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Cumulus Media Hires Paul Weiss, Porter Hedges for Restructuring - Atlanta-based Cumulus Media Inc. and 40 of its affiliated companies filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Wednesday in the Southern District of Texas. March 5, 2026Mark Curriden
Senate Confirms 2 WDTX Judges - The Senate Judiciary Committee approved an Austin litigator and a Fort Worth judge for the federal bench Thursday morning. Tarrant County Judge Christopher Wolfe will be serving in the Waco Division, and Andrew Davis will be in Austin. March 5, 2026Alexa Shrake
DOJ Flip-Flops Again, Seeks to ‘Withdraw Motion to Withdraw’ in President’s EO Litigation - Less than 15 hours after telling a federal appeals court that it no longer planned to fight to enforce the executive orders signed by President Donald Trump last spring against Susman Godfrey and three other corporate law firms, the U.S. Justice Department filed new motions today seeking to “withdraw their motion to voluntarily dismiss these consolidated appeals.”
The same two senior DOJ lawyers who last evening told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that the federal government would no longer fight to reverse orders from lower court judges declaring that the EOs targeting four law firms were illegal and blocked them from being enforced signed a six-page filing today saying that the fight is back on.
Justice Department lawyers gave no explanation for the government’s sudden reversal. March 3, 2026Mark Curriden
The same two senior DOJ lawyers who last evening told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit that the federal government would no longer fight to reverse orders from lower court judges declaring that the EOs targeting four law firms were illegal and blocked them from being enforced signed a six-page filing today saying that the fight is back on.
Justice Department lawyers gave no explanation for the government’s sudden reversal. March 3, 2026Mark Curriden
King & Spalding Adds Three More Litigation Partners in Dallas - The Dallas office of King & Spalding is expanding again.
Exactly one month ago today, the Atlanta-founded corporate law firm dramatically grew its Dallas operations by adding prominent trial lawyer Tom Melsheimer, litigator Steve Stodghill and five other partners from Winston & Strawn.
Today, King & Spalding announced that three additional former Winston partners — LeElle Slifer, John T. Sullivan, and Katrina Eash — have joined Melsheimer and Stodghill. March 3, 2026Mark Curriden
Exactly one month ago today, the Atlanta-founded corporate law firm dramatically grew its Dallas operations by adding prominent trial lawyer Tom Melsheimer, litigator Steve Stodghill and five other partners from Winston & Strawn.
Today, King & Spalding announced that three additional former Winston partners — LeElle Slifer, John T. Sullivan, and Katrina Eash — have joined Melsheimer and Stodghill. March 3, 2026Mark Curriden
Thoma Bravo Acquires Dallas Parcel and Freight Logistics Firm WWEX Group - Chicago tech investment firm Thoma Bravo said Tuesday that it agreed to acquire WWEX Group, a parcel and freight services logistics provider headquartered in Dallas. Financial terms weren’t disclosed. Bloomberg reports that the deal values WWEX at $5 billion.
Kirkland & Ellis and Latham & Watkins advised on the deal. March 3, 2026Jason Philyaw
Kirkland & Ellis and Latham & Watkins advised on the deal. March 3, 2026Jason Philyaw
DOJ Concedes Loss on EOs to Susman, Other Firms - The Trump administration filed court documents late Monday stating that it will no longer seek to enforce the executive orders signed by President Donald Trump last spring against Susman Godfrey and a handful of other law firms. March 2, 2026Mark Curriden
Centerpiece
Litigation Roundup: Fight Between Boeing, SWA Pilots Union Returns to Dallas - In this edition of Litigation Roundup, Stone Hilton helps X Corp. defeat a proposed class action lawsuit in North Texas, and a group of South Texas doctors agree to pay millions to settle False Claims Act allegations. March 2, 2026Michelle Casady
Bracewell, Shackelford Lawyers Team Up for Pro Bono Deal to Turn Former Convent into Foster Care Transition Home - Savannah Hostetter Benac, a partner at Shackelford, McKinley & Norton, and her husband, Dylan Benac, a corporate lawyer in Bracewell’s Houston office, found a rare opportunity to work together professionally on a pro bono matter for a client they care deeply about. The litigator and deals lawyer helped lead a real estate transaction that allowed Radiate Coalition to acquire a seven-acre property near Houston valued at approximately $2.5 million, which the nonprofit plans to redevelop into a transitional home for girls aging out of the Texas foster care system. February 26, 2026Krista TorralvaExpert Voices
A Review of February’s Business Court Decisions - The Business Court had a historic February. It presided over its first-ever jury trials, resulting in wins on both sides of the “v.” The Court also penned five opinions, including the first interpretation of its intellectual property jurisdiction. This month will be remembered as a culmination of the Court’s first chapter. March 5, 2026Zack Ewing & Austin Lesch
AI After the Strikes: What Texas Lawyers Need to Know About Digital Replica Clauses - Following the post-strike AI provisions negotiated by SAG-AFTRA and the Writers Guild of America, the entertainment industry is entering a new phase of grappling with artificial intelligence. Performers and writers demanded meaningful limits on the use of AI to replicate their voices, likenesses and performances and now the burden shifts to lawyers to operationalize them with clarity and foresight. Updating contract templates to include boilerplate AI clauses is the easy part; the real challenge is drafting for a technology that is moving faster than the law can keep up with. March 2, 2026Natalie LeVeck
Stories You Might’ve Missed
Texas Courts Cold as Ice to Winter Storm Uri Victims - Winter Storm Uri brought single-digit temperatures and freezing precipitation to Texas in February 2021. Power lines snapped. Natural gas and power generators went silent. Pipelines froze. At least 246 people died. Thousands and thousands more suffered serious medical injuries. In all, 31,600 Texans and businesses sued energy companies for gross negligence. But five years later, not a single case has made it to trial. February 13, 2026Mark Curriden











