Featured Stories
Emeka Chinwuba to Moderate Panel at Proximo Congress 2026: US Energy and Infrastructure Finance
NEW YORK, June 25 [Category: BizLaw/Legal] -- Cahill Gordon and Reindel, a law firm, posted the following news:
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Emeka Chinwuba to Moderate Panel at Proximo Congress 2026: US Energy and Infrastructure Finance
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Cahill partner Emeka Chinwuba will moderate the panel workshop "ABS for Digital Infrastructure: Charting the Path" at Exile Group's Proximo Congress 2026: US Energy and Infrastructure Finance Conference, taking place June 24-26, 2026, in Nashville, Tennessee.
The session, scheduled for June 25, will examine the rapidly evolving intersection of digital infrastructure and the US
... Show Full Article
NEW YORK, June 25 [Category: BizLaw/Legal] -- Cahill Gordon and Reindel, a law firm, posted the following news:
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Emeka Chinwuba to Moderate Panel at Proximo Congress 2026: US Energy and Infrastructure Finance
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Cahill partner Emeka Chinwuba will moderate the panel workshop "ABS for Digital Infrastructure: Charting the Path" at Exile Group's Proximo Congress 2026: US Energy and Infrastructure Finance Conference, taking place June 24-26, 2026, in Nashville, Tennessee.
The session, scheduled for June 25, will examine the rapidly evolving intersection of digital infrastructure and the USasset-backed securities (ABS) market, with a focus on the trends, opportunities, and challenges shaping the sector.
Joining Emeka on the panel are Nick Beauregard, Investment Director at Principal Asset Management; Ryan Delack, Chief Financial Officer of Surf Internet; Mehdi Khalili, Portfolio Manager at Legal & General Retirement America; and Margaret Osmulski, Principal at Ares Management.
Proximo Congress is the premier gathering of the US energy, infrastructure, and digital infrastructure finance community, bringing together industry leaders to discuss developments across the market.
Cahill partners Adam Dworkin and Peter Rooney, along with counsel Andrew Leedom, will also attend the conference.
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Original text here: https://www.cahill.com/news/events/2026-06-25-emeka-chinwuba-to-moderate-panel-at-proximo-congress-2026-us-energy-and-infrastructure-finance
Venable Honors Attorneys With the Benjamin R. Civiletti Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year Award
WASHINGTON, June 24 -- Venable, a law firm, issued the following news release:
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Venable Honors Attorneys with the Benjamin R. Civiletti Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year Award
Venable LLP has announced this year's Benjamin R. Civiletti Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year Awards. The award was presented to three individuals who demonstrated an outstanding commitment to pro bono service last year.
Additionally, a cross-practice team of four attorneys was highlighted for their unwavering dedication to a public interest project addressing systemic failures in Faulkner County, Arkansas, resulting in a form
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, June 24 -- Venable, a law firm, issued the following news release:
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Venable Honors Attorneys with the Benjamin R. Civiletti Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year Award
Venable LLP has announced this year's Benjamin R. Civiletti Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year Awards. The award was presented to three individuals who demonstrated an outstanding commitment to pro bono service last year.
Additionally, a cross-practice team of four attorneys was highlighted for their unwavering dedication to a public interest project addressing systemic failures in Faulkner County, Arkansas, resulting in a formof modern-day debtors' prison. The team has advanced equity in the courts by advocating for proper consideration of defendants' ability to pay before incarceration for unpaid fines and fees.
The firm also recognized attorneys and firm personnel who provided 100 hours or more or 50 hours or more of pro bono service.
"I'm so grateful for the firm to for supporting such a robust pro bono commitment ," said Warren Hamel, chair of the firm's Pro Bono program and co-chair of the firm's Investigations and White-Collar Defense Practice. "The firm established the Benjamin R. Civiletti Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year Awards to recognize and honor the spirit of public service of Ben Civiletti, our former firm chair."
