Compliance

  • April 09, 2025

    Country's Largest Egg Producer Discloses DOJ Price Probe

    Cal-Maine Foods Inc., which bills itself as the country's largest producer and distributor of fresh shell eggs, on Tuesday became the first company to disclose being targeted by a U.S. Department of Justice civil probe into spiking egg prices.

  • April 09, 2025

    DC Circ. Seems Open To Narrowing CFPB Injunction

    A D.C. Circuit panel seemed divided Wednesday on the Trump administration's bid to stave off a lower court order barring it from shutting down the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as a U.S. Department of Justice attorney disavowed plans to shutter the agency.

  • April 09, 2025

    2nd Circ. Allows Takeda To Appeal Actos Antitrust Class Cert.

    A split Second Circuit will allow Takeda Pharmaceuticals Co. to immediately appeal a New York federal judge's ruling certifying two classes of direct purchasers and end payors in consolidated antitrust actions accusing the company of unlawfully inflating the price of its diabetes treatment Actos by delaying the entry of generic alternatives.

  • April 09, 2025

    House Slates CFPB Payment, Overdraft Rules For Repeal

    The House on Wednesday voted to overturn two Biden-era Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rules aimed at increasing oversight of larger digital payment providers and curbing big-bank overdraft fees, setting the pair up for final repeal at the White House.

  • April 09, 2025

    Car Dealership Magnate To Pay $12M Over Pandemic Loans

    Massachusetts car dealership magnate Herb Chambers and several of his companies have agreed to pay $11.8 million to resolve allegations that they falsely certified their eligibility for pandemic-era aid under a U.S. Small Business Administration program, civil prosecutors said on Wednesday.

  • April 09, 2025

    IRS Acting Chief To Stay On Through Mid-May, Treasury Says

    The Internal Revenue Service's interim leader, Melanie Krause, will stay at her post through May 15, the U.S. Treasury Department said Wednesday, after she and other officials reportedly said they would resign following an IRS agreement to share taxpayer information with immigration enforcement agencies.

  • April 09, 2025

    Data Co. Can't Make DOL Accept Health Plan, Judge Says

    A data-mining company can't force the U.S. Department of Labor to acknowledge that a health insurance plan offered in exchange for participants' user data is covered by federal benefits law, a Texas federal judge ruled, saying the case's thin record prevented the court from deciding issues the Fifth Circuit told it to consider.

  • April 09, 2025

    SafeMoon CEO Flags DOJ Crypto Memo In Bid For Dismissal

    The CEO of crypto firm SafeMoon alerted a Brooklyn federal judge Wednesday to a U.S. Justice Department directive not to pursue charges related to digital assets under the Securities Exchange Act or Commodity Exchange Act, suggesting that the judge should dismiss his investor fraud case.

  • April 09, 2025

    Ill. Real Estate Broker Gets 4 Years For $3M Investment Scam

    A Chicago real estate broker has been sentenced to more than four years in prison after pleading guilty last year to allegations he duped clients into investing millions of dollars in properties that did not exist and then used the investors' funds for personal expenses, federal prosecutors announced Wednesday.

  • April 09, 2025

    Bessent: 'It's Main Street's Turn' For Regulatory Rollbacks

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Wednesday sketched out ambitious Trump administration plans to cut financial rules for smaller, so-called community banks and rein in federal bank supervision, saying the goal is to lock up "bureaucratic hubris."

  • April 09, 2025

    EPA Asks DC Circ. To Extend Time In PFAS Case

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has asked the D.C. Circuit for a temporary suspension in a case brought by water utility associations and chemical industry players over new rules about limits on forever chemicals in the nation's drinking water, given the new administration.

  • April 09, 2025

    Florida Won't Hire Law Firms With DEI Initiatives, AG Says

    The state of Florida will no longer hire law firms with diversity, equity and inclusion programs to serve as outside general counsel, according to a new memo from Attorney General James Uthmeier.

  • April 09, 2025

    Roberts Pauses Re-Hiring Of Fired NLRB, MSPB Members

    Chief Justice John Roberts on temporarily paused an en banc D.C. Circuit's order reinstating two fired members of the National Labor Relations Board and the Merit Systems Protection Board on Wednesday, in a dispute that challenges a 90-year-old U.S. Supreme Court ruling protecting certain government officials from presidential removal.

