
California Assemblymember Dawn Addis is championing AB 1159, a bill that would tighten privacy protections for K‑12 and college students by closing loopholes in the state’s 2014 education data law and restricting AI companies’ use of student information. The proposal expands coverage to a broader range of ed‑tech tools, including sports‑team apps like TeamSnap, and adds a private‑right of action for parents and students. Business groups such as the California Chamber of Commerce and TechNet, which together spent nearly $8 million on related lobbying, oppose the measure, arguing it could hinder investment in AI‑driven learning tools. The bill arrives amid a national debate over children’s data privacy and pending federal legislation targeting minors under 17.

Colombo & Hurd secured an O‑1B visa for a Dominican Republic audio engineer who won a Latin GRAMMY, achieving approval in three months via premium processing. The petition used an agent‑based sponsor to reflect the professional’s project‑based work across multiple...
Nordic Financials ASA disclosed that its Chief Investment Officer, Svend Egil Larsen, bought 25,851 shares through his wholly owned firm Selaco AS at NOK 1.6395 per share on 27 February. The acquisition raises Selaco AS’s holding to 2,631,000 shares, representing a substantial...

The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) has moved from taxing to dismantling Philippine offshore gaming operations (POGOs) by issuing a revenue memorandum circular that bans and declares all POGOs illegal, repealing the tax law that previously regulated them. This enforcement...

Monjur, a Texas‑based legal‑tech firm, launched Monjur Pilot, an AI‑powered legal assistant designed for managed service providers (MSPs). The solution combines large language models with a retrieval‑augmented generation (RAG) framework and a proprietary confidence‑scoring system to answer contract questions, redline...

Kilmar Abrego Garcia, an El Salvadorian granted withholding of removal, asked a Tennessee federal judge to dismiss human‑smuggling charges, alleging vindictive prosecution by the Department of Justice. After an unlawful, warrant‑less arrest and mistaken deportation, the Supreme Court ordered his return,...

The district court repeatedly denied Cortez L. Franklin's attempts to proceed without paying filing fees, first rejecting his in forma pauperis motion in August 2012 and ordering payment within 21 days. Subsequent petitions, including a habeas corpus request, were also...

The U.S. District Court dismissed Count 6 of the indictment against Doyle Glen Wilson without prejudice on November 13, 2025. Subsequent orders set a January 12 deadline for filing any motion challenging the voluntariness of Wilson’s statements, and granted the government’s motion in limine while denying...

Thailand's central bank introduced strict retail gold‑trading limits effective March 1, 2026. Individuals can now trade up to 50 million baht per day on each online platform, aiming to dampen speculative buying that has lifted the baht. The cap excludes USD‑denominated...

Bitcoin remains range‑bound around $60,000 while crypto volumes thin, leaving the market searching for a catalyst. JPMorgan argues that the pending U.S. Clarity Act could deliver the regulatory certainty needed to revive institutional interest. The bill would split oversight between...

UN human rights experts have urged the United Kingdom to ensure that the ongoing review of Equality Act 2010 guidance complies with international human‑rights standards and protects women, girls, and transgender people. Their call follows a 2025 Supreme Court ruling...

New York State’s Department of Environmental Conservation has amended Part 494 to require commercial property owners to register and report leakage of hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs). Large equipment (≥1,500 lb) must report annual leakage starting March 2026, medium‑size units (200‑1,499 lb) register by June 2026 with reporting...
Media Rights Capital (MRC) is suing insurer Fireman’s Fund for up to $100 million after the sixth season of *House of Cards* collapsed following Kevin Spacey’s departure. Spacey agreed to cooperate as a state’s witness, reducing his arbitration award to $1 million...

Apollo moon rocks remain U.S. government property, making their purchase or sale illegal under federal law. A 2002 theft of 8 kg of lunar material resulted in an eight‑year prison term, underscoring the seriousness of the offense. NASA’s Lunar Sample Laboratory...
Connecticut Senate Bill 117, titled An Act Concerning Breaches of Security Involving Electronic Personal Information, mandates that entities experiencing a massive data breach—defined as affecting at least 100,000 state residents—retain a qualified third‑party forensic examiner. The bill requires a detailed...