The following personnel are this year's individual Pro Bono of the Year Awardees:
* Sarah Brooks, Partner, Los Angeles
* Jared Boone, Associate, Chicago
* John McCauley, Retired Partner, Baltimore
The following personnel were highlighted for their contributions as a cross-practice team:
* AJ Lynn, Partner, Baltimore
* Alexander Belman, Associate, Baltimore
* Thomas Naatz, Associate, Baltimore
* Evan Suval, Associate, Baltimore
The following personnel donated 50 or more pro bono hours in 2025:
Loren K. Aho ... Megan L. Algya ... Matthew J. Allman ... Claude E. Bailey
Angelique J. Ball ... Marcella Ballard ... Megan Barbero ... Anne-Therese Bechamps
Meredith K. Boram ... Patrick W. Boynton ... Patrick J. Brogan ... Brian J. Clark
Jean Y. Crews ... Gianna E. Cricco-Lizza ... Andrew J. Currie ... Joyce A. Delgado
Ralph A. Dengler ... Jonathan D. Eisner ... David E. Fink ... Allison D. Foley
Sean J.B. Franzblau ... Eva-Maria Ghelardi ... Era O. Gjonbalaj ... Guy G. Graney
Joseph R. Hicks ... Ronald M. Jacobs ... Christine F.V. Jonglertham ... Oluwatobiloba A. Kalejaiye
Adel A. Kelifa ... Kyle H. Keraga ... Audrey Y. Kim ... Nicole N. King
Daniel D. Lynch ... Ethan B. Mackey ... Lea C. Mano ... Jahmel J. Martin
Karel Mazanec ... Kaidyn P. McClure ... Douglas B. McDonald ... Melissa C. McLaughlin
Christopher D. Mudd ... Brae N. Nee ... Halena H. Ngo ... Keith S. Olsen
Grace C. O'Malley ... Lawrence S. Perry ... Taylor Petrie ... Jacob J. Polce
Eric A. Prager ... Amit Rana ... Lindsay M. Reed ... Janice Roberts
Stephen Schiermeyer ... Christopher K. Serrano ... Evan T. Shea ... Daniel S. Silverman
Andrew L. Steinberg ... Bart Stupak ... William W. Weaver ... Matthew W. J. Webb
The following personnel donated 100 or more pro bono hours in 2025:
Taskeen Aman ... Peter W. Bellas ... Nathaniel S. Berry ... Jacob L. Blevins
James Y. Boland ... Jared A. Boone ... Sarah S. Brooks ... Dimitrije Canic
Allison M. Cunneen ... Ronn S. Davids ... Allison R. Day ... J. Daniel Everson
Andrew C. Frailer ... Christina L. Gaarder ... Julie L. Galbo-Moyes ... Zoe E. Gallagher
Tina Goldy ... David S. Gray ... Josephine C. Hall ... W. Warren Hamel
Brian J. Healy ... Sarah M. Hoffman ... Kristy Hsi ... Ana L. Jara
Patrick T. Kalbac ... Justine A. Kawa ... Thomas C. Klanderman ... Steven C. Kline
Jonathan L. Ko ... Yvette Lopez ... A.J. Lynn ... Erin M. Maus
Imani T. Menard ... Mitchell Y. Mirviss ... John D. Murnane ... Sophia F. Porotsky
Adam G. Possidente ... Tara Sugiyama Potashnik ... Matthew L. Raber ... Theresa A. Rosendale
Alexander S. Rubel ... Carlos H. Salguero, Jr. ... Christian R. Schreiber ... Daniel L. Schwartz
Sarah L. Scott ... Claire F. Serruto ... Joanna R. Steele ... Evan I. Suval
Kenneth L. Thompson ... Jaden C. Thornton ... Theresa M. Van Vliet ... Belinda M. Vega
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Venable LLP is an American Lawyer Global 100 law firm headquartered in Washington, DC that serves as primary counsel to a worldwide clientele of large and mid-sized organizations, nonprofits, high-net-worth entrepreneurs, and other individuals. With more than 900 professionals in California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, New York, Virginia, and Washington, DC, the firm strategically advances its clients' objectives in the United States and around the globe. Venable advises clients on a broad range of business and regulatory law, legislative affairs, complex litigation, and the full range of intellectual property disciplines. For more information, please visit our website (https://www.venable.com/).
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Original text here: https://www.venable.com/about/news/2026/06/venable-honors-attorneys-with-the-benjamin-r
[Category: BizLaw/Legal]
Perkins Coie Advises Long Table Growth Corp. on $172.5 Million IPO
SEATTLE, Washington, June 24 -- Perkins Coie, a law firm, issued the following news release:
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Perkins Coie Advises Long Table Growth Corp. on $172.5 Million IPO
NEW YORK --Perkins Coie is pleased to have advised Long Table Growth Corp. in connection with its $172.5 million initial public offering of 17.25 million units at a public offering price of $10 per unit. The units trade on the Nasdaq Global Market under the symbol LTGRU.
