
On 2 March 2026 the German Federal Court of Justice heard oral arguments in two tort‑law actions brought by the NGO Deutsche Umwelthilfe against BMW and Mercedes‑Benz, seeking injunctions to stop sales of combustion‑engine cars after 2030. The claim invokes §§1004(1) and 823(1) BGB, linking the constitutional “general right to personality” with an alleged “right to greenhouse‑gas‑related freedom” derived from the 2021 constitutional climate judgment. The court must decide whether private courts can allocate CO2‑budget responsibilities and treat manufacturers as “disturbers” under civil law, a question that could set precedent for climate litigation in Germany and beyond. A ruling is expected on 23 March 2026.

SEC’s Corporate Finance division released a batch of new and revised Compliance Disclosure Interpretations (CDIs) on Friday, primarily addressing Rule 701. The most notable change raises the exemption threshold from $5 million to $10 million, and several CDIs were updated without detailed redlines....
KLM is facing legal action in the Netherlands over its “Real Deal Days” promotions, which consumer watchdogs allege were deceptive. Data shows fares to destinations like Curaçao and London dropped significantly after the sales ended, suggesting prices were inflated beforehand....

Georgia lawmakers are on the brink of enacting Senate Bill 542, which would criminalize sexual exploitation by clergy members who abuse their spiritual authority. The bill adds clergy to the list of offenders eligible for "improper sexual contact" charges, carrying...

A federal court in New York dismissed SUNY Fredonia's motion to dismiss a lawsuit by philosophy professor Stephen Kershnar, ruling his controversial podcast remarks on adult‑child sexual consent are presumptively protected by the First Amendment. The judge applied the Pickering...
The FCC is set to vote on rules that would curb overseas customer service for ISPs, cable and cellular carriers, encouraging onshoring of call‑center jobs. Proposed measures include English‑proficiency standards, mandatory location disclosure, a right to transfer to U.S. agents,...

The Australasian Association of Private International Law (AAPrIL) has opened registration for its 2026 conference in Sydney on 16‑17 April. The two‑day event will be hosted at Ashurst Lawyers, Martin Place, and features panels on jurisdiction, digitalisation, regional cooperation, arbitration, and applicable...

Clio has introduced Clio Capital, a financing program that offers law firms using its practice‑management software pre‑qualified working capital. Launched on Feb. 26, the service embeds a fast, low‑friction application directly within the Clio platform, bypassing traditional loan paperwork. Eligible firms...

The Without Limitation podcast released an episode featuring Richard Tromans, the founder of Artificial Lawyer, discussing how the legal‑tech site launched in 2016. Hosted by Matt Pollins, co‑founder of Lupl, the conversation delves into the transformative effects of legal AI,...

The Harare High Court temporarily halted the Environmental Management Agency’s stop order against TN Gold’s Arcturus Mine, granting interim relief while the regulator’s appeal proceeds. Justice Maxwell Takuva ruled that shutting down the Ceylone Open Pit could cause water buildup...
GenieAI launched Eidetic Intelligence, a patent‑pending AI architecture built specifically for legal work. In internal tests the system achieved 90% accuracy on simulated risk assessments, outpacing all other large language model providers. The platform layers deterministic state‑machine workflows, quality‑gated validators,...

Legal AI can generate polished, English‑centric answers that appear credible but often miss jurisdiction‑specific nuances, especially in multilingual or cross‑border contexts. The underlying foundation models lack the structured, comparative legal knowledge needed to recognize non‑equivalence, leading to subtly incorrect advice....

Artificial intelligence is already being deployed in arbitration for document review, evidence organization, and drafting, offering speed and cost savings. Yet the rapid adoption outpaces regulatory guidance, with South African bodies issuing only soft guidelines and international rules lagging behind....

A federal judge dismissed the lawsuit of Any Lucia López Belloza, a Babson College freshman who was wrongfully deported after the government admitted its mistake. The dismissal hinged on Belloza's decision to refuse a government‑offered flight back from Honduras, causing...

Bard College’s Board of Trustees has hired an external law firm to conduct an independent review of communications between President Leon Botstein and convicted donor Jeffrey Epstein after the DOJ released related emails. Botstein maintains that Epstein was only a...

