
When a company faces insolvency, directors can opt for voluntary liquidation, either a Members' Voluntary Liquidation (solvent) or a Creditors' Voluntary Liquidation (insolvent). The first step is appointing an experienced insolvency practitioner who halts trading, prepares a directors' report, and seeks creditor approval. Once approved, the liquidator sells assets in order of priority to settle debts, freeing directors from legal exposure. Acting early can prevent a compulsory winding‑up and preserve the directors' ability to start new ventures.

In early 2024, twelve self‑identified victims of Jeffrey Epstein filed a lawsuit against the FBI, alleging the agency failed to investigate and stop Epstein’s sex‑trafficking operation. The plaintiffs sought to proceed under pseudonyms, arguing privacy concerns. A federal judge dismissed...

Law firms are accelerating legal‑technology upgrades—from cloud migrations to cybersecurity—yet many lack the in‑house expertise to execute them. To bridge this gap, firms increasingly turn to IT staff augmentation, hiring external specialists on a flexible basis. This approach supplies the...

The FDA issued its fourth revision of draft biosimilar development guidance, allowing scientifically justified streamlining of pharmacokinetic (PK) studies and estimating up to a 50% cost reduction—about $20 million per program. The new guidance also expands the use of clinical data...
Harvey, the AI‑driven legal platform, has partnered with The LegalTech Fund (TLTF) to co‑invest in emerging legal‑technology startups. The collaboration will leverage TLTF’s deal pipeline and Harvey’s product expertise to streamline startup vetting and potentially create a marketplace akin to...
Avelo Airlines, fresh from ending its controversial ICE deportation contract, has been hit with a proposed $65,000 civil penalty from the FAA for failing to include ten flight attendants in its mandatory drug‑testing pool between April and November 2024. The...

The London High Court has dismissed the criminal case against Kneecap rapper Mo Chara (Liam Ó g Ó hAnnaidh), ruling that prosecutors failed to meet the six‑month deadline for issuing a written charge under the Terrorism Act 2000. The judges affirmed a lower‑court...
Los Angeles County’s Hotel Workers Protection Ordinance (HWPO) takes effect on April 1, 2026, with public housekeeping training requirements beginning October 1, 2026. The law mandates panic‑button devices for staff working alone, caps daily room‑cleaning workloads, and limits shifts to...

At Legalweek 2026, industry leaders debated whether generative AI is reshaping legal education or merely creating a new class of prompt engineers. The article argues that law schools and firms risk prioritizing AI fluency over fundamental legal reasoning. It warns...
The European Commission fined X €120 million for breaching the Digital Services Act, citing a deceptive blue verification badge, inadequate advertising‑transparency tools, and restricted researcher data access. The DSA classifies platforms with over 45 million EU users as very large online platforms...
The Trump administration announced that the Small Business Administration will prohibit foreign nationals from accessing any federal small‑business loan program, expanding a ban that previously covered only core loans. The new rule adds the Surety Bond program and the Microloan...

A federal judge has ruled that the U.S. Department of Transportation acted arbitrarily in trying to rescind approval for New York City’s congestion pricing program, allowing the toll system to remain in force. The decision keeps peak‑hour truck tolls at...

Litigation teams face mounting pressure from exploding data volumes, tighter deadlines, and heightened client expectations. Traditional case management tools, which only organize data, are increasingly inadequate for modern demands. A new category of AI-enabled case strategy software is emerging to...

The 2026 CrowdStrike Global Threat Report shows attackers leveraging generative AI to accelerate breach timelines, with average breakout time now just 29 minutes—a 65% increase in speed. AI‑enhanced reconnaissance, phishing, and automated evasion are compressing response windows, while identity compromise...

The UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has launched a consultation on granting indefinite recognition to CE‑marked medical devices in Great Britain. Around 90% of devices used in the UK already carry CE marks, and the proposals aim...
The SBA Office of Hearings and Appeals upheld the VA’s use of NAICS code 621512 – Diagnostic Imaging Centers – for a teleradiology contract, rejecting Tribal Providers’ push to reclassify it as 621111 – Offices of Physicians. The appellant failed to meet the pre‑ponderance‑of‑evidence burden...

