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Life Sciences
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May 29, 2026
Illumina Ducks DNA Sequence Rival's Antitrust Suit, For Now
A DNA sequencing startup will have to rejigger its antitrust lawsuit against Illumina after a California federal judge said it hasn't shown that the industry giant has entered exclusive agreements and hasn't adequately asserted that Illumina priced its offerings below cost, among other failings.
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May 29, 2026
Justices Told USPTO's 'Settled Expectations' Rule Flouts Law
A host of industry groups, professors, attorneys and more urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday to take up Google's appeal arguing that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office has exceeded its authority by using the age of patents as a reason to refuse to review them.
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May 29, 2026
Ohio AG Says Cigna Can't Use Sherman Act To Ax State Case
The Ohio attorney general has urged a federal judge not to dismiss prescription drug price-fixing claims against Express Scripts, its Cigna parent and fellow pharmacy benefit manager Prime Therapeutics, arguing the companies are trying to fight his state law antitrust claims by invoking federal law standards that do not apply.
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May 29, 2026
Consulting Co. Says Ex-Owner Failed To Fulfill Sales Duties
A Colorado paleontology and cultural resources consulting company sued a former managing partner in state court, alleging he failed to generate sales after receiving approximately $208,100 in guaranteed payments and later left to work for a direct competitor.
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May 29, 2026
Blood Test Lab Owner Gets 4 Years For $11M Tax Evasion
The owner of a blood-testing laboratory was sentenced to more than four years in federal prison after evading $11.2 million in taxes by using an accomplice to illegally collect Medicare reimbursements made to the company, California federal prosecutors said.
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May 29, 2026
Full 4th Circ. To Rethink W.Va., Md. 340B Drug Discount Laws
The full Fourth Circuit will revisit two panel decisions that created a circuit split when they temporarily blocked a pair of state laws that barred drugmakers from prohibiting federally funded hospitals from contracting with an unlimited number of pharmacies to dispense discounted drugs in the 340B Drug Pricing Program.
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May 29, 2026
DOJ Final Rule On Medical Pot Comes Under New Challenge
A Trump administration rule loosening federal restrictions on state-sanctioned medical marijuana has been hit with another legal challenge in D.C. Circuit Court, initiated Thursday by a coalition of interests alleging they will be adversely impacted by the policy shift.
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May 29, 2026
Taxation With Representation: Latham, White & Case, Vischer
In this week's Taxation With Representation, Fertitta Entertainment acquires Caesars Entertainment, Eli Lilly and Co. buys three companies involved in vaccine development, and nuclear energy company Newcleo Ltd. says it plans to go public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company, NewHold Investment Corp. III.
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May 29, 2026
UnitedHealthcare Defrauded Mass. Of $100M, AG Says
UnitedHealthcare's "growth at all costs strategy" led the insurer's Massachusetts subsidiary to overcharge the state by more than $100 million by exaggerating the medical conditions and needs of seniors, the state's attorney general said in a Friday lawsuit.
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May 28, 2026
Calif. AG Sues 23andMe Over Lapses In Genetic Data Security
California moved Thursday to sue the genetic testing company formerly known as 23andMe over a 2023 data breach that exposed the personal information of nearly 7 million customers, arguing that the company failed to implement even the most basic security measures and misled consumers about the scope of its safeguards and severity of the breach.
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May 28, 2026
WHO 'Changed The Rule' To Find Talc-Cancer Link, Jury Told
A Johns Hopkins epidemiologist told a California jury Thursday considering bellwether claims that Johnson & Johnson's talc products caused deadly ovarian cancer in three women that a World Health Organization agency's recent reclassification of talc as being probably carcinogenic only came about because it "changed the rule" over what evidence it considered.
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May 28, 2026
Trans Patients Say Stanford Can't Give DOJ Medical Records
A group of transgender adolescents who received gender-related care at a Stanford Medicine hospital urged a California federal court to order the hospital not to turn over any of their medical records in response to a criminal subpoena issued by a grand jury in Texas.
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May 28, 2026
Injury Law Roundup: Freight Brokers, Uber Lose Key Cases
The U.S. Supreme Court's green light of negligent hiring claims against freight brokers in highway crash cases and an adverse verdict against Uber in the sexual assault multidistrict litigation lead Law360's Injury Law Roundup.
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May 28, 2026
Hospital Operator, Execs Ink $32M FCA Settlement With Feds
Psychiatric hospital operator Oglethorpe Inc. has agreed to pay $32 million and be excluded from all federal healthcare programs for 10 years to resolve allegations it knowingly failed to return Medicare overpayments in violation of the False Claims Act.