The UK Charity Commission is under fire for allegedly failing to investigate thirty charities and community centres with ties to the Iranian regime, citing fear of racism accusations. A recent court ruling dismissed the Commission’s attempt to judicially review the...
The article warns that the rapid rise of banking‑as‑a‑service (BaaS) is reshaping the traditional bank‑IT outsourcing model by having fintech firms outsource core banking functions to partner banks. While BaaS promises faster, cheaper digital experiences, it operates in a regulatory...
In 2025 the DOJ Criminal Division overhauled its white‑collar enforcement strategy, issuing a White Collar Enforcement Plan that identifies ten high‑impact priority areas—from government fraud and customs evasion to digital‑asset crime. The Department also revised the Corporate Enforcement and Voluntary...
A federal sentencing hearing for United States v. Thomas C. Goldstein has been set for Tuesday, June 16, 2026, following a scheduling order issued by the Maryland district court on Friday. The case, which has attracted attention amid a wave...

The Second Circuit affirmed New York’s unauthorized practice of law (UPL) statutes, ruling they are content‑neutral and therefore subject only to intermediate scrutiny. The court held that the licensing requirement for anyone giving individualized legal advice is narrowly tailored to...
Legal‑tech vendors are unveiling a flurry of product upgrades and funding announcements ahead of Legalweek 2026. DISCO introduced an all‑inclusive e‑discovery platform with transparent per‑gigabyte pricing, while Advocacy emerged from stealth with a $3.5 million seed round for its context‑first litigation...

The Good Law Project (GLP) has lodged an appeal against the High Court’s dismissal of its challenge to the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s (EHRC) interim guidance on trans‑inclusive single‑sex facilities. The court affirmed that the guidance correctly interpreted the...

Legal tech vendors are flooding the market with new announcements ahead of Legalweek 2026 in New York. DISCO, Advocacy, iManage, Monjur, Reveal, ChronoTracer and ALIGN each revealed product upgrades, AI‑driven platforms, and fresh funding. Highlights include DISCO’s AI evidence analysis,...

Paramount Global agreed to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery in a $110 billion deal, one of the largest media mergers in recent memory. The transaction arrives amid slowing subscriber growth and rising content costs, prompting heightened scrutiny from U.S. federal, state and...
The article explains how Canada’s Constitution splits legislative authority over trade between federal and provincial governments, limiting the ability to enact nationwide regulatory or deregulatory standards. It reviews key Supreme Court decisions that have narrowed the federal trade‑and‑commerce power, especially...
J. Emmett Murphy has rejoined King & Spalding as a partner in its Business Litigation practice in New York. He returns from the SEC, where he served as a senior trial attorney in the Division of Enforcement since 2023. Murphy’s...
Wall Street’s two primary regulators, the SEC and the CFTC, are evaluating a joint move into a single building complex near the U.S. Capitol, adjacent to Union Station where the SEC currently resides. The proposal does not involve merging the...

A federal prosecutor in North Carolina is accused of inserting fabricated quotations and misstatements of case law into multiple court filings in the Fivehouse v. Department of Defense litigation. The alleged fabrications involve citations to Fourth Circuit decisions and regulatory...

In the past 24 hours the United States saw a federal conviction of an Iran‑linked assassination plot targeting top political figures, a non‑citizen charged with illegal voting, a joint U.S.–Ecuador operation against narco‑terror networks, President Trump urging defense contractors to...

Federal regulators, led by the SEC, are cracking down on “AI washing,” where firms exaggerate or falsify AI capabilities in investor communications. Recent enforcement actions cite violations of the Securities Act of 1933, the Exchange Act of 1934, and Rule 10b‑5...

California’s at‑will employment rule is a legal starting point, not a free‑hand termination license. Employers who issue offer letters, handbooks, or verbal assurances can unintentionally create contracts that override the presumption. The state’s expanding protected‑class statutes and the new SB 497...

The Department of Justice’s autopen investigation, launched by the Trump‑aligned DOJ, has reportedly hit a procedural snag, raising concerns about its viability. Sources indicate that the probe, overseen by D.C. U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s office, is stalled amid internal disagreements...
A Sheraton Atlanta Perimeter North manager refused a guest’s reservation because she arrived with a service dog, citing the hotel’s "no pets" policy. Police intervened, pointing out that the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires public accommodations to accept legitimate...

