The Washington Post reports: "The Trump administration has stripped enforcement powers away from Consumer Financial Protection Bureau office that specializes in pursuing cases against financial firms accused of breaking discrimination laws, according to two people familiar with the matter and emails reviewed by The Washington Post." The full article is here.
The decision is here. WSJ report here. Update: Law360 reports here.
by Paul Alan Levy In the past few days there have been a couple of significant developments in the area of ”fake litigation” directed at consumer commentary – the use of fraudulent litigation techniques to obtain judicial relief against consumer criticisms of businesses without giving fair notice to the critic, and often using methods calculated […]
by Jeff Sovern During the Obama administration, the Department of Education adopted a regulation obliging colleges and universities to disclose their contracts with banks governing marketing to students as well as how much the schools receive from the banks. The WSJ went through those disclosures and reported on their findings in an article, Banks Pay Big […]
In Devlin v. Scardelletti, the U.S. Supreme Court held that a class-action objector may appeal a district court's approval of a class-action settlement under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 without first intervening. Today, the California Supreme Court rejected that approach in Hernandez v. Restoration Hardware for class actions in California state courts. The court's ruling was premised […]
That's the title of this Chicago-Sun Times editorial.
The Times carries this report of the role played by identity theft in the problem of commercial bots on Twitter. The victims of the identity theft might well have right of publicity claims given the commercial purpose of the identity theft, and it strikes me that Twitter has potential exposure to those claims, considering that, […]
by Jeff Sovern Ian McKendry has a report in the American Banker, Is Trump team moving to political middle in CFPB director search?, that mentions Iannicola, who served in the Treasury Department in the second Bush administration and is currently CEO of the Financial Literacy Group. Among their clients is the CFPB. The article also notes that another candidate, […]
Norman I. Silber of Hofstra has written Discovering that the Poor Pay More: Race Riots, Poverty, and the Rise of Consumer Law, 44 Ford.Urb.L.J. 1319 (2017). Here is the abstract: David Caplovitz is remembered primarily for his book The Poor Pay More and his writing about poor consumers. This article addresses why this work propelled the reconstruction […]
So Law360 reports. The nominees are Christine S. Wilson, Senior Vice President for Regulatory and International Affairs at Delta and Noah Joshua Phillips, chief counsel to Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas.

