Securities

  • December 05, 2023

    SEC Chair Warns Businesses Against AI Washing: 'Don't Do It'

    U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler on Tuesday cautioned business owners not to "AI wash," or mislead investors as to their true artificial intelligence capabilities, comparing the practice to "greenwashing" and saying that securities laws require "full, fair and truthful disclosure."

  • December 05, 2023

    Ex-CEOs Must Face Claims They Pilfered Bioscience Co.'s IP

    Two former CEOs of Global Discovery Biosciences Corp. can't dodge claims that they cost the company an opportunity to develop new medical tests by siphoning the resources to another company, a Delaware Chancery Court judge has said.

  • December 05, 2023

    Big Bank CEOs Bemoan Basel III Ahead Of Senate Grilling

    Chief executives of some of the nation's biggest banks will be sounding the alarm about proposed capital requirement hikes when senators question them on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, with JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon warning of dire potential consequences that will "fundamentally alter the U.S. economy."

  • December 05, 2023

    Solar Tech Lender Gets OK For Quick Ch. 11 Exit

    A Delaware bankruptcy judge Tuesday said she will approve Sunlight Financial Holding's prepackaged Chapter 11 sale plan just over a month after the solar power financing company filed for bankruptcy.

  • December 05, 2023

    Split 9th Circ. Won't Revisit Meta Investor Suit In Data Scandal

    The Ninth Circuit on Monday declined Facebook's request to rehear by three-judge or en banc panel a revival of a putative securities class action over the Cambridge Analytica data abuse scandal, with one jurist voting to grant the company's petition for rehearing en banc.

  • December 05, 2023

    SEC, Terraform Clash Over Jury's Role At Upcoming Trial

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Terraform Labs are sparring over whether a jury can determine if Terraform's tokens are securities as the parties await the court's decision on competing motions for summary judgment.

  • December 05, 2023

    Investors Sue Smith & Wesson Brass Over Assault Rifle Biz

    Smith & Wesson's directors and senior executives place their own "greed" and "political concerns" above the interests of the company and its stockholders by ignoring the liabilities of marketing AR-15 rifles that are used to perpetrate mass shootings, according to a Nevada state lawsuit filed Tuesday by a group of Catholic sisters.

  • December 05, 2023

    LinkedIn, Zoom May Be Enforcers' Next Recordkeeping Target

    Financial firm communications on platforms like LinkedIn and Zoom may be an upcoming focus for regulators after a spate of enforcement actions over off-channel communications via WhatsApp and other texting applications, according to a report released Tuesday.

  • December 05, 2023

    Floor & Decor Insider Trading Case Moves Ahead In Del.

    Floor & Decor shareholders got the nod from Delaware's Court of Chancery on Tuesday to proceed with a derivative suit alleging that directors and controlling shareholders of the company sold $466 million worth of inflated stock in 2018 based on insider information.

  • December 05, 2023

    Virtu Attacks SEC's 'Hypothetical' Information Security Suit

    Virtu Financial Inc. is fighting a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit accusing a subsidiary of failing to safeguard certain client information from its own in-house traders, arguing that the case should be dismissed because the regulator has not alleged that any Virtu employees actually accessed or misused that information.

  • December 05, 2023

    Trump, SBF Trials Spotlight Nonverbal Signaling, Prof Says

    Recent trials involving Donald Trump and Sam Bankman-Fried — and even the much older O.J. Simpson trial — show clearly that savvy trial lawyers are wielding forms of nonverbal communication that aren't subject to ethics guidelines, an expert on the topic said Tuesday.

  • December 05, 2023

    Investor Fights For New Shot At Cannabis Co. Accounting Suit

    An investor who alleged cannabis company Cronos Group Inc. violated "black-and-white accounting standards" to artificially boost quarterly revenue by 40% is asking to amend a consolidated lawsuit's claims post-dismissal, arguing that a New York federal judge's November decision to toss the case with prejudice ran afoul of Second Circuit precedent.

  • December 05, 2023

    Export-Import Bank Slammed As Major Fossil Fuel Financier

    Environmental group Friends of the Earth U.S. slapped the U.S. Export-Import Bank with an international complaint Tuesday alleging the agency has poured billions of dollars into fossil fuel projects, despite the Biden administration's commitment to end such international public financing.

