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Public Policy
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February 27, 2025
Deputy AG And Antitrust Nominations Head To Full Senate
The Senate Judiciary Committee sent the nominations of Todd Blanche, for deputy attorney general, and Gail Slater, for assistant attorney general for the Antitrust Division at the U.S. Department of Justice, to the full Senate on Thursday, the latter of whom received bipartisan support.
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February 27, 2025
DC AG Says 25 Unlicensed Pot Shops Have Been Shut Down
The Washington, D.C., attorney general on Thursday announced that 25 unlicensed cannabis retailers have been shut down as a result of the district's efforts to enforce its cannabis regulations over the last six months.
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February 27, 2025
CFPB Drops Suits Against Capital One, Rocket Homes, More
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Thursday permanently dropped several lawsuits, including ones against Capital One, a Rocket Mortgage affiliate, a major student loan servicer and the finance arm of a Berkshire Hathaway-owned mobile home builder.
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February 27, 2025
US Senate Panel Advances Trump's Labor Secretary Pick
A U.S. Senate committee voted Thursday to move forward the nomination of former Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer to lead the U.S. Department of Labor.
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February 26, 2025
High Court Halts Trump's Wed. Night Deadline To Restore Aid
The U.S. Supreme Court late Wednesday paused a Washington, D.C., federal judge's late-night deadline ordering the Trump administration to restore nearly $2 billion in foreign assistance funding.
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February 26, 2025
DOJ Drops Suits Over Police, Firefighter Discriminatory Hiring
The U.S. Department of Justice said Wednesday it was dropping lawsuits across the country over allegedly discriminatory practices for hiring police officers and firefighters, saying the litigation "unjustly targeted fire and police departments for using standard aptitude tests."
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February 26, 2025
Legal Groups Call Out Trump's 'Outrageous' Covington Attack
Defense attorney groups on Wednesday expressed concern over President Donald Trump's retaliation against Covington & Burling LLP attorneys for representing former special counsel Jack Smith, asking the wider legal community to join their members in condemning the president's "outrageous action."
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February 26, 2025
Calif. Judge Murdered His Wife, DA Tells Jury As Trial Wraps
California state court judge Jeffrey Ferguson intentionally killed his wife by drunkenly shooting her to death in their home after a heated argument, prosecutors told jurors during closing arguments Wednesday, while Ferguson's attorney argued that the gun accidentally discharged as the judge tried to set it on a table.
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February 26, 2025
Bank Directors Back Ex-Rabobank Exec's High Court Bid
A bank director advocacy group has urged the U.S. Supreme Court to take up a former Rabobank compliance chief's challenge against the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, arguing the agency engages in a practice of "regulation-by-dismissal" to the detriment of the banking industry.
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February 26, 2025
Trump's CFPB Pick Says Agency's 'Past Excesses' Must End
President Donald Trump's nominee to run the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will tell senators on Thursday that a "crisis of legitimacy" plagues the beleaguered agency, casting it as an out-of-control regulator that needs to be brought to heel.
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February 26, 2025
Wash. Biz Group Fears Amazon Loss In Price-Gouging Suit
Washington's largest business group is siding with Amazon's bid to dismiss a proposed class action alleging price-gouging during the COVID pandemic, in an amicus brief Wednesday that said consumers want to impose a flawed reading of consumer protection law that would leave businesses in limbo guessing what is fair or unfair.
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February 26, 2025
Lindell Says Defamation Jury Should See 118-Page Attack Doc
My Pillow Inc. CEO Mike Lindell has urged a Colorado federal court to admit a highly critical 118-page opinion document into former Dominion Voting Systems executive Eric Coomer's upcoming defamation trial, though Coomer has called the document "hearsay within hearsay."
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February 26, 2025
Colo. Panel Presses Plaintiff On Apparent Litigation Flip-Flop
A Colorado state appeals court judge asked a personal injury plaintiff on Wednesday how he can argue that a telecommunications company isn't a landowner under a recreational statute when he seemingly made the opposite argument earlier in the litigation.
