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Banking
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January 15, 2025
Broker, Traders Charged With $1M Insider Trading Scheme
A securities broker and three traders have been charged in New York federal court for their roles in what prosecutors described as a yearslong, $1 million insider trading scheme that involved tips about upcoming secondary stock offerings, including one by the owner of DVD rental company Redbox, an indictment unsealed Wednesday showed.
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January 15, 2025
Booz Allen Must Pay For Harm Of Tax Info Leaks, Court Told
A proposed class action in Maryland federal court blames IRS contractor Booz Allen Hamilton over the thousands of tax returns that were stolen by an employee who took financial information about President-elect Donald Trump and others while on the job and leaked it to the media.
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January 15, 2025
SEC Announces Departure Of Top Economist And Accountant
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's chief economist and chief accountant are stepping down, the agency has announced, marking the latest departures given the pending inauguration of President-elect Donald Trump.
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January 15, 2025
Banks Must Face Pension Funds' Mexican Bond-Rigging Suit
A Manhattan federal judge refused Wednesday to throw out a case brought by U.S. pension funds that accused a group of banks of conspiring to rig Mexican government bond prices, saying chatroom transcripts between traders showed evidence of collusion.
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January 15, 2025
BitMEX Fined $100M For 5 Years Of Flouting US Banking Law
A Manhattan federal judge slapped BitMEX with a $100 million fine Wednesday, rejecting its suggestion that $110 million of earlier penalties sufficed to punish the offshore crypto exchange for a five-year course of evading U.S. financial controls as it earned $1.3 billion.
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January 15, 2025
Mass. Atty Charged In $2.5M Embezzlement Schemes
A Massachusetts attorney blamed an addiction to prostitutes and a failed spa investment for his embezzling a total of $2.5 million from a couple and their multiple businesses, according to federal prosecutors.
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January 14, 2025
Wells Fargo Fights To Drop Officers From Investors' Bias Suit
Wells Fargo & Co. urged a California federal judge Tuesday to free three executives from a derivative lawsuit filed by shareholders claiming the bank's leadership failed to address the company's discriminatory lending and hiring practices, saying there are no allegations that explain why a presuit demand to the board would have been futile.
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January 14, 2025
OCC Fines Ex-Wells Fargo Execs $18.5M For Sales Practices
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency said Tuesday that it has fined three former Wells Fargo executives a total of $18.5 million for their alleged roles in the banking giant's fake accounts scandal, capping off contested enforcement proceedings against them.
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January 14, 2025
BofA Says Military Interest Law, Not Bank, To Blame In Suit
Bank of America has hit back at a class action suit accusing the financial giant of violating an interest cap law for military service members, arguing that the suit fails to allege any actual violations of the law and that Congress considered and decided against the interest rate requirement that the plaintiffs seek to impose.
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January 14, 2025
Mastercard Agrees To $26M Deal In Hiring Bias Suit
Mastercard Inc. has agreed to shell out $26 million and change its hiring practices to put to rest a proposed class and collective action alleging sex, gender, race and ethnicity-based employment discrimination, according to a motion filed Tuesday, the same day the workers sued in New York federal court.
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January 14, 2025
Crypto Co.'s Lax Compliance Enabled Hackers, Suit Says
A proposed class action in California federal court accused digital asset exchange OKX of flouting U.S. laws and allowing criminals to launder stolen funds through its platform, including $725,000 worth of crypto looted from the crypto investor leading the suit.
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January 14, 2025
Influencer Says Capital One Steals Link Commissions
An online content creator has filed a proposed class action against Capital One over an alleged theft of commissions she says are rightfully owed to those responsible for connecting shoppers with products.
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January 14, 2025
Frank Exec Wants Fraudster Comparisons Blocked At Trial
The founder of student financial aid startup Frank has asked a Manhattan federal judge to block prosecutors from comparing her to well-known convicted fraudsters at her upcoming trial on charges that she tricked JPMorgan Chase & Co. into buying her company for $175 million.
