Class Action

  • June 12, 2026

    $1.9M Deal In Health System Retirement Suit Gets 1st OK

    A Michigan federal judge granted initial approval to a $1.9 million deal between a health system and a proposed class of employee retirement plan participants who alleged underperforming investment options violated federal benefits law, greenlighting a deal that was first submitted to the court for approval in late April.

  • June 12, 2026

    JAMS Chief Executive Says Mass Arbitrations On The Rise

    Mediation giant JAMS says it has seen a major upswing in mass arbitrations in employment and other contexts, as plaintiff-side firms develop new ways of responding to language requiring out-of-court dispute resolution by companies. CEO Kimberly Taylor and veteran JAMS mediator Robert Meyer spoke to Law360 about mediation trends, with a specific focus on employee benefits disputes.

  • June 12, 2026

    Zoetis Brass Face Derivative Suit Over Pet Meds Statements

    Directors and officers of animal health company Zoetis Inc. have been hit with shareholder derivative claims that they breached their fiduciary duties by concealing that safety warnings about one of its products and increasing competition were hurting the company's bottom line.

  • June 12, 2026

    SheaMoisture Products Not '100% Virgin Coconut Oil,' Suit Says

    A customer is suing the makers of SheaMoisture products in California federal court, alleging that they mislead consumers by claiming the products are "100% virgin coconut oil" while containing other ingredients in higher proportions.

  • June 12, 2026

    ACLU Drops Racial Profiling Suit Over ICE Arrests, For Now

    Minneapolis-area residents and the American Civil Liberties Union dropped their proposed class action accusing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement of racial profiling, choosing to file administrative claims instead.

  • June 12, 2026

    Texas Court Urged To Keep Judge Romance Suit Alive

    In multiple filings, EJS Investment Holdings LLC has asked a Texas federal judge to reject attempts by former U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David Jones and other parties to dismiss its proposed class action over his secret romance with a former Jackson Walker LLP partner.

  • June 12, 2026

    Motorola Sued Again Over Vehicle-Tracking Camera Data

    A putative class action filed Thursday in Illinois federal court claims that Motorola Solutions operates a nationwide network of license plate recognition cameras and surveillance software that allows law enforcement agencies to track drivers' movements without their consent and in violation of their privacy rights.

  • June 12, 2026

    NJ Apartment Co. Faces More Migrant Discrimination Claims

    A property management company has been hit with another lawsuit in New Jersey federal court accusing it of discriminating against prospective tenants based on immigration status, this time from two Egyptian immigrants who said they have valid work authorization.

  • June 12, 2026

    2nd Circ. Leery Of Amazon Worker's Caregiver Bias Suit

    The Second Circuit appeared skeptical Friday of a former Amazon employee's attempt to revive her suit claiming she was unlawfully denied schedule flexibility to care for her son, questioning whether her suit should have been brought as an accommodation dispute rather than a discrimination suit.

  • June 12, 2026

    Cooper Health To Pay $735K Over 2024 Data Breach

    The Cooper Health System has agreed to pay $735,000 to settle proposed class actions over a May 2024 data breach that allegedly resulted from the failure to properly safeguard individuals' protected information.

  • June 12, 2026

    Call Center Worker, Energy Co. End Preshift OT Suit

    A call center worker and an Ohio energy company agreed to end a proposed collective action alleging employees were denied overtime wages for preshift computer login work, according to an order signed by an Ohio federal judge.

  • June 11, 2026

    Meta Beats Investors' Suit Over AI-Powered Facebook Scams

    A California federal judge tossed a proposed class action alleging that Meta's AI tools enabled investment schemes advertised on Facebook, finding Thursday that his own earlier ruling means that the plaintiffs' state claims are barred under federal securities law.

  • June 11, 2026

    OpenAI Says High Court Curbed Some News Org IP Claims

    OpenAI told a New York federal judge Thursday that the U.S. Supreme Court's recent Cox v. Sony decision bars a contributory infringement claim brought by four news companies accusing the artificial intelligence company of using their copyrighted materials to train ChatGPT, saying the high court's ruling eliminates the legal theory on which the plaintiffs rely.

  • June 11, 2026

    Guess Investors Claim Take-Private Deal Skirts Reforms

    Guess Inc. investors have hit the luxury apparel company's top brass with a putative securities class action in Delaware Chancery Court, alleging the company's take-private sale to Authentic Brands Group LLC unfairly cashed out public investors to benefit executives and circumvented governance reforms imposed to curb co-founder Paul Marciano's alleged sexual misconduct.