The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma dismissed Olupitan's federal claim against the University of Oklahoma and its Board of Regents, granting the defendants' motion to dismiss without prejudice. The court also declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction...

The Oklahoma district court has issued a series of rulings in Steadfast Insurance Company v. Medina Homes LLC. On September 2, 2025, Judge David L. Russell denied seven motions to dismiss filed by Medina Homes and nine filed by Crystal...

The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma issued an order in Singh v. Noem et al on February 26, 2026, setting procedural deadlines for the respondents. They must file an answer within 14 days or a pre‑answer...

On February 26, 2026, the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma filed case 26‑082, Hasanov v. Siegel et al. The docket is now publicly available through GovInfo, offering full citation details in Chicago, APA, MLA, and...

A U.S. District Court in Northern California issued a preliminary injunction preventing the USDA from withholding SNAP funding from 21 states and the District of Columbia after they refused to provide detailed recipient data. The judge found the states likely...

JPMorgan CFO Jeremy Barnum warned that interest‑bearing stablecoins are forming a "parallel banking system" that lacks the prudential safeguards of traditional deposits. Treasury estimates up to $6.6 trillion of bank deposits could be exposed if the regulatory loophole remains open. Lawmakers...
A federal judge in Oregon issued a preliminary injunction halting ICE's practice of arresting individuals without a warrant or a specific probable‑cause assessment of escape risk. The ruling finds a high likelihood that plaintiffs will succeed on claims ICE is...
A federal judge gave preliminary approval to a $299.5 million class‑action settlement that resolves claims Toyota falsified emissions tests on more than 272,000 gasoline and diesel forklifts. Eligible owners and lessees can file claims for payouts averaging $1,400‑$2,800 per unit, and...
The SEC announced new insider‑trade reporting rules for foreign private issuers, requiring executives to disclose purchases or sales within two business days, effective March 18, 2026. The mandate aligns foreign executive reporting with U.S. standards and fulfills a 2025 congressional...

Supabase, an open‑source Firebase alternative, has been blocked in India after the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology invoked Section 69A of the IT Act. The order, issued on Feb 24, has resulted in intermittent access across major ISPs, leaving developers unable...
San Francisco Superior Court clerks ended a two‑day strike after reaching a tentative agreement with court management. The deal includes concessions on cost‑of‑living adjustments, additional time off, and a pledged unit‑by‑unit approach to staffing and training. Union leaders say the...
Argentina’s Senate approved President Javier Milei’s Labor Modernization Act, a sweeping overhaul that lengthens the workday to 12 hours, cuts severance payouts, eases firing, and curtails union activity. The legislation aims to bring the country’s 40% informal workforce into the formal sector,...
U.S. District Judge John Tunheim issued a sweeping injunction that halts the Department of Homeland Security’s Operation PARRIS, which sought to arrest and detain roughly 5,600 Minnesota refugees who have not yet become permanent residents. The judge ruled the agency’s...

The U.S. Department of Labor issued a proposed rule reviving the 2021 “economic realities” test to determine independent‑contractor status, with comments due by April 28, 2026. The National Labor Relations Board removed the vacated 2023 joint‑employer text and reinstated the 2020 standard,...
A federal judge temporarily halted Virginia's 2025 law that caps minors' social‑media use at one hour per platform per day, citing First Amendment concerns. The law, which allows parental adjustments, also mandates age verification and out‑of‑state activity monitoring. NetChoice, representing...

Tether has frozen $3.5 billion of USDT linked to illicit activity since 2023, bringing the total frozen amount to $4.2 billion since the stablecoin’s launch. The company, which now has over $180 billion of USDT in circulation, can remotely lock tokens at law‑enforcement...
Level Legal’s partner Greg Moreman discussed the firm’s AI integration strategy on EDRM’s Illumination Zone podcast. He highlighted the need for defensible, outcome‑driven models and stressed that an expert human must remain in the loop. Moreman advised starting with small...

