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Securities
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February 18, 2025
Coinbase Brass Face Investor Suit Over Firm's Legal Liabilities
A Coinbase shareholder has sued the crypto exchange's executive officers and board members in New Jersey federal court on allegations they breached their fiduciary duties with disclosure failures and securities law violations that left the firm open to lawsuits and other events that jeopardized its financial condition to the detriment of shareholders.
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February 18, 2025
Wells Fargo Fights Class Cert. Bid In 'Sham' Hiring Case
Wells Fargo & Co. is seeking to avoid class claims in a lawsuit accusing it of deceiving investors about its hiring practices, arguing that suing shareholders have not shown how a downturn in the bank's stock price was caused by the supposedly "sham" job interviews rather than a challenging interest rate environment.
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February 18, 2025
Data Science Co. Director Admits $7M Skim In Del. Hearing
An officer and co-founder of a Hong Kong-headquartered data science company who acknowledged skimming nearly $7 million from the business during a Delaware Court of Chancery hearing was found Tuesday to have breached his fiduciary duty to the company and was ordered to return the cash.
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February 18, 2025
Web Data Co. Hid Customer Usage Slowdown, Suit Says
Web data collection solutions company Alarum has been hit with a proposed shareholder class action in New Jersey federal court alleging the company failed to disclose its struggles in keeping and expanding customer engagements, which led to reduced customer spending.
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February 18, 2025
Gas Co. Venture Global Faces Suit Over IPO Disclosures
Liquefied natural gas company Venture Global was hit with a proposed class action alleging the company raised $1.75 billion in its initial public offering last month without disclosing legal issues it is facing from oil companies Shell and BP.
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February 18, 2025
Acccounting Firm Blames Broker For Losing $1M In Coverage
A Texas accounting firm accused its insurance broker of causing it to lose $1 million coverage by failing to inform an excess insurer that the firm was subpoenaed in connection with the investigation of a $12 million seismic data collection company embezzlement scheme, the broker told a Texas federal court.
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February 18, 2025
Stablecoin Firm Gets Securities Claim Cut From Class Action
A New York federal judge has trimmed the securities claim from a putative class action brought by buyers of GMO-Z.com Trust's GYEN stablecoin who argued they suffered losses when the value of the digital asset temporarily fluctuated, but allowed the bulk of the consumer protection claims to move forward.
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February 18, 2025
Ancora Says US Steel CEO May Have Made Insider Trades
Ancora Holdings Group LLC is claiming that U.S. Steel CEO David Burritt "may have engaged in insider trading" tied to the company's proposed $14.9 billion merger with Japan's Nippon Steel, and the investor said it could bring related litigation, according to documents released Tuesday.
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February 18, 2025
Trump Media Blames Rising Loss Partly On SEC Legal Bills
The owner of President Donald Trump's social media platform attributed its widening losses in part to rising legal costs from the Biden-era U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's investigations of the merger that took the company public, according to a statement.
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February 18, 2025
Muni Bond Firm Stoever Glass Files For Ch. 7 In NY
The 61-year-old Wall Street municipal bond investment firm Stoever Glass & Co. Inc. has filed for Chapter 7, reporting liabilities of up to $10 million and assets of less than $1 million.
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February 18, 2025
Compliance Boss Took $9M In Clients, Investment Firm Says
A Connecticut investment firm with $360 million in assets under management says its former chief compliance officer violated trade secrets and computer fraud laws by taking eight clients worth $9.3 million and secretly joining a competitor, all despite bearing responsibility for his now-former firm's data confidentiality measures.
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February 18, 2025
Securities Group Of The Year: Robbins Geller
Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP guided investors in securing a $490 million settlement from Apple Inc. in California federal court after alleging CEO Tim Cook had misled them, and obtained a $434 million settlement with Under Armour Inc. in Maryland federal court to settle claims the company had artificially inflated stock prices, earning it a spot among the 2024 Law360 Securities Groups of the Year.
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February 18, 2025
Proposed Tweaks To Del. Chancery Law Ignite DExit Firestorm
Stockholder attorneys in Delaware pushed back immediately against two state Senate measures that would amend corporation law provisions at the center of recent debate over shareholder class lawsuits, big court awards and recent corporate moves to purportedly more business-friendly states such as Texas and Nevada.
