First up this week is Ben Finestone of Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan who secured a preliminary injunction from a Delaware bankruptcy court this week for lenders who claim Indian edtech company Byju fraudulently transferred funds to a Florida hedge fund. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge John Dorsey in Wilmington, who previously issued a bench warrant for the hedge fund’s manager after he no-showed a contempt hearing, this week issued an order freezing more than $533 million in transferred funds.

A trial team at Keller Postman won a $60 million verdict last week against Mead Johnson in the first trial considering claims that cow’s milk-based infant formula injures babies born prematurely. A state court jury in St. Clair County, Illinois, last week sided with plaintiff Jasmine Watson, whose baby was taking formula before he died at the hospital. Jurors found Mead Johnson was negligent and failed to warn that its formula could cause gastrointestinal inflammation called necrotizing enterocolitis, or NEC. The plaintiff’s trial team included Ashley Keller, Ben Whiting and Amelia Frenkel of Keller Postman, David Cates of The Cates Law Firm, and Sean Grimsley of Olson Grimsley Kawanabe Hinchcliff & Murray.