A newsletter by Reuters and Westlaw |
|
| REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration |
Today, Google and the DOJ are scheduled to deliver closing arguments in a historic antitrust case. The outcome of the case could fundamentally reshape the internet by unseating Google as the go-to portal for information online. Here's what to know: |
|
| - There will be a hearing in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, in the Google adtech antitrust case.
- U.S. District Judge Adam Abelson in Baltimore will hold a motion hearing in a lawsuit accusing the EPA of unlawfully canceling $180 million in grants over DEI concerns.
- William Duplessie, one of the men charged in the Soho crypto kidnapping case, is due to make a preliminary appearance in Manhattan criminal court.
|
Court calendars are subject to last-minute docket changes. |
|
|
- Novo Nordisk is facing a request for hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorney fees after a judge dismissed its lawsuit against a Florida pharmacy for selling products containing semaglutide, the active ingredient in its blockbuster weight-loss and diabetes drugs Wegovy and Ozempic. Read this week's Billable Hours.
- Moves: Former FDA lawyer Laura Akowuah moved to Cooley … Clark Hill added three oil & gas litigators in Pittsburgh.
|
|
|
That's the tuition revenue generated by the LL.M. program at Harvard, which could be at risk if courts uphold Trump's ban on international students from enrolling at the university. Read more. |
|
|
"Unfortunately, the ABA no longer functions as a fair arbiter of nominees' qualifications, and its ratings invariably and demonstrably favor nominees put forth by Democratic administrations."
|
—U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi in a letter to ABA President William Bay informing him that the DOJ will no longer allow the ABA to vet President Trump's judicial nominees, hobbling its decades-old practice of rating candidates for life-tenured positions on the bench. Read the letter. |
|
|
- PepsiCo won the dismissal of a lawsuit by a former executive that said the company defrauded and defamed him by denying that he invented Flamin' Hot Cheetos. Read the decision.
- A federal jury found that Intel may have a license to patents owned by VLSI Technology, boosting Intel's efforts to overturn patent infringement verdicts that awarded VLSI more than $3 billion in damages.
- Chobani escaped a proposed class action over claims its "Chobani Zero Sugar" yogurt actually contains sugar. A federal judge found that its labeling met FDA requirements. Read more.
- Express Scripts sued to block a new Arkansas law that would ban pharmacy benefit managers like the company from owning pharmacies, claiming the law puts an unconstitutional restriction on interstate commerce.
|
|
|
At first glance, an obscure provision tucked into the sweeping tax and immigration bill passed by the House last week limiting the authority of federal judges to enforce contempt sanctions might look to some like a free pass for Trump administration officials to defy injunctions. On closer inspection, though, those worries may be overblown, Jenna Greene writes in On the Case. Still, the provision, should it become law, could wreak havoc in unexpected ways. |
|
|
Bethany Simmons and Noah Weingarten of Loeb & Loeb look at a recent bankruptcy court decision that added to a long-standing circuit split over who owns alter ego claims. Read today's Attorney Analysis. |
Additional writing by Shruthi Krishnamurthy. |
|
|
The Daily Docket is sent 5 days a week. Think your friend or colleague should know about us? Forward this newsletter to them. They can also sign up here. Want to stop receiving this email? Unsubscribe here. To manage which newsletters you're signed up for, click here. This email includes limited tracking for Reuters to understand whether you've engaged with its contents. For more information on how we process your personal information and your rights, please see our Privacy Statement. Terms & Conditions |
|
|
|
0 comentários:
Postar um comentário