The California Court of Appeal upheld a family‑court order that relied on two nonexistent cases, *Marriage of Twigg* and *Marriage of Teegarden*. The order was drafted by the appellant’s counsel, who failed to verify the citations, while the opposing attorney...

The article argues that the 14th Amendment’s birthright citizenship guarantee depends on both being born on U.S. soil and being “under the flag,” meaning subject to American jurisdiction. It explains that historic exceptions—diplomats, foreign‑flagged vessels, occupied territories, and tribal lands—are...

The EEOC issued new guidance allowing federal agencies to consider an employee’s social‑media activity when evaluating telework as a reasonable accommodation under the Rehabilitation Act. The agency stresses that such evidence cannot replace medical documentation or the interactive process, but...

The FTC under new chair Andrew Ferguson quickly overturned Lina Khan’s condition that barred Scott Sheffield from Exxon’s board after the agency’s 2024 investigation into alleged price‑fixing between U.S. shale producers and OPEC. The reversal came just as a Middle‑East...

Compliance leaders must shift from reacting to employee training requests to proactively upskilling their entire team. The article stresses evaluating each member's development needs and directing budget toward targeted learning, such as conferences, podcasts, and mentorships. It highlights that interpersonal...

Colorado Democrats introduced HB 26-1281, a bill that would require a homicide to involve at least two victims before prosecutors can pursue a first‑degree murder charge. Under the proposal, a single‑victim killing would be downgraded to second‑degree murder, with narrow...
The GAO sustained a protest by Moorish‑Wallace Construction, finding that E.C. Korneffel Co.'s failure to acknowledge a third amendment to an Army IFB was a material defect. The amendment increased the steel pile cap size and weight, changing performance requirements...
A homeowner asks about accessory dwelling unit (ADU) regulations, costs, and resale potential. Local rules impose no extra parking requirements and allow up to two stories, though taller structures are discouraged. Building a basic ADU starts around $200,000, but adding...

The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in Bruce v. Adams and Reese that the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act (EFAA) bars arbitration of an entire case when any claim involves sexual harassment or assault....

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration Administrator Derek D. Barrs announced a sweeping enforcement push at the Truckload Carrier Association convention, targeting fraud, unsafe operations, and regulatory loopholes. The agency is purging shell carriers, removing over 7,000 dubious CDL schools, and...

Russia is drafting separate legislation for stablecoins, highlighting their "colossal potential" for cross‑border payments amid sanctions. The Bank of Russia proposes allowing banks and brokerages to operate crypto exchanges under existing licenses, with a simplified notification process and a 1%...

In 2024 Louisiana enacted a statute requiring every public‑school classroom to display the Ten Commandments with a historical disclaimer. Parents sued, arguing the mandate violates the Establishment Clause under *Stone v. Graham*; a district court issued a preliminary injunction and...

Senior litigation support manager Shannon Lex Bales argues that entrenched firm structures, not technology, are the primary obstacle to legal innovation. She notes that breakthroughs typically emerge when organizations adopt flexible processes, empower support staff, and align leadership with tech...

EDRM CEO Mary Mack says AI is reshaping e‑discovery, but clients now value trust and reliability more than price. She notes that outcomes and long‑term relationships have become the primary purchasing criteria. Mack highlighted EDRM’s focus on transparent AI models...

Litigation startup Advocacy announced a $3.5 million seed investment backed by law firm Fenwick & West, legal‑tech pioneer Relativity Labs, and a consortium of Big Law, boutique firms, and law‑school investors. The capital will accelerate development of its cloud‑based platform that...

On March 12, 2026, the European Law Institute will host a webinar to present its newly approved report “Enhancing Child Protection: Private International Law on Filiation and the European Commission’s Proposal COM/2022/695.” The report, led by Dr. Ilaria Pretelli and...

In late January, VC Zurn denied a temporary restraining order seeking to block the Fifth Third‑Comerica merger, rejecting the plaintiff’s claims under both Unocal fiduciary standards and Delaware General Corporation Law §141(a). The plaintiff contended that the merger’s “no‑shop” provisions violated...