
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman introduced the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026 to ease compliance and de‑criminalise minor corporate offences by amending the Companies Act, 2013 and the LLP Act, 2008. The bill was sent to a joint parliamentary committee after a voice vote, while opposition members claimed it would dilute the mandatory 2 % CSR contribution—a charge the minister rejected, saying only net‑profit criteria change. The legislation also permits IFSC entities to keep books in foreign currencies, creates a trust‑to‑LLP conversion framework, and expands NFR Authority powers. It aims to streamline regulation for SMEs, start‑ups and one‑person companies.

Employers expanding globally face diverse restrictions on background checks. Criminal record inquiries are heavily limited, with many countries prohibiting access to spent convictions, while drug testing rules differ widely, often illegal in Europe and requiring consent elsewhere. Education verification remains...

AppalReD Legal Aid hosted a free disaster‑response clinic in eastern Kentucky to untangle heirs’ property titles that block FEMA assistance. Generations of informal land transfers have left many flood survivors unable to prove ownership, even after the 2022 and 2025...
Virginia’s legislature passed a bill that, starting in July, will block air‑quality permits for data centers unless their onsite generators meet federal Tier 4 emissions standards, reflecting growing community backlash over noise, pollution and water use. The measure, which originally required...

The Federal Communications Commission announced on March 24 that seven criminally convicted individuals who siphoned more than $14 million from the E‑Rate program will be barred from all Universal Service Fund (USF) initiatives for three years. The fraud, spanning 2010‑2016, involved...

The California Age‑Appropriate Design Code Act (CAADCA) faces ongoing constitutional challenges after NetChoice’s lawsuits. In March 2026 the Ninth Circuit ruled that the law’s broad coverage definition and age‑estimation requirement likely survive facial challenges, but found data‑use and dark‑pattern provisions unconstitutionally...

Seneca Mortgage Servicing sued Homespire Mortgage for refusing to fund a $376,147.06 Fannie Mae loan repurchase after a July 2025 put‑back notice. Seneca paid the agency on Homespire’s behalf in November 2025 and now seeks reimbursement, interest, and legal fees. The underlying...

French regulator Arcep has opened a public consultation on the future of the wholesale digital terrestrial television (DTT) market as broadband delivery gains ground. The review examines DTT’s competitive position, minimum coverage obligations and the impact of rising IPTV and...

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), enacted in 1974, still governs student data under paper‑based assumptions despite schools now operating in a fully digital environment. Recent high‑profile ed‑tech breaches have highlighted the law’s inability to address modern data‑security...

Mining giant Rio Zim has filed a High Court suit challenging the Ministry of Mines’ August 2025 cancellation of Special Grant No. 849 for the Sengwa coal fields. Rio Zim, which has spent over $5 million on exploration and feasibility studies, argues...
Lakia Jackson, 36, was sentenced to 60 months in federal prison for a Medicaid fraud scheme that siphoned $2.66 million intended for at‑risk pregnant women and young children in Wisconsin. She pleaded guilty to healthcare fraud and aggravated identity theft after...

Pay transparency regulations are accelerating, with 16 U.S. states and Washington, D.C. already enacting laws and the EU Pay Transparency Directive set to take effect in June. Mercer’s research shows 81% of U.S. firms have begun a transparency strategy, yet...

A Washington man was awarded a $10 million jury verdict after emergency‑department physicians ordered the wrong imaging study, delaying treatment of a spinal epidural abscess. The misstep resulted in a 17‑hour wait, during which his paralysis progressed and became permanent. The...

Alan Moses argues that the heated debate over restricting jury trials distracts from the urgent crisis of an 80,000‑case criminal backlog in UK courts. He critiques the Leveson proposal to replace juries with bench divisions for lesser offences, suggesting it...
Vanta unveiled a new suite of automation tools aimed at streamlining enterprise compliance and privacy management. The offering introduces three context‑aware agents—Compliance, Third‑party Risk Management, and Customer Trust—that continuously monitor evidence, assess vendor risk, and automate security query responses. New...

