Litigation boutique Dunn Isaacson Rhee is dropping special bonuses for its associates just past the firm’s one-year anniversary. https://t.co/BeD5z201Wf
Industry groups are warning California’s top privacy regulator against imposing new rules governing data policy notices and employee data collection, arguing that businesses are already struggling to comply with the state’s rapidly changing requirements. https://t.co/Bkna0CmlP9
Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-Ga.) is drafting articles of impeachment against a federal judge whom a judiciary panel found had sex with a police officer in chambers and improperly attended a political event, he said in a social media post. https://t.co/Q15Y6X2Umz
Trump attorney general pick Todd Blanche heads into a Senate confirmation test facing an already-strained relationship between the Justice Department and Capitol Hill. https://t.co/qUVhppYQxg
House Republicans proposed a 27% funding decrease for the Labor Department, mirroring much of the Trump administration’s wish list. https://t.co/7jGwRHiWJZ
President Trump signed an executive order Wednesday stripping job security from nearly 8,000 federal positions, expanding his authority to fire career employees who work on policy matters and accelerating a civil-service overhaul. https://t.co/s2IpLRV6si
The country’s largest federal appeals court sanctioned and suspended two attorneys who failed to disclose inaccuracies in their legal briefs came from generative AI hallucinations. https://t.co/QZ5Qo4TIzn
Lawyers for Texas and the US Justice Department didn’t directly address claims of collusion during an appellate argument over their settlement that ended an in-state tuition program for migrant students. https://t.co/hSSWO5Ud9u
West Virginia must defend a class action seeking to reform its foster care system, which allegedly has overlooked children’s individual needs and permitted abuse and neglect, a federal appeals court said for the second time. https://t.co/wtFn9y249L
The NAACP has reignited a landmark lawsuit over pandemic-era mail-in ballot handling in an effort to prevent the Trump administration from altering rules that could impact how millions of voters cast their ballots. https://t.co/rSOdqs42Pz
The Supreme Court raised the bar for branded pharmaceutical companies seeking to sue over competitor’s generic versions of their drugs marketed using what’s called a skinny label. https://t.co/ilCnfvMnsf
Regulations the EPA is crafting to reduce unreasonable chemical risks are behind schedule, but when they come, the plans are expected to ban fewer uses of chemicals than previous regulations did. https://t.co/GgwOUglUne
Opinion: Kirkland & Ellis's $500 million investment in AI isn’t likely to translate to a fundamental change in its business model—or in the Big Law model generally—that will lead to immediate client discounts, Baretz + Brunelle's Casey Flaherty says. https://t.co/qpuUsZMsTP
The Trump administration’s nominee to become the critical third Republican member of the National Labor Relations Board will get a Senate hearing June 10, a necessary step toward unlocking the GOP majority’s ability to change board precedents. https://t.co/pU2KFbso3Y
Opinion: Kirkland & Ellis’ plan for a $500 million AI spend is a preview of where the legal market is headed: A world where only the largest firms can self-finance the technology that will define competitive advantage. https://t.co/1Z1uw3zsOX
Opinion: Representative Jay Obernolte and Lori Trahan explain why they're releasing a bipartisan discussion draft of the Great American Artificial Intelligence Act, a policy for a technology this transformative. https://t.co/wxk9WMHthM
A reported drop in patent infringement filings from early 2025 to early 2026 was unexpected, given improving conditions for patent enforcement. https://t.co/14JwlDiU5n
Opinion: The thousands of criminal cases that the Justice Department quietly closed last year can be reopened at any time, so defendants should use the reprieve to plan a legal strategy. https://t.co/yBzOdTid7y
A dispute over the destruction of a nearly 30-year-old mural in downtown Dallas ahead of the FIFA World Cup is bringing to light a law at the intersection of intellectual property and real estate rights. https://t.co/BUa0mvRV30