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Bell Nunnally, Vartabedian Start Summer Associate Bonus Season - The bonuses range from $5,000 to $15,000. In an interview with The Texas Lawbook, Bell Nunnally Managing Partner Christopher Trowbridge said the first half of the year "was incredible" and "we did not want to wait until the end of the year to spread the love to our associates." August 7, 2025Mark Curriden
Western Midstream to Acquire Aris Water Solutions for $1.5B - Vinson & Elkins and Gibson Dunn advised on the deal, which extends Western Midstream's reach for critical water resources into Eastern New Mexico. August 7, 2025Allen Pusey
Oxy, ConocoPhillips Announce Profits, Deals and Debt Reduction - Two major energy companies announced earnings Wednesday and both revealed upstream deal activity valued at more than $2 billion. ConocoPhillips announced a $1.3 billion sale of assets in the Anadarko Basin, which was advised by Haynes Boone. August 7, 2025Allen Pusey
Bondholders Call for Judge Isgur to Recuse from GWG Holdings Bankruptcy Case - GWG Holdings bondholders call for U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Marvin Isgur to step away from the case, alleging he is protecting David Jones, a former bankruptcy judge, and Elizabeth Freeman, a former Jackson Walker partner with whom Jones had an undisclosed romantic relationship. August 7, 2025Alexa Shrake
Eastern District Patent Infringement Case Dismissed - Intelligent Wellhead Systems’ lawsuit alleging patent infringement against Downing Wellhead Equipment was dismissed by an Eastern District Court judge this week. This is the second win Haynes Boone has seen for Downing this summer. August 6, 2025Alexa Shrake
Brookfield Acquires 19.7% Stake in Duke Energy Florida for $6B - Global investment firm Brookfield Asset Management acquired a 19.7 percent stake in Duke Energy Florida for $6 billion. The utility plans to use proceeds to further its energy modernization strategy and reduce debt. Kirkland & Ellis and Skadden Arps advised. August 5, 2025Jason Philyaw
Litigation Roundup: SFA’s Plans to Cut Women’s Sports Halted - In this edition of Litigation Roundup, Phillips 66 must pay $195 million in exemplary damages — on top of nearly $605 million in compensatory damages — in a trade secrets case in California, a federal judge in East Texas sides with female athletes at Stephen F. Austin State University who brought a Title IX lawsuit after the university announced it would end several women’s sports programs, and Amazon is the latest target of a company accusing retail behemoths of infringing barcode technology. August 4, 2025Michelle Casady
CDT Roundup: AI’s Energy Appetite Continues to Fuel Tech, O&G Deals - The week ending Aug. 2 saw 17 transactions reporting values of $19 billion. You can compare that to last week's 15 deals for $3 billion or the 26 deals for $16 billion we reported this time last year. The news this week is the same news last week: It's all about AI infrastructure. The good news is that even those deals cut a healthy swath across emerging data-related business sectors. That and more in this edition of CDT Roundup. August 3, 2025Allen Pusey
Sungard AS, Jackson Walker Reach Bankruptcy Fee Settlement - Information technology company Sungard AS New Holdings has asked the court to approve a $385,000 settlement it reached with Jackson Walker that would end its bankruptcy fee dispute with the Dallas-based law firm. This marks back-to-back weeks companies involved in the bankruptcy fee dispute have asked the court to approve settlements with the firm. August 1, 2025Michelle Casady
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Discretionary Denials 2.0 — The Litigator’s IPR Playbook Under the New PTAB Regime - In March, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued its “Interim Process for PTAB Workload Management” memorandum — quickly dubbed the “Workload Memo.” The memo resurrects and expands the PTAB’s discretion to deny institution for reasons that have little to do with the prior art. By July 31, the acting director had already logged 109 discretionary-denial decisions, signaling a tectonic shift. For petitioners who count on IPRs to stall infringement suits — and patent owners who must decide where to fight — the new regime demands a strategic overhaul. This article distills what has changed, why it matters and how litigators should adapt. August 7, 2025Jeffrey A. Andrews
Corporate Directors and Officers — Fiduciaries or Discretionaries? - I have enjoyed the privilege of being a chaired professor at Southern Methodist University for over 35 years. That’s a good run, which I hope to keep going for a long while. In teaching my corporate and securities law courses during that time, a key principle arises with frequency — namely, that corporate directors and officers are fiduciaries. These fiduciaries are charged with acting in their respective corporation’s best interests with due care and loyalty. If they fail to do so — according to the rhetoric — they will be held accountable and subject to liability exposure. But is this merely rhetoric without substantive content? Is the term fiduciary a misnomer? In my new book, I answer these questions with a resounding “yes.” August 4, 2025Marc I. Steinberg
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Report: Judge Gilstrap Again the King of Patent Litigation - Patent infringement litigation has mostly been on the decline across the U.S. for the past three years, but not in the Eastern District of Texas, which has re-established its courts as the preferred destination for disputes regarding patent infringement. A new report by legal analytics firm Lex Machina shows that U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap of Marshall was assigned 795 new patent lawsuits in 2024 — six times more than any other federal judge in the U.S. June 3, 2025Mark Curriden