  • June 11, 2026

    Workers Hit Chiron Financial With Unpaid Wage Suit

    Chiron Financial didn't pay 17 of its workers when it was having money trouble, a proposed class action in Texas federal court alleges, seeking to recoup the money that the workers say they're owed.

  • June 11, 2026

    Corteva Strikes $85M Deal In Farmer Pesticide Antitrust MDL

    A group of farmers have asked a North Carolina federal judge to preliminarily approve an $85 million settlement with Corteva Inc. to resolve antitrust claims that the company used loyalty rebate programs to artificially extend their patent monopolies over certain pesticides. 

  • June 11, 2026

    Fla. Dispensary Says Data Privacy Suit Is Meritless

    A medical marijuana patient can't sue Florida dispensary Sunburn Cannabis for secretly sharing his health data with Google LLC, the dispensary argued to a federal court this week, saying he consented to the tracking via its website's privacy policy.

  • June 11, 2026

    Fla. Hospital Antitrust Case Paused For Cert. Denial Appeal

    Patients who have accused hospital operator Health First of illegally fending off competition by preventing doctors from referring patients to rivals have convinced a Florida federal judge to put their lawsuit on hold while they challenge her decision to deny them class certification.

  • June 11, 2026

    Kan. AG Can't Try To Stop Shale Oil Claims From Local Gov'ts

    A New Mexico federal judge refused Thursday to let Kansas' attorney general intervene in multidistrict litigation accusing U.S. shale oil producers of conspiring with OPEC to inflate oil and fuel prices, concluding that the enforcer has no grounds or authority to try to block the claims from local governments.

  • June 11, 2026

    Mich. Judge Denies Law Firm's Bid To Toss Data Breach Suit

    A Michigan law firm's bid to toss a proposed class action alleging that it allowed a cybersecurity breach that exposed its clients' personal and medical information was denied Thursday by a federal judge who also granted the lead plaintiff's request to amend his complaint.

  • June 11, 2026

    Investment Cos. Push To Nix Consumers' Tribal RICO Suit

    A couple of investment firms are asking a North Carolina federal court to toss a proposed consumer class action over a so-called tribal lending scheme that charges annual interest rates as high as 490%, saying the borrowers fail to show they helped manage the short-term loan company.

  • June 11, 2026

    Amazon Reaches Deal To End Workers' Genetic Privacy Suit

    Amazon has agreed to end a lawsuit alleging that it violated Illinois genetic privacy law by seeking information about job applicants' family medical history, according to a federal court filing.

  • June 11, 2026

    23andMe To Pay $46.7M To Resolve Data Breach Claims

    The plan administration trust created under the Chapter 11 plan of DNA-testing company 23andMe has struck a deal to pay $46.7 million to data breach claimants, saying the move brings 23andMe one step closer to resolving the fallout of a massive data breach in 2023.

  • June 11, 2026

    Hospital Co. Accused Of Misusing Forfeited 401(k) Funds

    A Northwell Health Inc. subsidiary violated federal benefits law by using millions of dollars in forfeited 401(k) funds to offset its contribution obligations and allowing the $1.2 billion plan's recordkeeper to be overpaid, according to a proposed class action in Connecticut federal court.

  • June 11, 2026

    Immigration Firm Says Attys Fraudulently Poached Clients

    A law firm recently accused of running a volume-driven immigration filing mill claimed in a new lawsuit in Ohio federal court that three attorneys and a TikTok personality orchestrated a social media campaign falsely accusing it of visa fraud as a way to poach its clients.

Expert Analysis

  • How 'Bundling' Enforcement Is Parsing Efficiency, Access

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    Recent antitrust enforcement actions have taken a selective view of companies' bundling of products or services — challenging it when it shuts out rivals, but tolerating it when it creates efficient scale — making the real test now less about lower prices than about whether competition is being blocked, says attorney Alan Kusinitz.

  • Series

    The Biz Court Digest: Georgia Court Has Business On Its Mind

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    Thanks to recent legislation, the Georgia State-wide Business Court will soon offer business litigants greater access to the court than ever before, further enhancing the court's emphasis on efficiency, predictability and accessibility for sophisticated commercial disputes, says former GSBC judge Walt Davis at Jones Day.