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February 18, 2025
DOJ Noncommittal On Cognizant Bribe Trial Amid FCPA Order
In the wake of President Donald Trump's Feb. 10 executive order pausing enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, prosecutors told a federal judge Monday that they are preparing for a March 3 trial in their charges alleging two former executives of Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. authorized a bribe to an Indian official, but that the case is under review.
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February 18, 2025
Chancery Tosses Class Suit Challenging Trade Desk CEO Pay
Stockholders who sued to block an up to $5.2 billion, multiyear chairman's compensation package for global digital marketing venture The Trade Desk failed to show a required inference of director liability or bad faith, a Delaware vice chancellor has ruled.
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February 14, 2025
Judge Slams The Brakes On Peloton Bike Recall Claims
A New York federal judge threw out, for now, a proposed investor action alleging Peloton overstated the safety of its bikes before 2.2 million products were recalled over a bike seat defect, ruling that the shareholders haven't adequately alleged the exercise company made any misleading statements.
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February 14, 2025
Loper Bright Doesn't Sink ESG Rule, Texas Judge Says
A Texas federal judge again upheld a Biden-era rule allowing retirement fiduciaries to consider issues like climate change and social justice when choosing investments, ruling that the rule was still valid despite the U.S. Supreme Court doing away with a decades-long approach to interpreting statutes.
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February 14, 2025
CFTC Taps Ex-Whistleblower Chief As Enforcement Head
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission's acting head announced the appointment of a new enforcement director, naming to the position a former federal prosecutor who recently was the agency's whistleblower chief.
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February 14, 2025
SEC Crypto Mining Case Paused After Feds Bring Charges
A Texas federal judge paused the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's case against a crypto asset mining and hosting company after federal prosecutors filed their own suit against three of its executives for allegedly spending investor funds on themselves instead of the mining equipment they promised.
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February 14, 2025
4th Circ. To Hear Deloitte Appeal Of SCANA Class Cert. Ruling
The Fourth Circuit has agreed to hear a case that could overturn the class status of SCANA Corp. investors accusing Deloitte of issuing misleading audit reports about the progress being made on a failed $9 billion nuclear energy project, saying it would hear arguments over whether a U.S. Supreme Court model on damages was properly applied to the class certification order.
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February 14, 2025
Chemical Co.'s Inventory Issues Led To Losses, Investor Says
Agricultural sciences company FMC Corp. has been hit with a proposed shareholder class action in Pennsylvania federal court alleging it misled investors about its high inventory levels across its global channels, causing significant losses when its issues were revealed earlier this month.
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February 14, 2025
Digital Health Co. Beats Some Claims In SPAC Investor Suit
A New Jersey federal judge has dismissed, with leave to amend, claims in an investor suit against a blank check company that took digital health equipment venture Butterfly Network Inc. public, finding that some of the shares the plaintiffs purchased are not traceable to the registration statement at issue in the suit.
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February 14, 2025
SmileDirectClub Trustee Gets OK To Hire Orrick
The Chapter 7 trustee liquidating SmileDirectClub can hire Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP as special litigation counsel, a Texas bankruptcy judge said Friday, concluding that Orrick met U.S. Bankruptcy Code requirements, despite him not being notified earlier of Orrick's previous work for the trustee.
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February 14, 2025
Feds Say Las Vegas Man Ran $24M Cryptocurrency Ponzi Con
A Las Vegas man who allegedly cheated hundreds of investors out of $24 million with promises that his cryptocurrency company used artificial intelligence and would pay returns of up to 30% has pleaded not guilty to fraud and money laundering charges.
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February 14, 2025
Solar Tech Co. SunPower Beats Investor Suit Over Defects
A California federal court has permanently dismissed an investor's suit alleging solar power equipment company SunPower concealed product defects in order to maintain artificially high share prices, saying the investor has not established SunPower knew or could have known its statements were false when made.
Expert Analysis
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Opinion
Judge Should Not Have Been Reprimanded For Alito Essay
Senior U.S. District Judge Michael Ponsor's New York Times essay critiquing Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito for potential ethical violations absolutely cannot be construed as conduct prejudicial to the administration of the business of the courts, says Ashley London at the Thomas R. Kline School of Law of Duquesne University.