Georgia’s legal community is sounding alarms that the rule of law is under threat, citing a wave of judicial resignations, ongoing ethics investigations, and a perceived "illness" at the Department of Justice. A former DOJ anti‑corruption chief warned that the...
A 27‑year‑old man, Junwei Guo, appeared in federal court charged with a Class A misdemeanor for violating FAA airspace restrictions by flying a DJI Mavic Pro drone near Levi’s Stadium during a 49ers‑Rams NFL game. The temporary flight restriction prohibited...
Max Vance, a former Nuance Communications employee, admitted to illegally extracting protected health information from Geisinger Health System, affecting over 1.2 million patients. The breach continued after his termination, indicating he retained access to the provider’s network. Vance pleaded guilty in...
The FDA has classified Boston Scientific’s recall of certain Axios Stent and Electrocautery‑Enhanced Delivery Systems as a Class I recall, the agency’s most serious designation. The recall follows multiple reports of deployment and expansion failures during stent placement, resulting in...

Two California drivers have filed a lawsuit accusing Flock Safety of violating the state ALPR Privacy Act by allowing federal and out‑of‑state law‑enforcement agencies to query its automated license‑plate recognition data. The complaint cites more than 1.6 million out‑of‑state searches of...

Morgan Stanley has filed an application with the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to create a new federally chartered entity, Morgan Stanley Digital Trust, National Association, under a national trust bank charter. The charter would focus on...

Federal prosecutors announced they will not appeal Judge Margaret Garnett's dismissal of the death‑penalty charge against Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the UnitedHealthcare CEO murder. The judge ruled that the underlying stalking counts do not qualify as "crimes of violence,"...
The Department of Homeland Security settled a lawsuit with ICE detainees at New York's 26 Federal Plaza, agreeing to upgrade conditions, provide confidential attorney calls, and issue multilingual Notices of Rights. The agreement expands court oversight to the entire building,...

Virginia lawmakers have moved a bill that would prohibit businesses from selling precise geolocation data within a 1,750‑foot radius of a consumer. The House passed the measure unanimously, and the Senate, which already approved a near‑identical version, will consider it...
Former San Francisco Department of Building Inspection plan‑checker Rodolfo “Rudy” Pada was sentenced to 12 months and one day in federal prison for accepting more than $40,000 in bribes over a 14‑year span, plus additional payments while working for a...

The Fifth Circuit affirmed that oral consent satisfies the TCPA’s prior express consent requirement, holding that a customer’s provision of a phone number and lack of objection counts as valid consent for automated calls. The decision interprets “express consent” using...

Immigration lawyers in Canada launched the nonprofit AIMICI after discovering that Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has been using undisclosed automated decision‑making tools such as the Chinook summarisation system, machine‑learning triage, facial‑recognition and generative AI. The group aims to...

The Department of Labor has issued a proposal that would replace the Biden‑era “totality of the circumstances” test with a simpler “economic reality” test for determining independent‑contractor status. The change is aimed at easing the classification process for brokerage advisors,...
A federal court dismissed the International Longshoremen’s Association’s lawsuit claiming the Virginia Ports Authority violated national labor law by installing automated yard cranes without union notification. The VPA, which filed a motion to dismiss in October 2025, argued the union...

Coinbase’s VP of litigation, Ryan VanGrack, says state regulators are mischaracterizing federal law to block the firm’s new prediction‑market offerings launched with Kalshi. The company has filed lawsuits in Connecticut, Illinois, Michigan and Nevada after those states issued cease‑and‑desist letters...
Nyxoah SA disclosed that Robert Taub and his affiliated entity BMI Estate submitted a transparency notification after passively crossing the 10% voting‑rights threshold. The combined holdings amount to 4,360,800 voting rights, representing 9.99% of Nyxoah’s 43,662,403 total voting rights as...
Senator Todd Young introduced the Securing American Freight, Enforcement, and Reliability (SAFER) Transport Act to tackle freight fraud, theft, and safety on U.S. highways. The bill mandates a freight fraud advisory committee, eliminates MC numbers in favor of a single...

China's National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA) clarified that its new inventor‑information rules, effective Jan. 1 2026, obligate Chinese inventors to provide a national ID but do not require foreign inventors to submit passport or other ID numbers at the filing stage. The...