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January 14, 2025
SEC Sues Elon Musk Over Late Twitter Buy-Up Disclosure
Elon Musk violated securities laws by failing to timely disclose his initial buy-up of Twitter stock ahead of his $44 billion acquisition of the company, allowing him to purchase shares at artificially low prices, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission alleged in a D.C. federal lawsuit filed Tuesday.
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January 14, 2025
Equifax To Pay $725K For Inaccurate Credit Score Reporting
Equifax Information Services LLC has agreed to a $725,000 settlement with the New York Attorney General's Office to resolve claims that the credit reporting agency inaccurately reported tens of thousands of New Yorkers' credit scores to lenders between March and April 2022, causing inflated costs for loans and other products.
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January 14, 2025
Justices Suggest 7th Circ. Revisit False Statement Decision
Several U.S. Supreme Court justices seemed ready Tuesday to ask the Seventh Circuit to review a former Chicago alderman's conviction for lying about money he borrowed from a now-shuttered bank under a narrower standard, but the justices appeared skeptical that he would beat the case even with a fresh look.
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January 14, 2025
Steptoe Hires A&O Shearman Political Law Leader In DC
Steptoe LLP has hired the former head of A&O Shearman's political law group, who is joining the team in Washington, D.C., as a partner to continue her practice focused on a range of white collar investigations and political law issues, the firm announced Tuesday.
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January 14, 2025
Apollo, Standard Chartered Form $3B Strategic Partnership
Private equity giant Apollo and international banking group Standard Chartered PLC on Tuesday announced that they have formed a long-term strategic partnership under which the two will contribute up to a combined $3 billion to go towards clean energy and transition financing.
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January 14, 2025
CFPB Says Capital One Stiffed Savings Customers Out Of $2B
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Tuesday sued Capital One in Virginia federal court, alleging the bank avoided paying $2 billion in interest to customers by keeping them in a lower-yield savings account product.
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January 13, 2025
CFPB Eyes Rule To Rein In 'Forced' Financial Contract Terms
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Monday floated a new rule that calls for banning financial companies from using contractual fine print to limit consumers' legal rights or restrict their free expression.
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January 13, 2025
Quinn Emanuel Scoops Up SDNY Securities Fraud Chief
Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP announced Monday that it has hired the former chief of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York's securities and commodities fraud task force as a partner in its Manhattan office.
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January 13, 2025
4th Circ. Backs Arbitration In BoFA's PPP Loan Suits
The Fourth Circuit on Monday affirmed a decision ordering small businesses to arbitrate their proposed class action alleging Bank of America misled them on how to use the Paycheck Protection Program, noting the deposit agreements say an arbitrator will decide all disputes, including the scope of the arbitration provision.
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January 13, 2025
Feds Say Par Funding Fraud Caused $404M In Losses
Prosecutors and defense attorneys spent hours in a marathon hearing Monday trying to convince a Pennsylvania judge of how much financial damage they thought the principals of the Par Funding merchant lending business did by allegedly fleecing investors, with the government pushing for a $404 million figure.
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January 13, 2025
NYDFS Launches Staff Exchange With Bank Of England
The New York Department of Financial Services on Monday launched an international secondment program to allow the department to exchange staff with other regulators, starting with a digital assets-focused exchange with the Bank of England next month.
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January 13, 2025
Texas Judge Urged To Halt CFPB Medical Debt Reporting Rule
Trade groups suing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau over its new rule banning medical debt from credit reports have asked a Texas federal judge to put a court-ordered hold on the measure while they proceed with their challenge to its legality.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
In Visa Case, DOJ Continues To Misapply The Sherman Act
The recent U.S. Department of Justice debit market monopolization case against Visa fuels concerns that a misguided Biden administration DOJ is inappropriately expanding its interpretation of the Sherman Antitrust Act beyond the demonstrable economic effects that business conduct has on consumers, says Shubha Ghosh at Syracuse University.