Each unit consists of one Class A ordinary share and one-half of one redeemable warrant, with each whole warrant exercisable to purchase one Class A ordinary share
... Show Full Article
SEATTLE, Washington, June 24 -- Perkins Coie, a law firm, issued the following news release:
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Perkins Coie Advises Long Table Growth Corp. on $172.5 Million IPO
NEW YORK --Perkins Coie is pleased to have advised Long Table Growth Corp. in connection with its $172.5 million initial public offering of 17.25 million units at a public offering price of $10 per unit. The units trade on the Nasdaq Global Market under the symbol LTGRU.
Each unit consists of one Class A ordinary share and one-half of one redeemable warrant, with each whole warrant exercisable to purchase one Class A ordinary shareat a price of $11.50 per share. Once the securities comprising the units begin separate trading, the Class A ordinary shares and warrants are expected to be listed on Nasdaq under the symbols LTGR and LTGRW, respectively.
Long Table Growth Corp. is a special purpose acquisition company formed for the purpose of effecting a merger, amalgamation, share exchange, asset acquisition, share purchase, reorganization, or similar business combination with one or more businesses.
While it may pursue an initial business combination in any industry, sector, or geographic region, it expects to focus on a prospective target business that fits within its management team's historical areas of business expertise. Long Table Growth Corp.'s management team's long track record includes varied investments across financial technology, property technology, industrial technology/infrastructure, and energy transition.
The Perkins Coie team was led by Partner Elliott Smith and included Counsels Sarah Ross and Jordan Leon, as well as Associate April Foreman.
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Perkins Coie is a leading global law firm, dedicated to helping the world's most innovative companies solve the legal and business challenges of tomorrow. Learn about our work and values here.
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URL: Long Table Growth Corp.
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Original text here: https://perkinscoie.com/news/press-release/perkins-coie-advises-long-table-growth-corp-1725-million-ipo
[Category: BizLaw/Legal]
Fisher Phillips Issues Insight: New York Employers Need to Prepare for 3 New AI Laws That Could Soon Impact the Workplace
ATLANTA, Georgia, June 24 -- Fisher Phillips, a law firm, issued the following insight on June 23, 2026:
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New York Employers Need to Prepare for 3 New AI Laws That Could Soon Impact the Workplace
New York lawmakers recently passed several bills that would impose new AI reporting and disclosure requirements on businesses, including proposed amendments to the RAISE Act that would continue to build out a comprehensive AI governance framework. If signed by Governor Hochul, these measures would impose new obligations on employers and other businesses that use AI tools in hiring, staffing operations,
... Show Full Article
ATLANTA, Georgia, June 24 -- Fisher Phillips, a law firm, issued the following insight on June 23, 2026:
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New York Employers Need to Prepare for 3 New AI Laws That Could Soon Impact the Workplace
New York lawmakers recently passed several bills that would impose new AI reporting and disclosure requirements on businesses, including proposed amendments to the RAISE Act that would continue to build out a comprehensive AI governance framework. If signed by Governor Hochul, these measures would impose new obligations on employers and other businesses that use AI tools in hiring, staffing operations,and customer-facing applications. Here is what employers should know about the three big changes they could soon face.
1. Employers Could Soon Have To Report How AI is Affecting Jobs
The most significant proposal would require certain businesses to report annually to the New York State Department of Labor on how AI is affecting hiring and business practices. The bill would require businesses with more than 50 employees, as well as publicly traded companies, to estimate and report how AI is affecting their workforce. Reports would need to include:
* estimates of employees displaced;
* employees whose hours were reduced;
* employees hired or whose hours increased; and
* positions left unfilled in full or in part due to AI use.
Covered businesses would also need to describe the objectives of their AI use, human oversight measures, frequency and duration of use, use involving sensitive personal data, and risk-reduction measures.
Failure to comply could result in penalties of up to $500 per day, although employers would have a 90-day opportunity to cure violations.