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit claiming the Department of Public Safety illegally barred religious advertisements in the state Driver's Handbook. The handbook, however, contains no ads at all, and DPS confirmed it has never accepted advertising. Lacking...
Kurin, Inc. secured a victory in the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which affirmed a district‑court ruling that its Lock technology does not infringe Magnolia Medical Technologies' patents. The appellate decision removes legal uncertainty and validates...

Smartmatic has filed a motion to dismiss a superseding indictment that accuses its UK parent, SGO Corporation, of FCPA violations, money‑laundering and bribery linked to a 2025 Philippines election official. The indictment is notable as the first corporate FCPA criminal...

The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi to testify about the Department of Justice’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, citing missed deadlines and problematic redactions under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. DOJ failed to meet...
Federal judge in Sacramento sentenced Ari Lauer, the outside counsel for DC Solar, to more than 11 years in prison for his role in a $912 million Ponzi scheme. Lauer pleaded guilty to 23 counts, including bank and wire fraud, just...

The Reason podcast episode "Free Speech Unmuted" examines whether the FCC will revive a broad interpretation of the Equal Time Rule, potentially reshaping political broadcasting. Host Vy Nguyen and legal scholar Stuart Benjamin discuss if broadcast television should retain its...
McGuireWoods announced the addition of Gary Leung, former SEC Los Angeles regional director, and Jodi Lopez, a nationally recognized accountant and auditor defense lawyer, as partners in its Los Angeles office. The hires expand the firm’s securities enforcement and regulatory counseling capabilities....
Shareholder activism in life sciences has surged, with more than 320 public campaigns launched since 2020, driven by pre‑revenue business models and binary valuation tied to clinical milestones. Activists target roughly 75% of biotech firms that are still pre‑revenue, pressuring...
A federal jury in Pennsylvania convicted former Corsa Coal vice‑president Charles Hunter Hobson on two FCPA counts, conspiracy, money‑laundering and wire‑fraud charges, despite the 2025 Trump‑era pause on FCPA enforcement. The DOJ completed its review and proceeded, emphasizing that bribery...

The New Hampshire House approved the Countering Hate And Revolutionary Leftist Indoctrination in Education Act, known as the CHARLIE Act, which bars teachers from covering critical race theory, LGBTQ+ topics, and concepts deemed Marxist. The legislation also permits parents to...

Homeland Security Investigations raided Bright Future Healthier You, a Somali‑owned behavioral health firm in Lewiston, after a federal probe uncovered a multi‑million‑dollar Medicaid interpreter fraud and tax scheme. The company billed MaineCare for interpretation services, receiving about $15.58 million between 2019...

Finding a buyer for a small law firm is far more challenging than the industry narrative suggests. The market is immature, with most retiring boomers selling internally or to local competitors, while few listings appear on public platforms. Private‑equity interest...
A partial U.S. government shutdown that began in mid‑February has left the Treasury and most CFIUS offices funded, but the Department of Homeland Security’s involvement remains halted. CFIUS statutory deadlines are tolled, meaning approvals can be delayed, especially for transactions...

Georgia’s appellate courts have shifted their stance on Dispute Adjudication Boards (DABs). A 2021 decision invalidated multi‑tier dispute clauses that required a DAB before arbitration, deeming them void under Georgian law. In contrast, a 2025 ruling recognized DABs as legitimate...
U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced a new ACE‑based system to refund IEEPA tariffs within 45 days after a Court of International Trade ruling. The solution aggregates refunds by importer, bypassing the need to process each entry individually. Only about...