  • December 05, 2023

    Judge Drops EY's German Unit From Wirecard Investor Suit

    A Pennsylvania federal judge dropped the German unit of Ernst & Young for a second time from a proposed class action accusing it and failed online payments company Wirecard AG of misleading investors about Wirecard's financial viability, ruling that the investors have not established the court has jurisdiction over the German entity.

  • December 05, 2023

    Crypto Project Says SEC's Actions Warrant A Case Dismissal

    Defendants in the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's case against crypto project Debt Box have urged a federal judge to toss the case after he found the agency misrepresented certain facts to secure a temporary restraining order, arguing the SEC "also got the complaint badly wrong."

  • December 05, 2023

    Aspiring Antiques Bigwig Took $6M And Fled, SEC Tells Jury

    A Nevada man who raised $20 million from investors to launch a sports-focused collectibles and media empire misappropriated $6 million before fleeing the United States, securities regulators told a Manhattan federal jury Tuesday.

  • December 05, 2023

    Drug Co. Aceragen OK'd For Chancery-Overseen Liquidation

    Biopharmaceutical company Aceragen Inc. secured a Delaware Court of Chancery go-ahead for its bankruptcy-alternative liquidation under a court-supervised assignment for the benefit of creditors in favor of a NovaQuest Capital Management affiliate.

  • December 04, 2023

    Justices Weigh Limits Of Possible Ruling Against SEC Courts

    While the U.S. Supreme Court recently expressed a willingness to declare the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's in-house court system unconstitutional, experts say some justices have shown a desire to keep their ruling from spilling over into the enforcement activities of federal agencies doling out Social Security benefits or punishing alleged tax cheats.

  • December 04, 2023

    Sidley Austin's Woodbridge Work Not Free Speech, Panel Told

    An attorney for the liquidation trustee for the defunct Woodbridge Group told a California appellate panel Monday a lower court erred in tossing the trustee's claims that Sidley Austin aided Woodbridge's $1.3 billion Ponzi scheme, saying Sidley's transactional work in the case is not protected by the First Amendment.

  • December 04, 2023

    Energy Investment Co. Sues Del. Investor Protection Agency

    An energy investment company has sued the Investors Protection Unit of the Delaware Department of Justice, arguing that an enforcement action the department launched against it violates its constitutional due process rights, including the right to a jury trial.

  • December 04, 2023

    Feds Say Ex-Lumentum Exec Should Serve Up To 6 Years

    Manhattan federal prosecutors want a prison sentence between 57 and 71 months for former Lumentum Holdings Inc. Chief Information Security Officer Amit Bhardwaj, who pled guilty in March to claims he passed inside information to a California software engineer who held a senior role at Adobe.

  • December 04, 2023

    SEC Head Accountant Flags Cash Flow Statement Concerns

    The chief accountant of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said Monday that cash flow statements are consistently a top area of restatements from issuers, warning that issuers and auditors are obligated to treat them as critically as other financial statements.

  • December 04, 2023

    Kraft Heinz Fraudulently Won Insider Trade Suit, Investor Says

    An investor has hit Kraft-Heinz Co. with a fresh stockholder complaint in Delaware Chancery Court, claiming that the court wrongly tossed a prior action alleging similar $1.2 billion insider-trading claims based on fraudulent statements and incomplete evidence regarding Kraft Heinz's executives' purported financial ties to the majority stockholder accused of insider trading.

  • December 04, 2023

    CFTC Offers Advice For Tackling Carbon Credit Fraud

    The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Monday put forth proposed guidance for tackling fraud and manipulation in the voluntary carbon credit marketplace, outlining the measures it thinks that derivatives exchanges should take to ensure transparency and integrity in the evolving space.

  • December 04, 2023

    FirstEnergy Lands Stay In Investor Suit Over Bribery Scandal

    An Ohio federal judge and a magistrate judge have asked a special master to issue a report and recommendation on a bid by FirstEnergy Corp. to stay all discovery in an investor suit over the company's involvement in a massive bribery scheme to bail out two failing nuclear energy plants, while the utility company appeals class certification.

Expert Analysis

  • Opinion

    Legal Profession Gender Parity Requires Equal Parental Leave

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    To truly foster equity in the legal profession and to promote attorney retention, workplaces need to better support all parents, regardless of gender — starting by offering equal and robust parental leave to both birthing and non-birthing parents, says Ali Spindler at Irwin Fritchie.

  • Opinion

    Activist Short-Sellers Are The Dark Knights Of Wall Street

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    While so-called activist short-sellers have been subject to increased scrutiny in recent years, these investors work in the shadows like Batman to expose fraud on Wall Street, often generating leads that may move regulators to take action, say attorneys at Labaton Sucharow.

