Nov 24, 2024
Tracy Chapman performing on stage with a guitar.
Nicki Minaj pays $450,000 to settle Tracy Chapman’s 2018 Copyright Lawsuit

Tracy Chapman, an American singer-songwriter, filed a lawsuit against Nicki Minaj, an American-Trinidadian rapper, in 2018, claiming Minaj’s song “Sorry” took “both lyrics and vocal melody” from Chapman’s 1988 hit “Baby Can I Hold You.” Earlier this month, Chapman accepted Minaj’s offer to settle the suit by paying Chapman $450,000... Read More »

Sign for UnitedHealthcare building surrounded by landscaping.
Health Care Company Indicted for Labor Market Collusion

The Department of Justice Antitrust Division charged Surgical Care Affiliates LLC with two counts of collusion with the labor market on January 7, 2021. The indictment claims the company “enter[ed] into and engag[ed] in two separate bilateral conspiracies with other health care companies to suppress competition between them for the... Read More »

Senator Josh Hawley speaking during the Senate session regarding objections to the election results, with other senators in the background.
Elector Rejectors Reverse Course Following Capitol Riots

When Congress met on January 6 to certify the election results, there were about a dozen Republican senators who said they would object to the election results for at least one state. However, after pro-Trump protestors broke into the Capitol, they were forced to evacuate their chambers and have an... Read More »

Democratic Representative Carolyn Maloney speaking at a congressional hearing, with an American flag in the background.
New Law Cracks Down on Shell Companies

The Corporate Transparency Act now requires shell companies to disclose ownership within a Federal database. Going forward, federal agencies will store proprietary information and share it with investors and banks. Democratic Representative Carolyn Maloney of New York first introduced the bill in 2010 as a means to combat money laundering.... Read More »

The U.S. Supreme Court building with its iconic columns and steps.
Justices to review assignor estoppel in patent cases

Minerva Surgical, Inc., filed a petition for certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court asking the court to clarify questions around the doctrine of assignor estoppel. Their petition asks “Whether a defendant in a patent infringement action who assigned the patent, or is in privity with an assignor of the patent,... Read More »

Donald Trump seated at a meeting table, addressing attendees.
A Trump self-pardon could make criminal charges more likely

The possibility of President Trump issuing a self-pardon has been under discussion since the beginning of his presidency. In the wake of the riots at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, that possibility once again flirts with becoming a reality. Any discussion of the president’s power to pardon has to... Read More »