The proposal builds on New York's broader effort to understand how artificial intelligence is affecting the workplace. Last year, Governor Hochul directed the Department of Labor to begin collecting information about whether layoffs are connected to employers' use of AI, and the agency subsequently updated its WARN reporting process to request that information from businesses submitting layoff notices. This new bill would take that effort a significant step further by requiring covered businesses to report annually on AI's impact on hiring, staffing, hours worked, and positions left unfilled.
Bill Leaves 2 Major Questions Unanswered
The bill does not answer two key questions that could leave employers confused:
* How should we define "artificial intelligence"? The bill neither defines the term nor incorporates an existing definition. That matters because employers have used automated, algorithmic, and AI-enabled tools for years. It remains unclear whether the bill is intended to capture only newer generative AI tools or whether it would also apply to technologies such as applicant tracking systems, scheduling tools, productivity platforms, workforce analytics tools, chatbots, or software products that have recently added AI functionality.
* The bill expressly covers impacts caused "in full or in part" by AI use - but how will that standard be applied in practice? For example, employers may need to determine when a hiring increase was attributable to AI-assisted recruiting, whether a position remained unfilled because AI improved productivity alongside budget constraints, or whether reduced work volume resulted from AI tools, changing business conditions, or a combination of factors. If this bill is enacted, employers would need to think about how they would identify covered AI tools, track workforce impacts, and document the basis for any estimates included in an annual report.
2. RAISE Act Amendments Signal New York's Broader AI Strategy
New York lawmakers also passed amendments to the RAISE Act, which Governor Hochul mandated when signing the original legislation last year. The law, which takes effect January 1, 2027, regulates certain frontier AI models developed, deployed, or operating in New York and imposes obligations on frontier developers, with additional requirements for large frontier developers.
The new amendments substantially revised the original legislation by:
* aligning certain definitions and thresholds with California's frontier AI law;
* clarifying that companies merely using, licensing, hosting, deploying, or building applications on third-party models are not frontier developers;
* creating a new oversight office within the New York Department of Financial Services;
* requiring transparency reports and public frontier AI frameworks;
* adding reporting obligations for catastrophic-risk assessments and critical safety incidents; and reducing certain penalties.
For most employers, the RAISE Act will matter most if they develop covered frontier models or rely on vendors that do. More broadly, however, the law signals New York's continuing effort to build a broad AI governance framework focused on transparency, safety, accountability, and workforce-impact visibility.
3. Generative AI Warning Notices Could Become Mandatory
A separate bill, S934A/A3411, would require the owner, licensee, or operator of a generative AI system to clearly and conspicuously display a notice informing users that AI-generated outputs may be inaccurate. If enacted, the law would take effect 90 days after signing. Violations could result in civil penalties of up to $1,000 per violation, with each user who is not provided the required notice constituting a separate violation.
Employers using third-party generative AI tools, embedding AI into customer-facing chatbots, or offering AI tools to employees should evaluate whether they could qualify as the owner, licensee, or operator of a covered system and whether the required notice would remain visible throughout the user experience.
What New York Employers Should Do Now
Employers in New York should consider taking these steps to keep up with the changes:
* Inventory AI and AI-enabled tools used in HR, recruiting, operations, customer service, and compliance.
* Identify tools that may affect hiring, staffing, hours, job duties, productivity, or workforce planning.
* Determine who owns AI governance. Identify the business, HR, legal, IT or compliance stakeholders responsible for tracking AI use and evaluating evolving legal requirements.
* Document human oversight and escalation procedures.
* Review whether user-facing generative AI tools warn that outputs may be inaccurate.
* Ask vendors about AI functionality, training data, sensitive data, risk controls, and notice obligations.
Conclusion
We will continue to monitor developments in AI regulation and workplace technology, so make sure you are subscribed to Fisher Phillips' Insight System to receive the latest updates. If you have questions about AI governance, hiring tools, vendor diligence, or workplace technology compliance, contact your Fisher Phillips attorney, the author of this Insight, or any attorney in our New York City office or on our AI, Data, and Analytics Team.
