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Securities
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October 24, 2024
SEC Says German On Hook For $4.6M Tied To Fraud Scheme
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission asked a judge on Thursday to reinstate a $3.3 million disgorgement order, plus $1.3 million in interest, against a German national who allegedly received proceeds from a multinational pump-and-dump scheme.
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October 24, 2024
MVP: Cleary's Roger Cooper
Roger Cooper of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP's securities and mergers and acquisitions litigation practice led a team of Cleary attorneys to a New York state appellate victory on first impression arguments the firm has been making for a decade, earning him a spot as one of the 2024 Law360 Securities MVPs.
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October 23, 2024
Crypto Co. Tron, Founder Can't Shake Investor Suit Over ICO
Blockchain firm Tron Foundation and its founder Justin Sun on Wednesday partially lost their bid to dismiss a shareholder suit alleging they sold unregistered tokens in a 2017 initial coin offering, with a New York federal judge ruling the claims have enough of a connection to New York to proceed.
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October 23, 2024
SEC Says Kraken Can't Get Quick Appeal Of Dismissal Denial
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said cryptocurrency exchange Kraken shouldn't get a quick review of its failed bid to dismiss the regulator's registration suit because the firm's "reinterpretation" of how securities laws apply to digital assets has been broadly rejected by district courts.
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October 23, 2024
TD Bank Faces Investor Suit Over $3B AML Failures Fine
TD Bank and four of its executives have been hit with a shareholder class action suit over stock price drops the Canadian bank suffered after U.S. authorities announced a $3 billion settlement over vast compliance failures in TD's anti-money laundering controls.
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October 23, 2024
Waters Corp.'s $800K 401(k) Management Deal Gets Initial OK
Lab equipment maker Waters Corp. and a proposed class of its employees received Wednesday an initial green light for their $800,000 deal to resolve claims the company chose underperforming investments for its retirement plan.
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October 23, 2024
Chancery Mulls Call To Toss $7B Focus Financial Merger Suit
An attorney for private equity firm Stone Point Capital told Delaware's chancellor Wednesday that there was no control group formed before the $7 billion August 2023 go-private merger between Focus Financial Partners Inc. and Clayton Dubilier & Rice LLC, and that a ruling otherwise would "lower the bar" for control allegations.
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October 23, 2024
UBS Wins $192M Award Confirmation In Eurobond Dispute
An Egyptian businessman has lost his years-old bid in New York federal court to vacate an approximately $192 million arbitral award favoring UBS and other lenders in a dispute over a $100 million Eurobond default.
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October 23, 2024
Del. Justices Urged To Revive Oracle-NetSuite Deal Challenge
An attorney for Oracle Corp. stockholders rattled off a barrage of alleged disclosure failures, analytical flaws and errant deference decisions Wednesday during a Delaware Supreme Court appeal from the Chancery Court's toss last year of a challenge to the company's $9.3 billion acquisition of NetSuite Corp. in 2016.
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October 23, 2024
SEC's Peirce Calls For Compliance Advisory Committee
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's Hester Peirce on Wednesday detailed her vision for a compliance advisory committee that would give the agency a way to collect and evaluate concerns about new rules from in-house compliance staff.
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October 23, 2024
Billionaire Sued For $25M Over Renewable Fuel Project Costs
Air Products and Chemicals Inc. has slapped Canadian billionaire John Carter Risley with a suit in Delaware federal court seeking to enforce a $25 million personal guarantee after renewable fuels company World Energy, a company Risley has invested in, defaulted on more than $26 million in payments.
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October 23, 2024
Feds Say Conn. Oil Trader's Ailing Brother Deserves Prison Time
A Connecticut businessman who worked with his brother and others to run an oil industry bribery scheme in Brazil should go to prison despite his bladder cancer diagnosis, the government said, arguing incarceration is necessary "to reflect the seriousness of the offense, and to afford adequate deterrence."
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October 23, 2024
Colo. Justices Leery of Tossing Fraudster's Sentence
Colorado Supreme Court justices appeared doubtful Wednesday that a convicted fraudster could avoid his sentence of 20 years probation after he served four years in prison, suggesting that while there was practically little difference from a previous sentence they threw out, it no longer violated state law.
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October 23, 2024
How FINRA Filings Led To A $29M Defamation Verdict In Pa.