  • 9th Circ. Ruling May Expand Short-Swing Profit Exemption

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    The Ninth Circuit’s recent dismissal of a shareholder derivative suit in Roth v. Foris Ventures LLC provides boards of directors with greater latitude to approve certain securities transactions under the the Securities Exchange Act’s Section 16(b) short-swing profits rule, say John Stigi and John Mysliwiec at Sheppard Mullin.

  • New Regs Will Strengthen Voluntary Carbon Offset Market

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    Voluntary carbon offsets are a vital tool for organizations seeking to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions — and recent efforts by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the state of California and others are essential to enhancing the reliability and authenticity of carbon credits, says David Smith at Manatt.

  • How FinCEN's Proposed Rule Stirs The Pot On Crypto Mixing

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    The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network’s recently issued proposal aims to impose additional reporting requirements to mitigate the risks posed by convertible virtual currency mixing transactions, meaning financial institutions may need new monitoring techniques to detect CVC mixing beyond just exposure, say Jared Johnson and Jordan Yeagley at Buchanan Ingersoll.

  • Series

    Writing Thriller Novels Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Authoring several thriller novels has enriched my work by providing a fresh perspective on my privacy practice, expanding my knowledge, and keeping me alert to the next wave of issues in an increasingly complex space — a reminder to all lawyers that extracurricular activities can help sharpen professional instincts, says Reece Hirsch at Morgan Lewis.

  • What Lawyers Must Know About Calif. State Bar's AI Guidance

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    Initial recommendations from the State Bar of California regarding use of generative artificial intelligence by lawyers have the potential to become a useful set of guidelines in the industry, covering confidentiality, supervision and training, communications, discrimination and more, say attorneys at Debevoise.

  • Industry Must Elevate Native American Women Attys' Stories

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    The American Bar Association's recent research study into Native American women attorneys' experiences in the legal industry reveals the glacial pace of progress, and should inform efforts to amplify Native voices in the field, says Mary Smith, president of the ABA.

  • Crypto, Audit Cases Dominate SEC's Enforcement Focus In '23

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    Attorneys at Covington examine the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's fiscal year 2023 enforcement results, which marked the SEC's third consecutive year of increasing enforcement activity since Chair Gary Gensler took over in 2021 — this time driven by a focus on combating cryptocurrency-related scams and enforcing recordkeeping compliance.

  • New York Cybersecurity Amendments Raise Regulatory Bar

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    Financial service providers both in and outside New York should study recent changes to the state financial regulator's cybersecurity requirements, which add governance controls, technical safeguards and incident response protocols to improve what is already becoming the national benchmark for robust cybersecurity compliance programs, say attorneys at Baker McKenzie.

  • Understanding Discovery Obligations In Era Of Generative AI

    Excerpt from Practical Guidance
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    Attorneys and businesses must adapt to the unique discovery challenges presented by generative artificial intelligence, such as chatbot content and prompts, while upholding the principles of fairness, transparency and compliance with legal obligations in federal civil litigation, say attorneys at King & Spalding.

  • Chancery's 'Unfair Deal, Fair Price' Ruling Part Of A Trend

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    The Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in In re: Straight Path Communications is the latest in a line of recent post-trial rulings by the court that seem to prioritize a fair price in determining damage awards — even when a transaction has been clouded by an unfair process, say attorneys at V&E.

  • 5 Steps To Meet CFTC Remediation Expectations

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    After the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission recently updated its enforcement policies, organizations should implement elements of effective remediation — from root-cause analyses to design effectiveness tests — to mitigate the risk of penalties and third-party oversight, say Jonny Frank and Chris Hoyle at StoneTurn Group.

  • Asserting 'Presence-Of-Counsel' Defense In Securities Trials

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    As illustrated by the fraud trial of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, defense attorneys in securities trials might consider arguing that counsel had some involvement in the conduct at issue — if the more formal advice-of-counsel defense is unavailable and circumstances allow for a privilege waiver, say Joseph Dever and Matthew Elkin at Cozen O'Connor.

  • Series

    ESG Around The World: Mexico

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    ESG has yet to become part of the DNA of the Mexican business model, but huge strides are being made in that direction, as more stakeholders demand that companies adopt, at the least, a modicum of sustainability commitments and demonstrate how they will meet them, says Carlos Escoto at Galicia Abogados.

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