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Related People
Amanda M. Blair
Associate
212.899.9989
ablair@fisherphillips.com
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Melissa Camire
Partner
212.899.9965
mcamire@fisherphillips.com
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Original text here: https://www.fisherphillips.com/en/insights/insights/new-york-employers-need-to-prepare-for-3-new-ai-laws-that-could-soon-impact-the-workplace
[Category: BizLaw/Legal]
Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath Issues Commentary: Supreme Court Decides Cisco Systems Inc. vs. Doe
MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota, June 24 -- Faegre Drinker Biddle and Reath, a law firm, issued the following commentary on June 23, 2026, by associate William R. Heaston and partner Jeffrey P. Justman:
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Supreme Court Decides Cisco Systems, Inc. v. Doe
On June 23, 2026, the US Supreme Court decided Cisco Systems, Inc. v. Doe, No. 24-856, holding that courts may not create new rights of action to remedy violations of international norms, and also that there is necessarily no liability for aiding and abetting such violations.
The plaintiffs were practitioners of Falun Gong, a religious movement that
... Show Full Article
MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota, June 24 -- Faegre Drinker Biddle and Reath, a law firm, issued the following commentary on June 23, 2026, by associate William R. Heaston and partner Jeffrey P. Justman:
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Supreme Court Decides Cisco Systems, Inc. v. Doe
On June 23, 2026, the US Supreme Court decided Cisco Systems, Inc. v. Doe, No. 24-856, holding that courts may not create new rights of action to remedy violations of international norms, and also that there is necessarily no liability for aiding and abetting such violations.
The plaintiffs were practitioners of Falun Gong, a religious movement thatbegan in China in the 1990s. They alleged that the Chinese government persecuted them for their beliefs, and that Cisco Systems, Inc., enabled their persecution by developing surveillance technology that helped the Chinese government identify and apprehend them. The plaintiffs sued Cisco and its executives for aiding and abetting violations of international law, relying on the Alien Tort Statute (ATS). One plaintiff also sued two Cisco executives for aiding and abetting torture under the Tort Victim Prosecution Act of 1991 (TVPA). The Ninth Circuit determined that the plaintiffs could bring their aiding and abetting claims under the ATS and the TVPA.
The Supreme Court reversed. The Court began by acknowledging a "tension" in its prior decision under the ATS in Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain, 542 U.S. 692 (2004). There, the Court stressed that "the ATS is a jurisdictional statute creating no new causes of action," but said at the same time "that the ATS allows for the possibility of new, judicially created causes of action to enforce norms of international law." Sosa articulated a two-step framework for when this "very modest authority to create causes of action under the ATS for violations of international norms" may be exercised: (1) plaintiffs must show that the international norm has a "definite content and acceptance among civilized nations"; and (2) plaintiffs must show "it would be prudent for the court to create the proposed cause of action when the political branches have not acted."
The Court rejected the plaintiffs' theory of aiding and abetting international law violations under the ATS, holding that courts "cannot create new rights of action to remedy violations of international law, so there is necessarily no liability for aiding and abetting such violations." In so doing, the Court "close[d] the door that Sosa cracked to judicially created ATS liability." The Court reasoned that it was "difficult to think of a case in which a court 'might safely conclude' that a new ATS cause of action would not have detrimental foreign policy consequences." The Court also stressed that the "power to create causes of action belongs to Congress," which is in a better position than courts "to evaluate the policy tradeoffs of creating liability." It noted: "judicially created causes of action offend the separation of powers in almost every circumstance."
The Court also rejected the argument that the TVPA provides for aiding-and-abetting liability. It reasoned that when Congress seeks to impose such liability, it does so "expressly." Because the TVPA "nowhere mentions aiding-and-abetting liability," "that silence [was] enough to settle the issue."
Justice Barrett delivered the opinion of the Court, which Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Thomas, Alito, Gorsuch, and Kavanaugh joined. Justice Jackson filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, which Justice Kagan joined. Justice Sotomayor filed a dissenting opinion, which Justices Kagan and Jackson joined in part.
The material contained in this communication is informational, general in nature and does not constitute legal advice. The material contained in this communication should not be relied upon or used without consulting a lawyer to consider your specific circumstances. This communication was published on the date specified and may not include any changes in the topics, laws, rules or regulations covered. Receipt of this communication does not establish an attorney-client relationship. In some jurisdictions, this communication may be considered attorney advertising.
