Morning Docket: 09.25.25 - Above the Law
Briefly

Morning Docket: 09.25.25 - Above the Law
"* Judge considering sanctioning DOJ lawyers over repeated statements compromising fairness of Mangione trial. [ NY Times] * Roberta Kaplan representing Disney shareholders seeking discovery to determine if Kimmel suspension demonstrates a breach of fiduciary duties. [ Semafor] * Group challenging SEC gag rule, which prevents parties who voluntarily settle enforcement cases from turning around and telling the market they did nothing wrong, seeks en banc review from the Ninth Circuit. But, you know, you don't have to settle. [ Law.com]"
"* Supreme Court could decide if prediction markets are betting sites just because they let you "bet on stuff." [ National Law Journal] * "The Ryder Cup Is an Uncanny Mirror for UK Big Law's Aspirations" [ Bloomberg Law News] * Law partners launch accusations against each other ranging from stealing firm money to cocaine use. [ WCSC] * ABA argues that the administration's law firm intimidation policy is very real. [ Law360] * FTC suit over Amazon Prime cancellations heading to trial. [ ABA Journal]"
A judge is considering sanctioning DOJ lawyers for repeated statements that may compromise the Mangione trial's fairness. Roberta Kaplan is representing Disney shareholders seeking discovery to assess whether Kimmel's suspension breached fiduciary duties. A group has sought en banc review in the Ninth Circuit to challenge an SEC gag rule limiting public denials after settlements. The Supreme Court may decide whether prediction markets qualify as betting sites. Law partners have exchanged accusations including theft and drug use. The ABA asserts the administration's law firm intimidation policy exists. The FTC suit over Amazon Prime cancellations is moving toward trial.
Read at Above the Law
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