settlement, saying a lower court didn't give it a chance to argue for a portion of what it says are "significant" residual funds.
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December 05, 2025
Nickel For Your Thoughts? Dems Want Plan For Ending Penny
Top Democrats on banking and financial services committees are claiming the Trump administration has not formulated a sufficient plan for the transition away from the penny and are asking for a public plan by Dec. 12.
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December 05, 2025
Best Use Of Macy's Property Is As Store, Minn. Court Says
The highest and best use for a Macy's property in Minnesota is its continued function as an anchor department store in a shopping mall, the state tax court said, declining to amend the valuations it previously found.
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December 05, 2025
Calif. Tribal Water Rights Bill Seeks $500M Fund Approval
California tribal members and two of the state's water management agencies are urging Congress to pass a bill that would establish a $500 million trust fund and transfer 2,742 acres of Bureau of Land Management property as part of a settlement agreement following more than a decade of litigation.
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December 05, 2025
Georgia Turns To 11th Circ. In Trans Prisoner Care Fight
The Eleventh Circuit will get a chance to weigh in on a district judge's recent decision requiring the Georgia Department of Corrections to provide hormone therapy to transgender inmates, according to a Friday filing in federal court.
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December 05, 2025
High Court To Review Trump's Birthright Order
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Friday to review the constitutionality of President Donald Trump's executive order aimed at limiting birthright citizenship, after lower courts unanimously found the order to contradict the U.S. Constitution and federal law.
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December 05, 2025
Judge Denies Firms' Bid To Clarify sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½'s MoneyLion Deal
A New York federal judge has denied a request by consumer advocate law firms to add clarifying language to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's recently approved $1.75 million settlement with MoneyLion Technologies Inc., noting that the advocates did not seek to intervene in the suit and that the sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½ and MoneyLion both oppose the request.
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December 05, 2025
Divided DC Circ. Backs Trump's NLRB, MSPB Firings
A split D.C. Circuit panel on Friday upheld President Donald Trump's firings of two labor agency officials in spite of their statutory job protections, saying they wield enough executive power that Congress can't restrict the president's authority to fire them.
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December 05, 2025
CDC Panel Ends Recommendation Of Hepatitis B Shot At Birth
A panel of federal vaccine advisers on Friday voted to lift a long-standing recommendation that all newborns be given vaccinations for hepatitis B.
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December 05, 2025
Menendez Barred From Holding Public Office After Conviction
Former U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez has been permanently barred from holding any public office or position of trust in New Jersey, following his conviction on federal bribery and corruption charges, Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin announced Friday.
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December 04, 2025
5th Circ. Denies Green Card Holder's Bid To Stop Deportation
The Fifth Circuit on Thursday refused to block a lawful permanent resident's deportation, saying the green card holder failed to show that a New Mexico child abuse statute under which he was convicted isn't a categorical match with a federal offense.
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December 04, 2025
NY AG Applauds Reports Grand Jury Declined To Reindict
New York Attorney General Letitia James Thursday hailed reports that a Norfolk, Virginia, federal grand jury had declined to reindict her on charges of mortgage fraud, refusing to revive a case that President Donald Trump had pushed prosecutors to pursue against his "guilty as hell" political opponent.
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December 04, 2025
Dems Press sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½'s Vought On Mortgage Rate Shutdown Plan
Senate Democrats are demanding clarity on the fate of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's benchmark mortgage-rate work if the Trump administration lets the agency go dark, warning of imminent potential chaos for the $13 trillion mortgage market.
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December 04, 2025
Miami Resident Claims City Extorts Land For Permits
A Miami resident told a Florida state court that the city is subverting the eminent domain process by unconstitutionally extorting land from homeowners in exchange for building permits.
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December 04, 2025
11th Circ. Blocks Fla. City's Abortion Clinic Buffer Zone Law
The Eleventh Circuit on Thursday ordered a preliminary injunction blocking a Clearwater, Florida, ordinance requiring a 5-foot buffer zone outside an abortion clinic, finding the city likely violated protesters' rights by burdening their ability to leaflet drivers.
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December 04, 2025
Citadel Securities Sparks Crypto Clash Over DeFi Exemptions
Citadel Securities ignited debate with crypto advocates this week when it told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that decentralized finance projects dealing in tokenized securities should broadly be subject to the same obligations as traditional exchanges and broker-dealers.
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December 04, 2025
Watchdog Says Hegseth's Signal Use Could've Harmed Pilots
A Pentagon watchdog released a report Thursday finding that Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth's use of Signal to discuss plans to bomb targets in Yemen earlier this year exposed sensitive information that could have put U.S. pilots at risk of harm.Â
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December 04, 2025
1st Spot Crypto Market To Launch Amid CFTC 'Crypto Sprint'
Derivatives exchange Bitnomial said Thursday it is poised to launch the first spot crypto exchange regulated by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, with guidance from Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP.
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December 04, 2025
Protesters' Use-Of-Force Suit Stays Open To Field Objections
A lawsuit accusing immigration officials of using excessive force against Chicago press and peaceful protesters should briefly stay alive for potential class member objections, but the government's position that dismissal would prevent the class from filing similar future claims is seemingly "not correct on the law," a federal judge said Thursday.
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December 04, 2025
SEC Investor Panel Presses For Corporate AI Disclosures
A U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission working group is urging the agency to adopt regulations that could standardize the way publicly traded companies report the way they use artificial intelligence, arguing Thursday that investors are not always being kept informed about the risks of the technology.