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May 28, 2026
McDermott-Led Ampersand Clinches $1.5B Fund
Healthcare-focused private equity firm Ampersand Capital Partners, advised by McDermott Will & Schulte, on Thursday revealed that it closed its latest fund with $1.5 billion.
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May 28, 2026
3 Federal Circuit Clashes To Watch In June
The Federal Circuit's argument calendar next month includes a dispute between Micron and Netlist over Idaho's law against "bad faith" patent suits, and appeals of multimillion-dollar verdicts against Boston Scientific on a stent patent and TP-Link on Wi-Fi patents.
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May 28, 2026
Zoetis Hit With Investor Suit Over Slowed Pet Drug Sales
Animal health company Zoetis Inc. has been hit with a proposed shareholder class action accusing it of misleading investors about its growth prospects amid rising competition and shifting trends in the veterinary industry.
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May 28, 2026
J&J Unit Cleared In Blood Pump Patent Suit In Mass.
A Massachusetts federal jury on Thursday cleared a Johnson & Johnson MedTech subsidiary of allegations that it infringed a blood pump patent owned by a unit of Swedish medical device company Getinge AB.
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May 28, 2026
Chancery Tosses Insider Financing Suit Against Ayala Brass
The Delaware Chancery Court has dismissed a stockholder derivative suit against several venture capital investors and directors of biotechnology company Ayala Pharmaceuticals Inc., ruling that the plaintiff failed to show the board could not independently evaluate litigation over a disputed 2023 financing deal.
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May 28, 2026
Abbott Labs Settles Ill. Genetic Privacy Suit
Abbott Laboratories has inked a settlement with a proposed class of workers alleging the company's onboarding materials asked for employees' medical history in violation of an Illinois law aimed at protecting residents' genetic information, prompting an Illinois federal judge to dismiss the case Thursday.
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May 28, 2026
Legislative Update: Cannabis And Psychedelics Bill Roundup
Tennessee became the latest state to approve a policy paving the way for more research into ibogaine; Vermont lawmakers brought a bill doubling cannabis potency and possession limits closer to the finish line; and California legislators approved a bill banning the sale of "laughing gas" used for recreational purposes. Here are the major moves in cannabis and psychedelics legislation from the past week.
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May 28, 2026
Husch Blackwell Adds Manatt Healthcare Duo In LA
Husch Blackwell LLP announced that a pair of Los Angeles-based commercial litigators from Manatt Phelps & Phillips LLP have joined the firm as part of its focus on expanding its California healthcare capabilities.
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May 28, 2026
Ex-Reebok CEO Says Biotech Investor Suit Was Shakedown
Former Reebok CEO and billionaire philanthropist Paul Fireman said a "baseless" shareholder lawsuit against him and a biotech company he later sold to Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc. for $85 million was an effort to get him to "cave" to demands for more money, according to a complaint filed in Massachusetts state court Wednesday.
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May 28, 2026
9th Circ. Won't Revisit FCA Ruling Over Drug Price Program
The Ninth Circuit has said it will not disturb its March ruling allowing a hospital chain to pursue a False Claims Act lawsuit against various pharmaceutical companies for allegedly causing the government to overpay for drugs under a discount program.
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May 28, 2026
Split Fed. Circ. Says $452M Trade Secret Case Was Untimely
A split Federal Circuit panel on Thursday erased Insulet Corp.'s trade secret victory against EOFlow Co. Ltd., holding that the medical device maker filed its claims too late and reversing a $452 million jury verdict that was later reduced to $59.4 million.
Editor's Picks
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Supreme Court Will Tackle Patent Enablement In Amgen Case
The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday agreed to review Section 112 of the Patent Act for the second time in the law's history, accepting Amgen's request to consider how much a patent must disclose in order to meet enablement requirements.
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A Circuit-By-Circuit Guide To FCA Suits After High Court Snub
The U.S. Supreme Court's refusal to resolve one of the False Claims Act's most consequential controversies leaves circuit courts deeply divided over whistleblower pleading obligations in ways that will reverberate nationwide, attorneys say. Here, Law360 explores each circuit's approach and scenarios that might finally trigger high court intervention.
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Inside The Collapse Of A Pioneering Opioid Case For DOJ
The U.S. Department of Justice launched a "terribly flawed" criminal case against a drug distributor and several individuals amid pressure to alleviate Appalachia's opioid crisis, and a newly confirmed U.S. attorney displayed "courage and guts" by ending the case last month, defense counsel told Law360 in an expansive interview.