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Series
Playing Ultimate Makes Us Better Lawyers
In addition to being fun, ultimate Frisbee has improved our legal careers by emphasizing the importance of professionalism, teamwork, perseverance, enthusiasm and vulnerability, say Arunabha Bhoumik and Adam Bernstein at Regeneron.
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Call For Input Shows How Banks, Fintechs Can Address Risks
A recent request for information by federal banking regulators suggests that watchdogs are zeroing in on the bank-fintech partnerships they have long perceived as risky to consumers, but analyzing the publication can help companies anticipate regulators’ chief concerns and take steps to avoid becoming enforcement targets, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
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E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On Metadata
Several recent rulings reflect the competing considerations that arise when parties dispute the form of production for electronically stored information, underscoring that counsel must carefully consider how to produce and request reasonably usable data, say attorneys at Sidley.
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How New OCC Priorities Will Affect Bank Compliance
With the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency recently releasing a new bank supervision plan for fiscal year 2025, all banks, not only those primarily supervised by the OCC, should consider how compliance with its guidelines creates opportunities and challenges, says Andrew Karp at Cadwalader.
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2nd Circ. Hostile Workplace Ruling Widens Arbitration Pitfalls
The Second Circuit’s recent decision, affirming the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act applies to a worker whose workplace hostility claims arose before the law’s 2022 enactment, widens the scope of the law — and the risks of unenforceable arbitration agreements for employers, say attorneys at Hinshaw.
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Why Secured Lenders Must Mind The Gap In UCC Searches
If not adequately addressed, the Uniform Commercial Code filing indexing gap can interfere with a lender's expected lien priority, but taking appropriate preclosing actions and properly timing searches can eliminate this risk, says Robert Wonneberger at Barclay Damon.
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What FTC's 'Bitcoin ATM' Report Tells Us About Crypto Scams
The Federal Trade Commission's recent insights into bitcoin ATM scams highlight the technical evolution of fraudsters, the application of old scams to new technology, and the persistent financial impact on victims, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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The Fed. Circ. In October: Aetna And License-Term Review
The Federal Circuit's recent decision that Aetna's credit card licensing agreement with AlexSam did not give the insurer immunity from patent infringement claims serves to warn licensees to read their contracts carefully, say attorneys at Knobbe Martens.
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A Look At Grewal's Record-Breaking Legacy After SEC Exit
Gurbir Grewal resigned as director of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Division of Enforcement last month after more than three years on the job, leaving behind a legacy marked by record numbers of penalties and enforcement actions, as well as mixed results in aggressive lawsuits against major crypto players, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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Striking A Balance Between AI Use And Attorney Well-Being
As the legal industry increasingly adopts generative artificial intelligence tools to boost efficiency, leaders must note the hidden costs of increased productivity, and work to protect attorneys’ well-being while unlocking AI’s full potential, says Ed Sohn at Factor.
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Takeaways From The IRS' Crypto Doc Summons Win
A recent First Circuit decision holding that taxpayers do not have a Fourth Amendment reasonable expectation of privacy in cryptocurrency transaction records should prompt both taxpayers and exchanges to take stock of past transactions and future plans, say attorneys at BakerHostetler.
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Empathy In Mediation Offers A Soft Landing For Disputes
Experiencing a crash-landing on a recent flight underscored to me how much difference empathy makes in times of crisis or stress, including during mediation, says Eydith Kaufman at Alternative Resolution Centers.
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A Look At The Increased Scrutiny Of Cash Sweep Programs
Financial industry regulators have increasingly probed the adequacy of so-called cash sweep disclosures and policies, underscoring the heightened risk faced by investment advisers and broker-dealers, as well as the importance of adequately disclosing material conflicts of interest, say attorneys at Dechert.
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Series
Being An Artist Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My work as an artist has highlighted how using creativity and precision together — qualities that are equally essential in both art and law — not only improves outcomes, but also leads to more innovative and thoughtful work, says Sarah La Pearl at Segal McCambridge.