• 11.21.17

    OCC’s Otting Confirmed: Another Former OneWest Executive Takes Reins

    On a largely party-line vote, the Senate has confirmed former OneWest president Joseph Otting as Comptroller of the Currency.

  • 11.21.17

    Fraud and Abuse 2017: Understanding Trends and Avoiding Actions

    Under the Trump administration, healthcare fraud will remain a key focus.

  • 11.21.17

    The Legality of Cost-Sharing Reduction Payments Under the ACA

    Health insurers may have experienced uncertainty in 2017 when they were setting 2018 rates for individual plans sold on federal and state exchanges pursuant to the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

  • 11.21.17

    Texas Medical Board Immune From Antitrust Suit

    In 2015, the Supreme Court injected great uncertainty into the operation of state medical boards with its ruling in North Carolina Board of Dental Examiners v. FTC, 135 S. Ct. 1101 (2015), that when a state board is controlled by active market participants, that entity must be actively supervised ...

  • 11.20.17

    Insider Trading: Once More Into the Breach

    On Aug. 23, 2017, the Second Circuit decided U.S. v. Martoma, in which the court affirmed a tippee’s conviction in an insider trading case based on the Supreme Court’s 2016 decision in Salman v. U.S. The Martoma opinion further eroded the Second Circuit’s own landmark 2014 ...

  • 11.16.17

    California Court Tosses Arbitration Agreement ‘Permeated’ by Unconscionability

    Concluding that an arbitration agreement was both substantively and procedurally unconscionable, a California appellate panel affirmed denial of an employer’s motion to compel arbitration.

  • 11.16.17

    SEC Provides Greater Deference to Public Company Boards

    On Nov. 1, 2017, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) issued Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14I(CF), which articulates important interpretive guidance relating to shareholder proposals submitted to public companies for inclusion in proxy statements.

  • 11.16.17

    Lawmakers Speak Out Against Ad Tax Changes

    Legislators are pushing back against a proposed alteration to the tax code that would—for the first time—change the treatment of advertising expenses.

  • 11.16.17

    Ninth Circuit: Let’s Talk About Comic-Con

    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed a protective order in the dispute over the “Comic-Con” trademark, finding that a prohibition on the defendants from discussing the case on social media was unconstitutional.

  • 11.16.17

    Keep It Concrete, Ad Groups Urge FTC

    In new comments filed in advance of a workshop on “informational injury,” a coalition of advertising groups encouraged the Federal Trade Commission to take action in cases involving privacy or data security issues only when consumers have suffered concrete injuries.

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