A cross‑party parliamentary roundtable warned that non‑disclosure agreements (NDAs) are being misused to conceal workplace harassment and discrimination, eroding trust and accountability. While NDAs can have legitimate uses, evidence showed 79% of employees who report misconduct face retaliation and 43%...
California Coast Credit Union CEO Todd Lane is embroiled in a rare, combative merger dispute with San Diego County Credit Union (SDCCU). After SDCCU attempted to renegotiate the April 2025 deal and install its own CEO, Cal Coast sued, alleging breach of the...
Loan officer couple Ashley and Christopher Hoehn have filed a federal lawsuit against former employer Stockton Mortgage, alleging the company used forensic tools to scrape their private Gmail messages from company laptops. The suit adds a computer‑fraud claim to an...
The SEC, together with the CFTC, released guidance that categorizes digital assets into five groups, clarifying that only digital securities are subject to securities law. This move comes as Congress wrestles with market‑structure legislation, with the Senate’s bills delayed over...

The UK government is eager to regulate stablecoins, but Scotland already operates a stable‑coin regime through its own banknotes. Issued by three commercial banks, Scottish notes circulate as legal currency backed by assets, and the Banking Act 2009’s definition allows them...

The UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has repeatedly postponed a ruling on its public‑cloud market investigation, allowing existing Crown Commercial Service contracts with Microsoft to continue unchecked. As a result, public‑sector bodies remain tied to costly, long‑term licences that...

Law firms that still rely on web portals are falling behind as clients demand instant, mobile‑first onboarding. Checkboard’s app‑based solution consolidates AML, source‑of‑funds, biometric ID and payment steps into a single workflow, eliminating fragmented links. The unified mobile experience drives...

Meta Platforms is being sued over its 2025 layoff round, which the plaintiff alleges disproportionately targeted employees aged 40 and older. Former senior director Nicolas Franchet claims he was given a low performance rating to justify his termination, resulting in...

Greek rail services were suspended for a 24‑hour strike as the trial for the February 2023 Tempi disaster began. The trial, expected to last at least two years, will hear from over 350 witnesses and prosecute 36 railway officials for...

In December 2023 a Moscow court sentenced poet Artyom Kamadarin to seven years and poet Yegor Shtovba to five and a half years for reciting anti‑war verses. The convictions rely on Articles 282(2)(v) and 280.4(3) of Russia’s Criminal Code, which...

A federal indictment alleges Super Micro executives facilitated moving Nvidia AI chips to China, prompting co‑founder Yih‑Shyan Liaw's resignation. The case highlights the clash between soaring AI hardware demand, tightening export controls, and supply‑chain integrity. Analysts warn that reliance on...

Senior paralegal Gemma Clarke, formerly of Knights, was barred by the Solicitors Regulation Authority after convictions for two stalking offences and criminal damage valued under £5,000 (≈$6,250). The convictions occurred on May 1 and September 16, 2024, and the SRA cited breaches of...

Hong Kong police have been granted new powers under amended National Security Law provisions to demand passwords from individuals suspected of security offences. Refusal to comply can result in up to one year in jail and a fine of roughly...

Ghana announced a new policy that will block any Ghana Card linked to multiple mobile‑money (MoMo) fraud cases, effectively cutting offenders off from telecom services and public digital platforms. The move follows a surge in fraud, with the Bank of...

RegScale, a continuous controls monitoring platform, has been included in Gartner’s 2026 Market Guide for DevOps Continuous Compliance Automation Tools. The inclusion highlights growing enterprise demand for automated, AI‑driven compliance embedded directly in CI/CD pipelines. Gartner forecasts that by 2028,...
Controversial radio host Kyle Sandilands has filed a Federal Court claim seeking to overturn ARN's termination of his $100 million (≈$66 million) KI & S contract. The filing reveals a $7.4 million (≈$4.9 million) base salary, $120,000 (≈$79,000) flight allowance, $500,000 (≈$330,000) advertising budget and $2 million...

