Articles Tagged: Federal Court
A newly filed joint motion in 1:25-cv-01112 in the Middle District of North Carolina suggests the parties are trying to convert an active emergency dispute into a negotiated procedural reset. View full case on Docket Alarm.
From the docket text, the filing asks the court to enter an agreed order that would, first, deny a pending preliminary injunction motion as moot and, second, grant related relief the parties have apparently negotiated.
The Federal Trade Commission has announced settlements with three of the world’s largest advertising agencies—WPP, Publicis, and Dentsu—over allegations that they coordinated brand-safety standards in a way that excluded or disadvantaged media outlets based on political content. The case, filed in federal court in Fort Worth, Texas, is a significant signal that the FTC is willing to treat certain forms of industrywide content-related coordination as a competition problem, not merely a speech or platform-governance dispute.
According to the FTC, the agencies’ alleged conduct effectively created a boycott by steering advertising dollars away from publishers or platforms deemed politically objectionable under shared standards.
Cleveland-Cliffs has agreed to a proposed settlement with the United States that would require at least $12 million in corrective measures at its Middletown Works facility, resolving a long-running federal suit over alleged hazardous-waste discharges in Ohio federal court. While the dollar figure is notable on its own, the bigger takeaway for legal and compliance teams is the government’s continued emphasis on operational fixes and facility remediation—not just civil penalties—when pursuing environmental enforcement.
That distinction matters.
A federal court has ordered a central operator in an alleged timeshare-exit scheme to pay $140 million and permanently barred him from the industry, according to the Federal Trade Commission. The ruling marks a significant consumer-protection result in a sector that has drawn sustained regulatory scrutiny over claims that distressed timeshare owners were promised relief that never materialized.
The case centers on allegations that the operation took millions from consumers through deceptive representations about its ability to help owners cancel or exit their timeshare obligations.


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