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February 26, 2025
DHS Registration Could Spur Fear But Will Be Hard To Enforce
A U.S. Department of Homeland Security plan to require unauthorized immigrants who didn't enter with a visa to register with the federal government or face criminal prosecution will likely spur fear but will require vast resources to enforce, immigration experts said.
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February 26, 2025
Trump Orders Fed Agencies To Plan For Large Layoffs
The White House is telling federal agencies to submit plans for "large-scale" layoffs by mid-March, accusing them of siphoning funding for "unproductive and unnecessary programs" and "not producing results for the American public."
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February 26, 2025
Frontier Airlines Rips Feds' DC Airport Slots Snub
Frontier Airlines Inc. has told the D.C. Circuit that the U.S. Department of Transportation unlawfully excluded it from competing for new slot exemptions at Ronald Reagan National Airport to operate long-distance flights, while carrier Spirit Airlines wants to have a say in the dispute.
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February 26, 2025
Trump CFTC Shifts Enforcement Stance From Stick To Carrot
In a sign that it is backing off a more aggressive tone on enforcement during the second Trump administration, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has provided what it says is first-of-its-kind guidance on how much money regulated entities can expect to save for cooperating with agency investigations.
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February 26, 2025
USDA Unlawfully Purged Climate Info, Advocacy Groups Say
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has illegally erased scores of data-rich webpages focused on climate change from its websites in a sudden action that denies farmers access to essential information as the country faces extreme weather patterns, according to a lawsuit filed in New York federal court.
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February 26, 2025
Senators Want Federal Broadband Money To Be Tax-Exempt
Telecom companies set to collectively receive billions in federal dollars aimed at subsidizing the build-out of broadband infrastructure won't have to pay taxes on those funds, if a bipartisan group of senators gets its way.
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February 26, 2025
Dems Pan Trump Reversal On US Weapons Order
The top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee condemned the Trump administration's decision to scrap an order requiring potential international law violations involving U.S.-supplied weapons to be reported to Congress, calling it "a step backward."
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February 26, 2025
GOP Reps. Criticize Judges At 'Impeachathon'
A trio of House Republicans on Wednesday unveiled a list of federal judges they're targeting for impeachment as they, along with presidential adviser Elon Musk, go after those who rule against the Trump administration's executive actions.
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February 26, 2025
Broadcasters Say Next-Gen TV Transition Must Move Faster
It's time to finish up the transition to the next generation of television broadcasting, and the Federal Communications Commission should move things along or the "realistic window for implementation could pass," broadcasters are telling the agency.
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February 26, 2025
EPA's Enviro Justice Reset Upending Community Relations
The Trump administration's undertaking to root out environmental justice staffers, programs and funding has sown confusion and ruptured relationships with communities that had worked more closely with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in recent years.
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February 26, 2025
Dewberry Ruling May Lead To More Defendants In TM Fights
Plaintiffs in trademark disputes likely will consider including multiple defendants in their complaints when it's unclear who holds the profits from the alleged infringement, according to intellectual property attorneys, after the U.S. Supreme Court remanded a case because nonparty affiliates of a defendant were ordered to pay an award that reached nearly $47 million.
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February 26, 2025
5th Circ. Mulls Whether PPP Ineligibility Precludes Forgiveness
A Fifth Circuit panel seemed wary Wednesday of buying a truck dealer's argument that the U.S. Small Business Administration should forgive its PPP loan, pondering whether doing so could have far-reaching consequences for litigation surrounding CARES Act loans.
Expert Analysis
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2024 Was A Significant Year For HIPAA Compliance
The Office of Civil Rights' high level of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act activity in 2024 and press releases about its specific focus on certain cybersecurity issues make it abundantly clear that the OCR is not going to tolerate widespread compliance complacency, says Nathan Kottkamp at Williams Mullen.
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Examining DOJ Corporate Whistleblower Pilot's First 100 Days
Though the U.S. Department of Justice’s corporate whistleblower awards pilot program has successfully elicited numerous tips since its August launch, stakeholder feedback leaves questions about how the scheme compares to other whistleblower awards and protections — and how it will fare in the incoming Trump administration, say attorneys at Joseph Greenwald.