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December 04, 2025
Pot Co. Says Ill. Agency's Tech Glitch Led To Loan Denial
A Chicago-area cannabis cultivator claims it lost out on millions of dollars in loan forgiveness due to a glitch in an Illinois-run website and a state agency's arbitrary decision prohibiting the grower an opportunity to refile, according to a lawsuit filed in Cook County court.
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December 04, 2025
Live Nation Customers Appear Poised For Antitrust Class Cert.
Consumers accusing Live Nation of monopolizing the live entertainment industry were in a good position Thursday for class certification after a California federal judge issued a tentative ruling that would approve the request and appeared skeptical of the entertainment giant's arguments at a hearing.
Expert Analysis
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Perspectives
Asylum Pretermission Ruling Erodes Procedural Protections
A recent Board of Immigration Appeals decision permitting immigration judges to dismiss asylum applications without notice or evidentiary hearings adopts the civil court's summary judgment mechanism without the procedural protections that make summary judgment fair, says Georgianna Pisano Goetz at GHIRP.
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What To Expect From DOD's Acquisitions Revamp
The U.S. Department of Defense’s recently announced reshuffling of offices and changes to approval processes aimed at streamlining acquisitions and foreign military sales could materially reshape how contractors position themselves, structure bids and manage compliance, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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A Close Look At The Evolving Interval Fund Space
Interval funds — closed-end registered investment companies that make periodic repurchase offers — have recently moved to the center of the conversation about retail access to private markets, spurred along by President Donald Trump's August executive order incorporating alternative assets into 401(k) plans and target date strategies, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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Meta Monopoly Ruling Highlights Limits Of Market Definition
A D.C. federal court's recent ruling that Meta is not monopolizing social media raises questions, such as why market definition matters and whether we have the correct model of competition, which can aid in making a stronger case against tech companies, says Shubha Ghosh at the Syracuse University College of Law.
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Perspectives
Nursing Home Abuse Cases Face 3 Barriers That Need Reform
Recent headlines reveal persistent gaps in oversight and protection for vulnerable residents in long-term care, but prosecution of these cases is often stymied by numerous challenges that will require a comprehensive overhaul of regulatory, legal and financial structures to address, says Veronica Finkelstein at Wilmington University.
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Florida Throws A Wrench Into Interstate Trucking Torts
Florida's recent request to file a bill of complaint in the U.S. Supreme Court against California and Washington, asserting that the states' policies conflict with the federal English language proficiency standard for truck drivers, transforms a conventional wrongful death case into a high-stakes constitutional challenge, say attorneys at Farah & Farah.
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Series
The Law Firm Merger Diaries: How To Build On Cultural Fit
Law firm mergers should start with people, then move to strategy: A two-level screening that puts finding a cultural fit at the pinnacle of the process can unearth shared values that are instrumental to deciding to move forward with a combination, says Matthew Madsen at Harrison.
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Why Justices Must Act To End Freight Broker Liability Split
The Sixth Circuit's recent ruling in Cox v. Total Quality Logistics Inc., affirming states' authority over negligence claims against transportation brokers, deepens an existing circuit split, creating an untenable situation where laws between neighboring states conflict in seven distinct instances — and making U.S. Supreme Court intervention essential, says Steven Saal at Lucosky Brookman.
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The Future Of Digital Asset Oversight May Rest With OCC
How the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency handles fintechs' growing interest in national trust bank charters, demonstrated by a jump in filings this year, will determine how far the federal banking system extends to digital assets, and whether the charter becomes a mainstream supervisory pathway, say attorneys at Sheppard Mullin.
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Rare Tariff Authority May Boost US Battery Manufacturing
Finalizing preliminary tariffs on active anode material from China — the result of a rare exercise of statutory authority finding that foreign dumping hampered the development of a nascent U.S. industry — should help domestic battery manufacturing, but potential price increases could discourage related clean-energy use, say attorneys at MoloLamken.
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Takeaways From First Resolution After FCPA Pause Was Lifted
The U.S. Department of Justice’s recent deferred prosecution agreement with TIGO Guatemala — its first Foreign Corrupt Practice Act corporate resolution after issuing new guidelines and resuming enforcement — highlights several aspects of the administration’s approach to corporate foreign bribery enforcement, say attorneys at Cleary.
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Ending All-In Airfare Pricing Could Pose Ad Dilemma For Cos.
The U.S. Department of Transportation's plan to scrap its requirement that airfare ads include all fees and taxes in price listings means that airlines, travel agents and other affected businesses must balance competitive pricing against the risk of alienating consumers, say Kimberly Graber at Steptoe and Serena Viswanathan, formerly at the FTC's Division of Advertising Practices.
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Considerations When Invoking The Common-Interest Privilege
To successfully leverage the common-interest doctrine in a multiparty transaction or complex litigation, practitioners should be able to demonstrate that the parties intended for it to apply, that an underlying privilege like attorney-client has attached, and guard against disclosures that could waive privilege and defeat its purpose, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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AG Watch: Ohio's Prediction Market Preemption Battle
Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost is playing a significant part in two cases involving Kalshi before the Third Circuit and the Southern District of Ohio, the latest in a growing string of court battles regarding which regulations govern prediction markets that will have notable consequences on sports gambling nationwide, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.
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How Banks Can Pilot Token Services As Fed Mulls Reforms
While the Federal Reserve explores streamlined payment accounts and other reforms aimed at digital asset infrastructure, banks and payment companies seeking to launch stablecoin services must apply the same rigor they use for cards or automated clearinghouse, says Christopher Boone at Venable.