Two firms that specialize in injury, employment and fraud matters teamed up for an unusual case that posed a tricky task: boiling down the technicalities of securities law in order to convince a Pennsylvania state jury that regulatory filings were misused for defamation.
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October 23, 2024
Securities Claim Cut From Fraud Suit Against Calif. Developer
A California federal judge trimmed a securities claim from a Sonoma resident's suit against a real estate company embroiled in a fraud scandal and recommended that the rest of the claims be brought in state court.
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October 23, 2024
Ex-SEC Atty, Fintech GC Joins Stradling's Securities Team
Stradling Yocca Carlson & Rauth PC has added a former fintech general counsel and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission attorney, reinforcing the firm's offerings for companies facing enforcement investigations or grappling with other compliance issues.
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October 23, 2024
Kirkland Adds Freshfields Atty To Boost Private Credit Bench
Kirkland & Ellis LLP has welcomed an expert in leveraged finance from Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP, saying Wednesday that his diverse practice will strengthen the firm's liability management and opportunistic credit practices and support its position in the growing private credit sector.
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October 23, 2024
Ga. Firm Owner Denies SEC Ponzi Scheme Allegations
The owner of an Atlanta-area firm accused of running a multimillion-dollar "classic Ponzi scheme" has denied all wrongdoing, telling a Georgia federal judge he merely acted in reasonable reliance on others' advice and experience.
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October 23, 2024
2nd Circ. Backs Early Wells Fargo Win In $100M RMBS Case
The Second Circuit on Wednesday approved an early win for Wells Fargo in a lawsuit brought by Commerzbank AG alleging it lost $100 million investing in residential mortgage-backed securities, saying the German lender didn't have standing to sue.
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October 23, 2024
MVP: Sullivan & Cromwell's Robert J. Giuffra Jr.
Robert Giuffra Jr. of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP helped shepherd Goldman Sachs through 13 years of investor litigation that ended in a victory for his client last year when the Second Circuit applied a new U.S. Supreme Court standard for the first time, earning him a spot as one of the 2024 Law360 Securities MVPs.
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October 22, 2024
Blink Investor Deal Gets Final OK, Attys Score $1.25M Fee
A Florida federal judge has granted final approval to a $3.75 million settlement between electric-vehicle charging station operator Blink Charging Co. and a proposed class of investors who alleged the company mischaracterized the functionality of its charging network.
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October 22, 2024
Big Banks Say Yearslong Libor Suit Still Lacks Evidence
Bank of America, Merrill Lynch and more than a dozen other large banks have urged a federal judge to dismiss the remaining claims in multidistrict litigation accusing them of manipulating Libor, arguing that the plaintiffs have failed to bring sufficient evidence in the 13 years since they filed suit over the once-critical benchmark interest rate.
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October 22, 2024
Activist Short Seller's Associate To Pay $1.8M In SEC Fraud Suit
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announced Tuesday that an associate of Andrew Left, founder of popular trading advice website Citron Research, has agreed to pay more than $1.8 million to resolve allegations that he negligently took part in a scheme to defraud readers through two trading recommendations.
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October 22, 2024
AMC Fights Insurer Bid For Toss Of $99.3M Settlement Claim
AMC Entertainment has asked a Delaware judge to summarily toss four insurers' refusals to approve a $99.3 million claim for losses related to the theater chain's settlement with stockholders after the company settled a battle over a preferred share conversion and reverse stock split.
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October 22, 2024
Fintech Co. Ryvyl Investors' Accounting Fraud Suit Trimmed
Executives of fintech company Ryvyl Inc. have shed some claims from an investor suit accusing them of concealing accounting problems, with a California federal judge ruling that the investors have not sufficiently pled that the defendants knowingly acted recklessly or committed wrongful acts.
Expert Analysis
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Will Texas Stock Exchange Provide Regulatory Haven?
While the newly proposed Texas Stock Exchange may represent a market reaction to increasingly complex regulations, those looking to list on a national securities exchange should consider that their choice of an exchange may not relieve them of some of the most burdensome public company requirements, say Elizabeth McNichol and Ryan Lilley at Katten.
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Equity Rights Offering Considerations As Maturity Cliff Looms
Current market uncertainties make an equity rights offering — involving affiliate backstop investors — a cost-effective, capital-raising transaction for distressed companies looking to manage their leverage ahead of the impending maturity of a substantial number of COVID-era debt issuances, say attorneys at Winston & Strawn.
