By Cogan Schneier | July 24, 2017
President Donald Trump promised to re-create the government and diminish its regulations, but he faces an increasingly organized and determined opposition in Democratic state attorneys general.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 13, 2017
Armed with last month's U.S. Supreme Court decision in , Johnson & Johnson has moved to dismiss the claims of 1,365 women with talcum powder suits in Missouri state court in part because their lawyers have engaged in "blatant forum shopping on a grand scale."
By Kristen Rasmussen | July 13, 2017
The DOJ has brought its largest health care fraud enforcement action ever with more than 400 defendants charged nationwide.
By Kristen Rasmussen | July 12, 2017
Howard Sklamberg, former deputy commissioner for global regulatory operations and policy at the FDA, says it's an "interesting time" for the agency.
By Sue Reisinger and Kristen Rasmussen | July 10, 2017
Last fall the U.S. Department of Justice proudly claimed a major victory for its Health Care Corporate Fraud Strike Force when it nailed Tenet Healthcare Corp. for a multimillion-dollar kickback and bribery scheme. It was the strike force's first major victory—it also may have been its last.
By Mike Scarcella | May 22, 2017
Lawyers for the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services on Monday asked a federal appeals court to freeze for another 90 days a dispute over billions of dollars in insurance industry subsidies under the Affordable Care Act, a delay that could further unnerve the health insurance markets.
By Mike Scarcella | May 19, 2017
Escape the daily flood of Trump news dominating the Washington headlines with this roundup of big regulatory developments. Zillow is facing CFPB scrutiny, Amazon mulls a pharmaceuticals play, Democratic state AGs move to defend a key part of Obamacare, and the SEC is boosting its ranks in new hires from Big Law. And here's a story about ducks at the U.S. Capitol.
By Robert Storace | May 17, 2017
The prescription drug company denied allegations that it falsely billed Medicaid and Medicare while agreeing to the settlement.
By Kristen Rasmussen | May 4, 2017
Some health care practice lawyers weren't ruffled by the passage of the Obamacare repeal bill in the U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday, mainly because they give it little chance of making it through the Senate. But they offered some guidance on what lawyers should be thinking through with clients right now.
By Kristen Rasmussen | May 1, 2017
This month, to help us unpack major regulatory action in Washington, we led a conversation between two former top federal regulators, William "Bill" Schultz and Ladd Wiley, who served under different presidents.
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