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Proactively Managing Tariff Impacts On Megaprojects
President-elect Donald Trump's proposed tariffs may compound the complexity, duration and risks associated with financing and building large-scale infrastructure projects — so owners and contractors should plan to take possible tariff-related cost and schedule overruns into account when drafting contracts, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.
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New York Climate Superfund Law May Face Preemption Fight
New York state's new climate superfund law highlights a growing trend of states supplementing their climate litigation efforts with legislative initiatives — but it will likely encounter the same federal preemption questions raised about state and local lawsuits seeking redress for climate harms, say attorneys at ArentFox Schiff.
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Forecasting The Future Of The FTC Post-Inauguration
The incoming Federal Trade Commission leadership's agenda, which is expected to be in sharp contrast with the Biden administration's enforcement posture, will be noticeable right away in the first few weeks of the Trump administration, say attorneys at Cooley.
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5 Notable Information Security Events In 2024
B. Stephanie Siegmann at Hinckley Allen discusses 2024's largest and most destructive data breaches seen yet, ranging from ransomware disrupting U.S. healthcare systems on a massive scale, to tensions increasing between the U.S. and China over cyberespionage and the control of U.S. data.
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Opinion
Trump Should Pass On Project 2025's Disparate Impact Plan
The Trump administration should reject Project 2025's call to eliminate the disparate impact doctrine because, as its pro-business Republican creators intended, a focus on dismantling unnecessary barriers to qualified job candidates serves companies' best interests more successfully than the alternatives, says Susan Carle at American University.
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Opinion
Laken Riley Act Will Not Advance Immigration Reform
By granting states legal standing to sue the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for immigration violations, the Laken Riley Act enables states to block all kinds of federal actions they don't like but provides little reason for them to be invested in positive change, says Jacob Hamburger at Cornell University Law School.
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Series
Playing Rugby Makes Me A Better Lawyer
My experience playing rugby, including a near-fatal accident, has influenced my legal practice on a professional, organizational and personal level by showing me the importance of maintaining empathy, fostering team empowerment and embracing the art of preparation, says James Gillenwater at Greenberg Traurig.
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How 2025 NDAA May Affect DOD Procurement Protests
A bid protest pilot program included in the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act shifts litigation costs onto unsuccessful bid protesters and raises claim-filing thresholds, which could increase risks to U.S. Department of Defense contractors who file protests, and reduce oversight of DOD procurement awards, say attorneys at Venable.
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Looking Back At 2024's Noteworthy State AG Litigation
State attorneys general across the U.S. took bold steps in 2024 to address unlawful activities by corporations in several areas, including privacy and data security, financial transparency, children's internet safety, and other overall consumer protection claims, say attorneys at Troutman Pepper.
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What Broker-Dealers Must Know Before Selling Bitcoin ETPs
Interest in bitcoin exchange-traded products is already high, and only expected to grow in light of the incoming Trump administration's pro-crypto stance, but broker-dealers must still consider numerous regulatory requirements before recommending a bitcoin ETP to a client, say Frank Weigand and Justine Woods at Cahill Gordon.
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Opinion
A Federal Insurance Mandate For Private Aviation Is Overdue
A recent private plane crash in California that killed two people and injured 19 others spotlights the dangers of such occurrences — and serves as a reminder that because there is no federal requirement for general aviation pilots to carry insurance, the victims of these accidents are often unable to obtain fair compensation, says Timothy Loranger at Wisner Baum.
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Updated FWS Regs Will Streamline Right-Of-Way Permitting
Although the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's final rule covering rights-of-way across lands administered by the service will bring increased up-front fees and stricter permit terms and conditions, it also provides a clearer application process and should reduce permitting delays and total costs, say attorneys at Holland & Hart.
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Cyber Disclosure Is A Mainstay In 2025 SEC Exam Priorities
Despite a new administration and a new U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chair incoming, the SEC's 2025 examination priorities signal that cybersecurity disclosures and risk management practices will remain important due to the growing threat of cyberattacks, says Anjali Das at Wilson Elser.