Expert Analysis
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Teva Ruling Offers Patentees New Support For Genus Claims
The Federal Circuit's recent decision in Teva v. Eli Lilly, finding that the Teva patents at issue are not invalid, offers an interesting counterexample against the recent trend of courts invalidating patents claiming a broad, functionally defined class of compounds, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Your Next Litigation Hold Should Cover AI Chat Logs
The Delaware Chancery Court’s recent decision in Fortis Advisors v. Krafton to treat a CEO’s artificial intelligence chats as substantive evidence is being read as a discovery warning to litigators, but there is a second duty-to-preserve lesson that is especially pertinent to in-house counsel, say attorneys at Faegre Drinker.
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Opinion
High Court's Abortion Pill Stay Reinforces Appellate Principles
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent order in Danco Laboratories v. Louisiana, staying a Fifth Circuit ruling that reinstated an in-person requirement for dispensing the abortion medicine mifepristone, should be seen not as a definitive ruling on reproductive rights, but as an affirmation of a more disciplined jurisdictional reality, says Daniel Nardo at Nardo & Associates.
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Cannabis Policy Shift May Reshape Banking, Insolvency Risks
The Trump administration's cannabis rescheduling initiative aims to correct classification that had rendered federal banking, tax administration and insolvency law incoherent, and will begin to restore some alignment between federal law and the economic reality of the marijuana industry, says Richard Ormond at Buchalter.
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Opinion
International Patent Licensing System Must Be Maintained
As foreign approaches to patent enforcement threaten to distort the licensing markets that underpin modern technology, courts and policymakers must take action to ensure that the standard essential patent framework is preserved, says Brian O'Shaughnessy at Dinsmore.
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Series
Studying Foreign Languages Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Studying Italian and Japanese has shown me that learning a new language can benefit a legal career in several ways, including by demonstrating the importance of approaching problems from a fresh perspective and the value of practicing patience with colleagues and clients, says Anna King at Genworth Financial.
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10 US Patent Pressure Points For EU Life Sciences Cos.
U.S.-specific patent issues can be challenging for European life sciences companies because they require decisions at the intersection of legal, scientific, regulatory and commercial functions, necessitating proactive, cross-functional steps from EU patent counsel, says Paul Calvo at Sterne Kessler.
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Sizing Up The Rescheduling Hurdles Medical Pot Cos. Face
The Justice Department’s recent lowering of certain medical marijuana products to Schedule III means operators — particularly those simultaneously offering federally illegal adult-use cannabis — must implement greater structural discipline to navigate an increasingly fragmented legal landscape if they hope to benefit from new tax deductions and access to capital, say attorneys at Akerman.
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Series
NY Times Word Puzzles Make Me A Better Lawyer
Every morning I let The New York Times humble me with word games, which offer a chance to recalibrate my brain before the day's chaos arrives and remind me that a solution — whether to a puzzle or employment law issue — almost always exists once I find the right angle, says Amy Epstein Gluck at Pierson Ferdinand.
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Engaging With FDA's New Complete Response Letter Policy
A citizen petition filed with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration last month puts renewed focus on the agency's practice of releasing complete response letters in near real time, materially altering the context in which life sciences companies communicate with investors regarding regulatory developments, say attorneys at Debevoise.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lesson: Diagnose Before Arguing
Law school often skips over explicitly teaching students how to determine what kind of problem a case presents before they commit to a particular doctrinal path, which risks building arguments that are internally coherent but externally misaligned, says Melanie Oxhorn at Kobre & Kim.
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Trump's Psychedelics EO Creates A Regulatory Collision
Sponsors pursuing U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for psychedelic drug access must tackle how to generate regulatory-grade safety and efficacy data in controlled trials when President Donald Trump's recent executive order on psychedelics mandates uncontrolled access through Right to Try, say Kimberly Chew at Husch Blackwell and Odette Hauke at Odette Alina.
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A Fed. Circ. Blueprint For Drafting Medical Device Patents
The Federal Circuit's decision in Constellation Designs v. LG last month, among other recent rulings, underscores the importance of emphasizing engineering, rather than clinical goals, when drafting patent claims for medical devices and software as a medical device, says Brandon Theiss at Volpe Koenig.
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DTSA Data Shows Hidden Value Of Ex Parte Seizure Filings
Ten years of Defend Trade Secrets Act data indicate that although there is a low success rate for civil seizure applications, intellectual property litigators should continue filing them anyway in order to better their odds of obtaining other provisional relief, say attorneys at Reed Smith.
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Becoming The Biz-Savvy GC That Portfolio Companies Need
Candidates for general counsel roles at private equity-backed portfolio companies should prioritize proving their sector-specific experience, commercial judgment and ease with uncertainty — and attorneys hoping to be candidates in five to 10 years should start working on those skills now, says Dimitri Mastrocola at Major Lindsey.