Conservative retired judge calls for moving FTC into DOJ

Retired Chief Judge Susan G. Braden, formerly of the United States Court of Federal Claims, has written Quo Vadis—Federal Trade Commission? She argues that the Department of Justice should absorb the FTC. The paper was written before the Court decided Trump v. Slaughter but it anticipated the result. This proposal reminds me of how the […]

Court agrees to delay consideration of CFPB RIF plan

A federal court’s consideration of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s plan to lay off employees is temporarily delayed pending the nomination of a new director. More than a year ago, the National Treasury Employees Union sued the CFPB’s Acting Director Russell Vought and others, seeking to halt the rushed attempt to mass fire employees and […]

Seventh Circuit holds TCPA cause of action does not extend to text messages

Section 227(c)(5) of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) provides a private right of action for any “person who has received more than one telephone call within any 12-month period by or on behalf of the same entity in violation” of FTC regulations related to “residential telephone subscribers’ privacy rights to avoid receiving telephone solicitations […]

Second Circuit rejects constitutional challenges to NYC broker fee law

For those who haven’t had the fortune of trying to find a rental apartment in New York City, there has long been a system of “brokers’ fees”, where the *renter* is required to pay a broker a fee, often equal to one months’ rent, in order to obtain an apartment, which was negotiated by the […]

Bartholomew & Becher on AI Shopping Agents

Mark Bartholomew of Buffalo and Samuel Becher of the City University of Hong Kong have written a short opinion piece for the Regulatory Review: Consumer Protection Law Was Not Built for Robot Shoppers. Here are the first and last paragraphs: Imagine waking up to find that, while you slept, an artificial intelligence (AI) shopping agent […]

NJ Supreme Court Holds No Private Right of Action to Void Loan Contract

The New Jersey Consumer Finance Licensing Act (CFLA) requires consumer lenders to obtain a license, and provides that if a lender  violates that provision “in the making or collection” of a loan, the loan contract “shall be void” and the lender “shall be guilty of a crime of the fourth degree.”  In a unanimous opinion […]

Berkeley Consumer Law Scholars Conference Call for Abstracts

We received the following call for abstracts: We are pleased to announce the Ninth Annual Consumer Law Scholars Conference will be held in Berkeley on Thursday and Friday, March 4-5, 2027! Please save the date! The purpose of the CLSC is to support in-progress scholarship, foster a community of consumer law scholars, and build connections with scholars in other disciplines who […]

Pfeffer-Gillet article on batched arbitration

Alexi Pfeffer-Gillet of Washington and Lee has written From Mutual Aid to Batched Plaintiffs: Arbitration’s Collective Roots and Procedural Future, 76 Emory Law Journal (2026). Here’s the abstract: Arbitration is spinning out of control. The seemingly innocuous private alternative to court has for decades been the primary battleground for consumers and employees with widespread claims […]