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A Midyear Forecast: Tailwinds Expected For Atty Hourly Rates
Hourly rates for partners, associates and support staff continued to rise in the first half of this year, and this growth shows no signs of slowing for the rest of 2024 and into next year, driven in part by the return of mergers and acquisitions and the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence, says Chuck Chandler at Valeo Partners.
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A Checklist For Lenders Preparing For CRE Loan Defaults
Considering the recent interest rate environment, lenders should brush up on the proper steps that they should take when preparing to respond to a borrower's default on a commercial real estate loan, and borrowers should understand what lenders will be reviewing, says attorney Norma Williams.
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Opinion
Discount Window Reform Needed To Curb Modern Bank Runs
We learned during the spring 2023 failures that bank runs can happen extraordinarily fast in light of modern technology, especially when banks have a greater concentration of large deposits, demonstrating that the antiquated but effective discount window needs to be overhauled before the next crisis, says Cris Cicala at Stinson.
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Series
In The CFPB Playbook: Making Good On Bold Promises
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision upholding the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's funding structure in the second quarter cleared the way for the bureau to resume a number of high-priority initiatives, and it appears poised to charge ahead in working toward its aggressive preelection agenda, say Andrew Arculin and Paula Vigo Marqués at Blank Rome.
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Series
After Chevron: Creating New Hurdles For ESG Rulemaking
The U.S. Supreme Court's Loper Bright decision, limiting court deference to agencies' statutory interpretations, could have significant impacts on the future of ESG regulation, creating new hurdles for agency rulemaking around these emerging issues, and calling into question current administrative actions, says Leah Malone at Simpson Thacher.
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Opinion
States Should Loosen Law Firm Ownership Restrictions
Despite growing buzz, normalized nonlawyer ownership of law firms is a distant prospect, so the legal community should focus first on liberalizing state restrictions on attorney and firm purchases of practices, which would bolster succession planning and improve access to justice, says Michael Di Gennaro at The Law Practice Exchange.
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Navigating The Extent Of SEC Cybersecurity Breach Authority
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's broad reading of its authority under Section 13(b)(2)(B) of the Securities Exchange Act in the R.R. Donnelley and SolarWinds actions has ramifications for companies dealing with cybersecurity breaches, but it remains to be seen whether the commission's use of the provision will withstand judicial scrutiny, say attorneys at Sullivan & Cromwell.
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Best Text Practices In Light Of Terraform's $4.5B Fraud Deal
Text messages were extremely important in a recent civil trial against Terraform Labs, leading to a $4.5 billion settlement, so litigants in securities fraud cases need to have robust mobile data policies that address the content and retention of messages, and the obligations of employees to allow for collection, say Josh Sohn and Alicia Clausen at Crowell & Moring.
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Series
Solving Puzzles Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Tackling daily puzzles — like Wordle, KenKen and Connections — has bolstered my intellectual property litigation practice by helping me to exercise different mental skills, acknowledge minor but important details, and build and reinforce good habits, says Roy Wepner at Kaplan Breyer.
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Dapper Settlement Offers Rules Of The Road For NFT Issuers
The terms of a $4 million settlement in a class action alleging that Dapper Labs sold its NBA Top Shot Moments as unregistered securities may be a model for third parties that wish to avoid securities liability in connection with offering digital asset non-fungible token collectibles, say attorneys at K&L Gates.
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Texas Ethics Opinion Flags Hazards Of Unauthorized Practice
The Texas Professional Ethics Committee's recently issued proposed opinion finding that in-house counsel providing legal services to the company's clients constitutes the unauthorized practice of law is a valuable clarification given that a UPL violation — a misdemeanor in most states — carries high stakes, say Hilary Gerzhoy and Julienne Pasichow at HWG.
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Navigating The New Rise Of Greenwashing Litigation
As greenwashing lawsuits continue to gain momentum with a shift in focus to carbon-neutrality claims, businesses must exercise caution and ensure transparency in their environmental marketing practices, taking cues from recent legal challenges in the airline industry, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.
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In Memoriam: The Modern Administrative State
On June 28, the modern administrative state, where courts deferred to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes, died when the U.S. Supreme Court overruled its previous decision in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council — but it is survived by many cases decided under the Chevron framework, say Joseph Schaeffer and Jessica Deyoe at Babst Calland.