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A Look At Collateralized Loan Obligations Post-Reform
The Financial Stability Board's recent report on global securitization reforms, analyzing resilience trends in the collateralized loan obligation market post-2008, suggests that, while risk retention rules have a limited impact on observable characteristics, other structural features play a significant role in ensuring risk alignment, says Kos Vavelidis at DLA Piper.
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What Day 1 Bondi Memos Mean For Corporate Compliance
After Attorney General Pam Bondi’s flurry of memos last week declaring new enforcement priorities on issues ranging from foreign bribery to diversity initiatives, companies must base their compliance programs on an understanding of their own core values and principles, says Hui Chen at CDE Advisors.
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Lights, Camera, Ethics? TV Lawyers Tend To Set Bad Example
Though fictional movies and television shows portraying lawyers are fun to watch, Hollywood’s inaccurate depictions of legal ethics can desensitize attorneys to ethics violations and lead real-life clients to believe that good lawyers take a scorched-earth approach, says Nancy Rapoport at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
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SEC Motion Response Could Reveal New Crypto Approach
Cumberland DRW recently filed to dismiss the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement action against it for the unlawful purchase and sale of digital asset securities, and the agency's response should unveil whether, and to what extent, the Trump administration will relax the federal government’s stance on digital asset regulation, say attorneys at O'Melveny.
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3 Ways Trump Can Nix SEC's Climate Disclosure Rules
Given President Donald Trump's campaign statements and agency appointments, it's likely that his administration will try to annul the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's climate disclosure rules, but his options for doing so present unique opportunities and challenges, with varying levels of permanence and impact, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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Del. Ruling Further Narrows Scope Of 'Bump-Up' Exclusion
The recent Delaware Superior Court ruling in Harman International v. Illinois National Insurance offers a critical framework for interpreting bump-up exclusions in management liability insurance policies, and follows the case law trend of narrow interpretation of such exclusions, says Simone Haugen at Tressler.
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Perspectives
Accountant-Owned Law Firms Could Blur Ethical Lines
KPMG’s recent application to open a legal practice in Arizona represents the first overture by an accounting firm to take advantage of the state’s relaxed law firm ownership rules, but enforcing and supervising the practice of law by nonattorneys could prove particularly challenging, says Seth Laver at Goldberg Segalla.
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Expect Scrutiny Of Banks To Persist, Even Under Trump
Although the change in administrations brings some measure of uncertainty as to the nature of bank compliance oversight, if regulators in Washington, D.C., attempt to dilute the vigilance of federal superintendence, the states are waiting in the wings to fill the void, say attorneys at Polsinelli.
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The Post-Macquarie Securities Fraud-By-Omission Landscape
While the U.S. Supreme Court's 2024 opinion in Macquarie v. Moab distinguished inactionable "pure omissions" from actionable "half-truths," the line between the two concepts in practice is still unclear, presenting challenges for lower courts parsing statements that often fall within the gray area of "misleading by omission," say attorneys at Katten.
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AI Will Soon Transform The E-Discovery Industrial Complex
Todd Itami at Covington discusses how generative artificial intelligence will reshape the current e-discovery paradigm, replacing the blunt instrument of data handling with a laser scalpel of fully integrated enterprise solutions — after first making e-discovery processes technically and legally harder.
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When Innovation Overwhelms The Rule Of Law
In an era where technology is rapidly evolving and artificial intelligence is seemingly everywhere, it’s worth asking if the law — both substantive precedent and procedural rules — can keep up with the light speed of innovation, says Reuben Guttman at Guttman Buschner.
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What Compensation Committees Must Keep In Mind In 2025
New disclosure obligations, an evolving discussion on the analysis of executive perks and updated proxy adviser policies — on top of a new presidential administration — are all important things compensation committees must pay close attention to in 2025, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.
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The Future Of ALJs At NLRB And DOL Post-Jarkesy
In the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2024 Jarkesy ruling, several ongoing challenges to the constitutionality of the U.S. Department of Labor's and the National Labor Relations Board's administrative law judges have the potential to significantly shape the future of administrative tribunals, say attorneys at Wiley Rein.
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The Risk And Reward Of Federal Approach To AI Regulation
The government has struggled to keep up with artificial intelligence's furious pace, but while an overbroad federal attempt to adopt a more unified approach to regulating AI poses its own risks, so does the current environment of regulatory uncertainty, say attorneys at Covington.