Blackpool Council has intensified its selective licensing scheme, requiring landlords of roughly 9,000 private‑rented homes to obtain a licence or face prosecution and fines. More than half of the properties have already registered, and 30% meet the council’s higher “Blackpool...
Mumbai International has filed a petition in court demanding repayment of approximately $92 million owed by the insolvent Jet Airways. The claim comes as the airline’s liquidator continues to manage asset sales, including pending auctions of Boeing 777‑300ERs and the transfer...
Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will introduce the Finance Bill 2026 and the Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill 2026 in the Lok Sabha during the second phase of the budget session. The Finance Bill will operationalise the government’s fiscal proposals for FY 2026‑27, while...
The FDA’s National Priority Voucher (CNPV) program, launched in June 2025, promises to cut drug review times from 10‑12 months to just one or two months for products that meet defined national priorities. Early successes include Johnson & Johnson’s Tecvayli/Darzalex...
Google Australia has put its proposed $20 billion data‑centre programme on hold, citing fears that the projects could be deemed a permanent establishment and subject to Australia’s 30% corporate tax rate. The pause follows a decline in the subsidiary’s effective tax...
The Victorian Essential Services Commission has accepted its first court‑enforceable undertaking against Ecovantage, mandating the company to correct non‑compliant heat‑pump water‑heater installations at its own expense. The regulator alleges Ecovantage claimed up to 31,666 energy‑efficiency certificates for upgrades that violated...

Mayor Mamdani’s administration convened the first Citywide Junk Fees Task Force on March 18, 2026, following Executive Orders 9 and 10 that target hidden consumer charges. Ten city agencies gathered at City Hall to coordinate data sharing, enforcement plans, and policy development aimed at...
A new webcast reviews recent federal court rulings that finally reach a hearing on workplace discrimination, delivering practical guidance for employers. It dissects how judges interpret statutes across direct and indirect discrimination, disability accommodations, age, race, and sexual harassment. The...

The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has launched a review of commercial TV alcohol advertising rules, focusing on placements alongside sports broadcasts. The consultation, which runs until 30 April 2026, examines Code of Practice sections 6.2 and 8 that define permissible...

Family violence protection orders help over 100,000 Australians each year by legally restricting abusive partners and providing a deterrent through criminal penalties for breaches. While they can reduce repeat violence, the system is fragmented across states, with inconsistent definitions, durations,...

The UK legal market is entering a historic transformation driven by consultant‑led and platform models, a surge in alternative business structures, and a wave of private‑equity investment totaling roughly £1.2 bn over five years. Remote‑work trends have accelerated the rise of...

California’s privacy law now mandates written risk assessments for any activity that constitutes a “sale” of personal data and presents a significant risk, including behavioral‑advertising cookies, sensitive data processing, and high‑risk automated decision‑making. The final CCPA regulations, released in September 2025,...

The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) apologised for a prolonged delay in sending correspondence to Linda Lu, a solicitor serving a five‑and‑half‑year prison term for stalking. The regulator’s letter, intended to facilitate Lu's response to allegations, arrived only in mid‑March despite...

The Legal Ombudsman released its third set of public‑interest decisions, naming eight law firms for serious service failures that left clients with financial loss and emotional distress. Notable cases include KMC Legal’s failure to redeem a mortgage, Irwin Mitchell’s unauthorised cost...

The High Court dismissed Clyde & Co’s attempt to block senior lawyer Abhimanyu Jalan from pursuing a Dubai Labour Court claim over a £300,000 bonus, calling the firm’s conduct “disproportionately aggressive” and bordering on bullying. The judge held that the Dubai...

High Court deputy judge Master Kaye ruled that the now‑defunct law firm Ewan & Co improperly paid out £2.5 million of client money and forged client signatures in connection with NRD Property’s Kent development. The firm breached trust and retainer obligations, must account...

A UK employment tribunal ruled that Lidl unfairly dismissed deputy store manager Ryan Toghill, who has ADHD and associated rejection sensitivity, awarding him £45,150 (approximately $57,000). The tribunal found Lidl failed to make reasonable adjustments during the disciplinary process, despite...
Dentons partner Paul O'Halloran will host a pre‑recorded webcast on appealing Fair Work Commission (FWC) decisions, offering a fireside‑style discussion with HR Daily editor Jo Knox. The session covers eligibility criteria, the public‑interest test, evidence preparation, hearing formats, cost orders,...