  • April 09, 2025

    Religious Mission Justifies Philly Injection Site, 3rd Circ. Told

    Counsel for a nonprofit seeking to open a safe injection site in Philadelphia told the Third Circuit Wednesday that it qualified as a religious organization immune from prosecution, despite not having any spiritual language in its incorporation documents.

  • April 09, 2025

    Ex-Mars Executive Faces Forfeiture Bid In $28M Fraud Case

    The U.S. Department of Justice wants the former global price risk manager of a subsidiary of candy maker Mars Inc. to forfeit a Connecticut home plus accounts at three financial firms to help offset $28 million in alleged fraud proceeds.

  • April 09, 2025

    Pillsbury Expands Houston Office With 3 Corporate Attorneys

    Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP has added three attorneys with unique dealmaking experience to its growing Houston office.

  • April 09, 2025

    FTC Has Authority To Bring Antitrust Case Against Amazon

    A federal court in Washington found the Federal Trade Commission has the authority to bring an antitrust case targeting Amazon's treatment of sellers on its platform directly in federal court without also pursuing an in-house administrative case.

  • April 09, 2025

    5th Circ. Pauses Contractor Rule Challenge Amid DOL Review

    The Fifth Circuit halted a group of companies' challenge to a Biden-era independent contractor rule determining workers' classification under the Fair Labor Standards Act after the U.S. Department of Labor said it was reconsidering the rule.

  • April 09, 2025

    Trump EPA, FWS Nominees Clear Senate Committee Vote

    Three of President Donald Trump's nominees for top positions at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday cleared a Senate committee confirmation vote, clearing the path for a vote by the full body.

  • April 09, 2025

    Dinsmore Labor Duo Moves On To Greenspoon Marder

    Greenspoon Marder LLP has hired a labor and employment duo from Dinsmore & Shohl LLP, which they had joined in December after leaving a firm that one of them helped launch in 2022, the firm has announced.

  • April 08, 2025

    Jenner & Block, WilmerHale Seek Shutdown Of Trump Orders

    Jenner & Block LLP and WilmerHale on Tuesday asked Washington, D.C., federal judges for permanent court orders blocking President Donald Trump's executive orders targeting the firms, saying the directives threaten the firms, their clients and the entire legal system.

  • April 08, 2025

    House Working Group Fields Input On Data Privacy Efforts

    Business groups and digital rights advocates responding to an influential House committee's call for feedback on the latest push to craft federal data privacy legislation showed no signs of backing down from their dueling positions on the key issues that have long stymied such legislative efforts. 

  • April 08, 2025

    Town's Insurance Suit Unfrozen After $11M Civil Rights Deal

    A previously paused lawsuit that East Haven, Connecticut, brought against its insurers has been referred for settlement negotiations after the town and former officials lost an underlying civil rights case over the politically motivated closure of a quarry and then reached an $11 million deal to end the underlying dispute.

  • April 08, 2025

    Trump's CFPB Pick Could Be Confirmed By May, Scott Says

    Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott, R-S.C., said Tuesday that a final confirmation vote could be just weeks away for Jonathan McKernan, who is President Donald Trump's nominee to head up the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

  • April 08, 2025

    Four Robinhood Users Must Arbitrate Meme Stock Claims

    A Florida federal judge overseeing the multidistrict litigation over Robinhood's decision to freeze trading in certain so-called meme stocks ordered four remaining plaintiffs in the case to arbitrate their claims, writing in an order that there's no dispute a valid arbitration agreement exists.

Expert Analysis

  • Avoiding Pitfalls Around New Calif. Commercial Lease Law

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    A California law that became effective this year requires commercial landlords to extend certain protections previously afforded to residential tenancies, and a few key provisions of the law especially warrant reexamination of leasing and operational processes, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • How BigLaw Executive Orders May Affect Smaller Firms

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    Because of the types of cases they take on, solo practitioners, small law firms and public interest attorneys may find themselves more dramatically affected by the collective impact of recent government action involving the legal industry than even the BigLaw firms named in the executive orders, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.