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Meet the Authors
William R. Heaston
Associate
Des Moines
+1 515 447 4766
william.heaston@faegredrinker.com
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Jeffrey P. Justman
Partner
Minneapolis
+1 612 766 7133
jeff.justman@faegredrinker.com
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Original text here: https://www.faegredrinker.com/en/insights/publications/2026/6/supreme-court-decides-cisco-systems-inc-v-doe
[Category: BizLaw/Legal]
Driving Credible Climate Action: HSF Kramer Supports SBTi's Corporate Net Zero Standard 2.0
NEW YORK, June 24 -- Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer LLP, a law firm, issued the following news:
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Driving credible climate action: HSF Kramer supports SBTi's Corporate Net Zero Standard 2.0
Leading global law firm Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer has provided strategic legal support to the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) in connection with the development of its new Corporate Net-Zero Standard Version 2.0 (CNZS V2.0).
SBTi is a corporate climate action organisation that enables companies and financial institutions worldwide to play their part in combating the climate crisis. In this
... Show Full Article
NEW YORK, June 24 -- Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer LLP, a law firm, issued the following news:
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Driving credible climate action: HSF Kramer supports SBTi's Corporate Net Zero Standard 2.0
Leading global law firm Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer has provided strategic legal support to the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) in connection with the development of its new Corporate Net-Zero Standard Version 2.0 (CNZS V2.0).
SBTi is a corporate climate action organisation that enables companies and financial institutions worldwide to play their part in combating the climate crisis. In thiscapacity, it is one of the world's fastest-growing voluntary corporate climate initiatives, trusted by over 11,000 companies and financial institutions.
The CNZS V2.0 is SBTi's most comprehensive framework for corporate climate action to date, with an expanded toolkit for setting and implementing targets. It makes credible, science-based climate action practical, accessible, and relevant for companies at every stage of the net-zero journey.
The firm conducted a legal review of successive drafts of the CNZS V2.0, suggesting amendments to mitigate legal and reputational exposure to the SBTi and companies operating under the CNZS arising from the CNZS V2.0 requirements, its claims framework, and the new responsibilities SBTi assumes in this version of the standard in relation to the assurance model and additional validation cycle assessments. In addition to identifying risks, the firm provided a mitigation strategy across a range of post-publication workstreams.
The Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer team was led by partner Sarah Ries-Coward, supported by UK head of ESG Jannis Bille, of counsel Ernst Muller and Leonie Timmers, and associate (Australia) Olivia Battcock. The team worked closely with Will Grazebrook, general counsel at SBTi.
Partner Sarah Ries-Coward commented: "In the net-zero transition, rigorous and practical frameworks are key to turn ambition into credible action. We are proud to have worked with SBTi across successive drafts of this landmark standard, providing strategic legal advice on the risk and mitigation architecture that underpins the CNZS V2.0."
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Original text here: https://www.hsfkramer.com/news/2026-06/driving-credible-climate-action-hsf-kramer-supports-sbtis-corporate-net-zero-standard-2-0
[Category: BizLaw/Legal]
Akin Advises Jamen Capital on Acquisition of Curve Royalty Systems From Universal Music Group
WASHINGTON, June 24 -- Akin Gump, a law firm, issued the following news release:
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Akin Advises Jamen Capital on Acquisition of Curve Royalty Systems from Universal Music Group
(London) - Akin advised investment firm Jamen Capital and its co-investor Merlin on the acquisition of Curve Royalty Systems from Universal Music Group.
Curve Royalty Systems is a royalty processing platform used by record labels, distributors and publishers, and the transaction is expected to support its continued operation as an independent business. The acquisition remains subject to final European Commission
... Show Full Article
WASHINGTON, June 24 -- Akin Gump, a law firm, issued the following news release:
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Akin Advises Jamen Capital on Acquisition of Curve Royalty Systems from Universal Music Group
(London) - Akin advised investment firm Jamen Capital and its co-investor Merlin on the acquisition of Curve Royalty Systems from Universal Music Group.
Curve Royalty Systems is a royalty processing platform used by record labels, distributors and publishers, and the transaction is expected to support its continued operation as an independent business. The acquisition remains subject to final European Commissionapproval prior to closing.
The Akin team was led by private equity partners Daniel Oates and Angela Becker and included corporate associates Laura McCrea and Gloriya Andonova.
For additional information on the transaction, please click here.
Akin is a leading international law firm with more than 1,000 lawyers in offices throughout the United States, Europe, Asia and the Middle East.
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URL: Jamen Capital
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Original text here: https://www.akingump.com/en/insights/press-releases/akin-advises-jamen-capital-on-acquisition-of-curve-royalty-systems-from-universal-music-group
[Category: BizLaw/Legal]