Keep your finger on the legal world's pulse
27th February 2026
Together with
Cashroom Brand Logo
THE HOT STORY
Vanguard settles with Texas in key case on ESG investing
Fund manager Vanguard Group is to pay $29.5m to settle a lawsuit by 13 Republican state attorneys general who claimed the firm and rivals violated antitrust law through climate activism. Reuters notes that the suit in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Texas has been closely watched as a test of how far Republicans from energy-producing states would push Wall Street firms they accused of overemphasizing environmental matters. Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach, one of the plaintiffs, said Vanguard "agreed to strict passivity commitments" which prohibit the firm from dictating the strategy of companies in which it invests or to push shareholder proposals related to environmental or social concerns. Vanguard decided to settle the litigation to avoid the potential for tens of millions of dollars in legal fees and to get rid of the “distraction”, said sources.
COMPLIANCE CHECKLIST
Avoid Common Client Account Mistakes    

Client trust account compliance remains one of the highest-risk areas for law firms, with small process gaps often leading to serious regulatory consequences. 
From delayed reconciliations and incomplete audit trails to manual processes and unclear approval workflows, many compliance issues arise from avoidable mistakes.   

Cashroom’s Legal Compliance Checklist for Law Firms is designed to help firms review their current approach, identify potential risk areas, and strengthen financial controls across client trust and IOLTA account management.

Covering reconciliations, segregation of funds, audit documentation, staff training, and risk monitoring, the checklist provides a practical framework to help firms stay compliant and prepared.

Whether you’re reviewing internal controls, onboarding new team members, or preparing for a state bar audit, this checklist offers a clear starting point to protect both your firm and your clients.    

Download the checklist

 
EMPLOYMENT LAW
Appeals court declines to block Trump’s anti-union order
A federal appeals court has declined to enforce a temporary decision blocking the Trump administration from stripping two-thirds of the federal workforce of their collective bargaining rights, reversing a lower court's ‌ruling. A three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San ⁠Francisco said ⁠Trump's 2025 order eliminating collective bargaining rights for swaths of ​government workers was legitimately grounded in national security concerns. The ​order "expresses that the President's primary - if not only - concern with union activity was its ​interference with national security," ⁠Circuit Judge Daniel Bress, a Trump appointee, wrote for the court.
Walmart settles $100m driver pay claims
Walmart has agreed to pay $100m to settle allegations from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) regarding misleading pay practices for delivery drivers. The FTC, joined by 11 states, claimed that Walmart inflated base pay and tips in its Spark delivery program, leading drivers to lose significant earnings. Christopher Mufarrige, director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said: "Labor markets cannot function efficiently without truthful and non-misleading information about earnings." As part of the settlement, Walmart will implement an earnings verification program to ensure transparency for drivers.
LAWSUITS
Jefferies sued over alleged misrepresentation in First Brands-linked fund
Jefferies Financial Group has been sued by investors who claim the firm misled them into investing in a trade finance fund tied to now-bankrupt auto parts supplier First Brands. In a lawsuit filed in New York state court, British Virgin Islands-based Eugenia II Investment Holdings and Eugenia III Investment Holdings allege that Jefferies and its Point Bonita Capital fund falsely represented that they had “cash dominion” over receivables purchased from First Brands. The complaint claims that, in reality, First Brands retained control of the funds while allegedly double-pledging collateral and manipulating invoices as part of what federal prosecutors have described as a multibillion-dollar fraud. Jefferies has denied the allegations. First Brands founder Patrick James and his brother Edward James were indicted last month on fraud and conspiracy charges related to the company’s collapse and have pleaded not guilty.
Federal judge rejects Binance arbitration request
A federal judge in Manhattan has rejected a request from Binance to resolve claims through arbitration from customers who accused the trading platform of illegally selling unregistered tokens and causing significant losses. U.S. District Judge Andrew Carter said customers could pursue claims that arose by February 20, 2019 in court, because the cryptocurrency exchange did not sufficiently notify them that it modified their terms of use to require arbitration and waive the right to sue in a class action.
AT&T settles lawsuit to let shareholders vote on diversity proposal
AT&T is to settle a lawsuit by four New York City public pension funds by letting shareholders vote on whether it should disclose the breakdown of its 133,000-person workforce by race, ethnicity and gender. The funds last week sued to block the Dallas-based firm from soliciting shareholder proxies that would have excluded their diversity proposal from consideration at its 2026 annual meeting.
CASES
Federal Reserve mounts challenge to DOJ subpoenas
The Federal Reserve is waging a behind-closed-doors legal challenge to two subpoenas issued in U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro's criminal investigation of Chair Jerome Powell, the Wall Street Journal reports. Pirro is investigating testimony that Powell provided last summer around building renovations, a probe he has called improper. The Fed, in sealed proceedings, is asking a judge to quash the subpoenas, which could reduce or eliminate its obligation to respond.
REGULATORY COMPLIANCE
Court adviser backs EU regulators in Meta data spat
An adviser to Europe’s highest court has sided with European Union antitrust authorities in their dispute with Meta Platforms, dealing a setback to the U.S. technology company’s challenge over regulatory information demands. The Luxembourg-based Court of Justice of the European Union's Advocate General Athanasios Rantos said judges should dismiss Meta's appeal and uphold a lower tribunal's ruling that backed the European Commission, the EU's competition enforcer. Reuters says the case underscores the increasing tendency by companies to challenge the EU antitrust enforcer over what they say are disproportionate regulatory demands.
FIRMS
Hunton Andrews Kurth shuts China office
Hunton Andrews Kurth has officially closed its Beijing office, marking the end of nearly two decades of presence in mainland China. The closure is part of a broader trend: over two dozen foreign law firms have shut their operations in Greater China over the past three years. The firm continues to operate regionally in Tokyo and Bangkok.