  • Mass. Draft Regs Signal Nationwide Scrutiny Of Junk Fees

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    Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Campbell's new draft regulations for assisted living facilities is only her latest move in the war on junk fees — and part of a national reordering of consumer protection enforcement in which states are aggressively and creatively asserting authority, says Steve Provazza at Arnall Golden.

  • Operational AI Washing: A New Securities Class Action

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    In rising claims of operational AI washing — plaintiffs alleging that artificial intelligence was invoked to explain corporate business decisions in ways that may obscure underlying financial distress — earnings calls, restructuring disclosures and board-level communications will serve as key defense evidence, say attorneys at Akerman.

  • 4 Emerging Approaches To AI Protective Order Language

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    Over the last year, at least five federal district courts have issued or analyzed specific protective order provisions restricting the use of generative artificial intelligence platforms with protected materials, establishing that proactive AI-specific provisions are now standard practice and demonstrating that no single model works for every case, says Joel Bush at Kilpatrick.

  • Heppner Ruling Left AI Privilege Risk For Lawyers Unresolved

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    While a New York federal judge’s recent ruling in U.S. v. Heppner resolved a privilege question surrounding client-side artificial intelligence use, it did not address how to mitigate the risks that can arise when confidential information enters the operative context of an AI system used by an attorney, says Jianfei Chen at Quarles & Brady​​​​​​​.

  • Live Nation Shows States, Experts Key To Antitrust Verdicts

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    A New York federal jury's recent finding that Live Nation unlawfully monopolized primary ticketing services and amphitheaters demonstrates that states will not defer to federal agencies when they believe anticompetitive conduct warrants stronger action and highlights the vital role of economic expert testimony in antitrust cases, say attorneys at Paul Weiss.

  • The Ethics And Practicalities Of Representing AI Agents

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    With autonomous artificial intelligence agents now able to take action without explicit instructions from — or the awareness of — their human owners, the bar must confront whether existing frameworks like informed consent and client privilege will be sufficient on the day an AI agent calls seeking counsel, say attorneys at Morrison Cohen.

  • Notable Q1 Updates In Insurance Class Actions

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    Notable insurance class action decisions from the first quarter of the year included reminders about the statute of limitations as a key defense for claims relating to allegedly deficient forms, the importance of focus on the specific contract at issue and further guidance on the contours of Rule 23, says Kevin Zimmerman at BakerHostetler.

  • Series

    Speed Jigsaw Puzzling Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    My passion for speed puzzling — I can complete a 500-piece jigsaw puzzle in under 50 minutes — has sharpened my legal skills in more ways than one, with both disciplines requiring patience, precision and the ability to keep the bigger picture in mind while working through the details, says Tazia Statucki at Proskauer.

  • Opinion

    Congress Should Ax Privacy Bill For Not Shielding Consumers

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    The SECURE Data Act should be rejected because, despite Congress' claims, it would not meaningfully rein in data practices, but instead would weaken enforcement, eliminate stronger protections and prioritize data extraction over consumer protection and accountability, say attorneys at DiCello Levitt.

  • A Core Weakness In The Challenge To Birthright Citizenship

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    The government’s recent oral arguments against birthright citizenship in Trump v. Barbara would have the Supreme Court use modern immigration classifications as markers for a constitutional boundary that is not expressed in the Fourteenth Amendment, making the theory easier to administer but weaker as a matter of text and history, says attorney Tara Kennedy.

  • 2 AI Snafus Show Why Attys Can't Outsource Judgment

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    The recent incident involving Sullivan & Cromwell where citations in a filed motion were fabricated by artificial intelligence, as well as a punitive ruling from the Sixth Circuit in U.S. v. Farris, demonstrate that the obligation to supervise AI has belonged and always will belong to lawyers, says John Powell at the Kentucky School Boards Association.

  • Assessing The 9th Circ.'s Recent Stock Drop Dismissal Trend

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    The recent decision in Nova Scotia Health Employees' Pension Plan v. Comerica is an important circuit-level addition to the growing trend of Ninth Circuit securities class action dismissals on loss causation grounds, which have used a contextual analysis premised on stock drops that are modest, typical and short-lived, say attorneys at Paul Weiss.

  • How 'Spillover' Effects Can Skew AI Securities Class Actions

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    Event study evidence is often central in securities litigation at class certification and beyond, but in an environment where earnings forecasts and statements can have spillover market implications, particularly when concerning artificial intelligence, the task of parsing out the price impact of news requires careful consideration, say Erik Johannesson, Olivia Wurgaft and Nguyet Nguyen at Brattle Group.

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