  • 5 Tools To Help Existing Gov't Contracts Manage Tariff Costs

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    Five pointers can help government contractors scrutinize their existing contracts for protections like equitable adjustment and duty-free entry clauses, which may help insulate them from tariff-related cost increases, say attorneys at Covington.

  • Opinion

    Lawsuits Shouldn't Be Shadow Assets For Foreign Capital

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    Third-party litigation financing amplifies inefficiencies from litigation and facilitates national exposure to foreign influence in the U.S. justice system, so full disclosure of financing arrangements should be required as a matter of institutional integrity, says Roland Eisenhuth at the American Property Casualty Insurance Association.

  • How To Accelerate Your Post-Attorney Career Transition

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    Professionals seeking to transition to nonattorney careers may encounter skepticism as nontraditional candidates, but there are opportunities for thought leadership and to leverage speaking and writing to accelerate a post-attorney career transition, say Janet Falk at Falk Communications and Evgeny Efremkin at Toronto Metropolitan University.

  • Key Takeaways From The 2025 Spring Antitrust Meeting

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    Leadership changes, shifting priorities and evolving enforcement tools dominated the conversation at the recent American Bar Association Spring Antitrust Meeting, as panelists explored competition policy under a second Trump administration, agency discretion under the 2023 merger guidelines and new frontiers in conduct enforcement, say attorneys at Freshfields.

  • 5 Key Licensing Considerations For AI Innovations

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    As businesses increasingly integrate artificial intelligence technology into their operations, they must prepare to address complex intellectual property challenges and questions surrounding licensing AI-based innovations, which require careful consideration of ownership, usage rights and regulatory compliance, says Lestin Kenton at Sterne Kessler.

  • 3 Action Items For Innovators Amid Fintech Regulatory Pivot

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    As the federal banking agencies seek to smooth the way for banks to engage in crypto-related activities, banks and technology companies should take note of this new chapter in payments services, especially as leadership in digital financial technology becomes a national priority, says Jess Cheng at Wilson Sonsini.

  • What PFAS-Treated Clothing Tariff Bill Would Mean For Cos.

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    In keeping with a nationwide trend of greater restrictions on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, legislation pending in the U.S. House of Representatives would remove tariff advantages for PFAS-treated clothing — so businesses would be wise to proactively adapt their supply chains and review contracts to mitigate liability, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • Tariffs And FCA Create Perfect Storm For Importers

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    The Trump administration's aggressive tariff policies pose a high risk to certain importation practices that are particularly likely to trigger False Claims Act enforcement, say attorneys at Jeffer Mangels.

  • Running A Compliant DEI Program After EEOC, DOJ Guidance

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    Following recent guidance from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the U.S. Department of Justice that operationalized the Trump administration's focus on ending so-called illegal DEI, employers don't need to eliminate DEI programs, but they must ensure that protected characteristics are not considered in employment decisions, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.

  • A Closer Look At New NYSE, Nasdaq Listing Rule Changes

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    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has recently approved changes to the New York Stock Exchange's and the Nasdaq's listing rules on reverse stock splits, minimum share price requirements and required liquidity for initial listings, meaning listed companies facing delisting will have fewer means to regain compliance, say attorneys at Cahill Gordon.

  • Opinion

    GENIUS Act Can Bring Harmony To Crypto-Banking Discord

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    ​​​​​​​By embracing crypto innovation while establishing appropriate guardrails, the so-called GENIUS Act charts a path forward that promotes financial inclusion and technological advancement without compromising stability or constitutional rights, says J.W. Verret at George Mason University's Antonin Scalia Law School.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Be An Indispensable Associate

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    While law school teaches you to research, write and think critically, it often overlooks the professional skills you will need to make yourself an essential team player when transitioning from a summer to full-time associate, say attorneys at Stinson.

  • 6 Principles For De-Risking In This Era Of Uncertainty

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    Companies can emerge from the current period of disruptive transformation stronger than ever by embracing strategies that enable them to methodically evaluate risk, adapt to change without losing purpose, focus on customer value and find competitive advantages amid uncertainty, says David McVeigh at Axiom.

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