 
Law
APPOINTMENTS
DLA Piper hires top Akin debt lawyer
DLA Piper has hired Ranesh Ramanathan, the head of capital solutions at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld. Ramanathan, who joined Akin in 2022 from Kirkland & Ellis, has a strong background in advising companies and investors on complex debt and equity situations. His previous experience includes serving as managing director and deputy general counsel at Bain Capital.
INTERNATIONAL
Swiss bank could lose access to U.S. financial system
The U.S. Treasury has threatened to sever Swiss private bank MBaer's access to the U.S. financial system on the grounds it had breached sanctions against Iran, Russia and Venezuela. "MBaer has funneled over a hundred million dollars through the U.S. financial system on behalf of illicit actors tied to Iran and Russia," U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said. "Banks should be on notice that the U.S. Treasury will aggressively protect the integrity of the U.S. financial system using the full force of our authorities." Switzerland’s financial regulator Finma said it considers MBaer “to be a financial institution of primary money laundering concern.”
Jimmy Lai's fraud convictions overturned
A Hong Kong appellate court has overturned fraud convictions against media mogul Jimmy Lai, a significant win in his ongoing legal struggles. Lai, 78, remains imprisoned due to a separate conviction under a national security law. The overturned convictions stemmed from allegations that Lai's consultancy misused rented office space. The judges ruled the prosecution did not prove false representations beyond reasonable doubt. Lai's children hope that U.S. President Donald Trump can assist in securing his release during an upcoming visit to Beijing. U.K. Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has called for Lai's release on humanitarian grounds.

 

Legal Slice delivers the latest, most relevant, and useful legal intelligence each weekday morning with intelligence, designed specifically for legal professionals, including attorneys, practice owners, judges, legal scholars, and influencers.

Content is selected to an exacting brief from hundreds of influential media sources and summarised by experienced journalists into an easy-to-read digest email. The links under articles indicate original news sources. Some links lead directly to the source material. Others lead to paywalls where you may need a subscription. A third category are restricted by copyright rules.

For reaction and insights on any stories covered in Legal Slice, join the discussion by becoming a member of our LinkedIn Group or Business Page, or follow us on Twitter.

If you are interested in sponsorship opportunities within Legal Slice, please get in touch via email sales team

This e-mail has been sent to [[EMAIL_TO]]

Click here to unsubscribe