The EU Short‑Term Rental Regulation (EUSTRR) takes effect in May, creating a unified registration system and mandatory data‑sharing protocol for an estimated four million short‑term rental units across all 27 member states. While substantive rules such as caps or quotas...
The FCA has moved to a more selective enforcement model, aiming for “impactful deterrence” by concentrating on cases likely to succeed quickly. In the first half of 2025 it opened 23 new operations, with a notable emphasis on senior‑manager accountability...
Perma.cc offers a simple, library‑backed solution to the growing problem of link rot by creating permanent, unalterable snapshots of web pages for citation purposes. Users copy a URL, paste it into the platform, and receive a stable Perma Link that...
The Coalition for Independent Technology Research (CITR), joined by the Knight First Amendment Institute and Protect Democracy, filed a federal lawsuit challenging the U.S. government’s May 2025 Censorship Policy. The policy targets non‑citizen researchers, fact‑checkers, and trust‑and‑safety workers, threatening visa denials,...
Ed Martin, the former Trump‑appointed U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, is under disciplinary investigation by the D.C. Bar after sending a letter to Georgetown University Law Center that challenged its diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) policies. The grievance...
Fox is embroiled in a cross‑border trademark dispute in Mexico after a football broadcast blackout, leading to injunctions and mounting contempt fines. The Ninth Circuit is hearing an appeal that could restore the NFL’s $4.7 billion Sunday Ticket penalty. Disney is...

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is urging a Southern District of New York judge to quash DMCA subpoenas issued by the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society aimed at unmasking anonymous researcher J. Doe. Doe’s work, which uses fair‑use analysis of...

Legalweek 2026’s second day spotlighted two urgent priorities for law firms: fortifying data‑breach response plans and integrating next‑generation AI tools into practice. Panels emphasized proactive incident‑response playbooks, real‑time breach monitoring, and alignment with evolving privacy regulations. Parallel sessions tackled lawyer...

The Ninth Circuit vacated a summary‑judgment ruling in B.B. v. Capistrano Unified School District, holding that a first‑grader’s drawing containing the phrase “Black Lives Mater any life” is protected speech under the First Amendment. Applying the Tinker balancing test, the...

A Connecticut jury convicted journalist Paul Boyne on all counts of first‑degree and electronic stalking for a series of blog posts criticizing state judges. Prosecutors argued the posts formed a course of conduct intended to intimidate the judiciary, while the...
The article dissects Data Security Addenda (DSAs), highlighting how most vendor templates lack the structural completeness needed for real breach scenarios. It stresses that precise definitions of Customer Data and Security Incident are foundational, influencing every downstream obligation. The piece...

British MPs voted 307‑173 against an outright ban on under‑16s accessing social media in the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, but left the door open for future restrictions. The decision follows a wave of legislation in Australia, France and Spain...
Exxon Mobil announced plans to redomicile from New Jersey to Texas, citing protection from shareholder lawsuits. Nvidia revealed an open‑source AI‑agent platform, inviting partners like Salesforce and Cisco without mandating its chips. Goldman Sachs is marketing total‑return swaps and bespoke...

A federal judge in California ruled that Assembly Bill 2013, which requires generative AI developers to publish high‑level summaries of their training datasets, likely does not violate the First Amendment. The decision framed the disclosure requirement as a commercial‑speech regulation...

North Carolina’s strict contributory negligence rule bars any car‑accident recovery if a plaintiff is found even 1 percent at fault. Insurers and courts examine driver behavior—speed, signaling, lane position, and attention—to determine liability. The doctrine can nullify claims for medical bills,...
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms was drafted without explicit economic freedoms, leaving it largely ineffective as a tool for promoting interprovincial trade. Supreme Court decisions have narrowly interpreted Section 6(2)(b) as a limited right to work without residency, and...

Illinois District Judge David W. Dugan in Mueller v. City of East St. Louis ordered the defendants to produce complete compensation records and conduct a renewed, good‑faith search for electronic communications. The court imposed coercive sanctions of $100 per business...

The Texas Attorney General filed an opposition to Epic’s motion to dismiss, arguing that Epic cannot import federal summary‑judgment standards into a state‑court pleading under Texas Rule 91a. The brief emphasizes that Epic’s reliance on a patchwork of federal cases...

A U.S. federal judge ordered Chinese telecom firm Hytera Communications to pay $50 million after the company admitted conspiring to steal proprietary radio technology from Motorola Solutions. The judgment follows a civil lawsuit alleging that Hytera used former Motorola employees to...