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TikTok to settle with teen plaintiff before California social media trial, law firm says

Summary: TikTok settles lawsuit with Florida teen plaintiff Morgan & Morgan represents the 15-year-old plaintiff Over 3,300 social media addiction cases pending in California TikTok has agreed to settle a lawsuit brought by a teenager who claimed the platform damaged his mental health, a spokesperson for the plaintiff's law firm said on June 30. The settlement was reached in principle, but the details have not yet been finalized, according to a spokesperson for Morgan & Morgan, which represents the plaintiff, a 15-year-old boy from Florida known by his initials R.K.C. TikTok representatives did not immediately respond to requests for comment. R.K.C.'s case is expected to be the second trial in California state court over claims social media platforms have been designed to be addictive to children, spurring a youth mental health crisis. R.K.C., who started using social media when he was about 8, said he became addicted to it, losing sleep and suffering from depression and anxiety, according to court filings. He originally named four defendants in his lawsuit — Google's YouTube, Meta's Instagram, Snap Inc's Snapchat and ByteDance's TikTok. YouTube settled in June, while Meta and Snapchat remain scheduled for a trial set to kick off July 27. THOUSANDS OF CASES More than 3,300 lawsuits involving addiction claims against social media companies are pending in California state court. Another 2,600 cases brought by individuals, school districts, municipalities and states are pending in California federal court. The companies have denied the allegations and say they take extensive steps ⁠to keep teens and young users safe on their platforms. The first trial, which ended in March, was in the case of a woman who said ⁠she became addicted to social media platforms at a young age because of their attention-grabbing design. TikTok and Snap settled that case before trial. Meta and Google went to trial, and a jury ultimately found the companies negligent, ordering Meta to pay $4.2 million in damages and Google to pay $1.8 million. In June, the judge rejected the companies’ bid to set aside that verdict. The first trial in federal court had been set to begin in June in a lawsuit brought by a Kentucky school district against Meta, Snap, TikTok and YouTube. All of the companies settled before trial, paying the district a combined $27 million. In addition to the cases in Los Angeles and in federal court, nearly every state in the country has filed lawsuits in their own states against the companies. The lawsuits accuse the companies of misrepresenting the safety of their platforms for young users and of designing them to addict children.

Supreme Court strengthens Trump’s hold on key levers of government power

Summary: Supreme Court overturns Humphrey's Executor precedent 6-3 ruling affirms president's authority to fire FTC commissioner Decision marks major expansion of unitary executive theory   The U.S. Supreme Court's decision to hand Donald Trump broad authority to fire regulatory agency heads caps off a decades-long conservative push to strengthen the president's grip on key levers of government power. The June 29 6-3 ruling, powered by the court's conservatives, determined that a president can remove agency officials who wield executive power, such as Democratic Federal Trade Commission member Rebecca Slaughter, whose firing was upheld despite removal protections provided in law by Congress. The court, however, signaled that the decision should not be seen as undermining the Federal Reserve's independence. The justices described the U.S. central bank as possessing a unique historical tradition, and in a separate case on Monday refused to let Trump fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. Legal experts said the FTC ruling dealt a crippling blow to the so-called "administrative state." That refers to the network of federal agencies that regulate key aspects of American life and business, from finance to air traffic safety to labor relations, and had been largely insulated from direct presidential control. The decision is also seen as the high-water mark for the "unitary executive" theory, a conservative legal doctrine popularized during the presidency of Republican Ronald Reagan in the 1980s that had made steady inroads with like-minded justices. That theory sees the president as having sole authority over the U.S. government's executive branch, including the power to fire and replace heads of federal agencies at will. The court bolstered presidential power at a time when Trump has tested the limits of his authority in both domestic and foreign affairs. 'NEARLY A NULLITY' University of North Carolina School of Law professor Michael Gerhardt said Monday's FTC ruling marked "the most significant decision expanding presidential power in decades." "This is definitely the biggest win yet for the unitary theory of the executive," Gerhardt said, calling it "the culmination of years of planning by conservative groups." "The administrative state," Gerhardt added, "just shrank to nearly a nullity." According to John Yoo, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law, the ruling gives the president control over an administrative state that was primarily created and expanded by Democratic former Presidents Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson and Barack Obama. "The presidency just gained the most constitutional power, at any one time, in Slaughter than in any other single case in Supreme Court history," Yoo said, referring to the case by its name, Trump v. Slaughter. "There is no more independent administrative state." Slaughter, appointed by Democratic former ⁠President Joe Biden, was one of two Democratic FTC commissioners who Trump moved to fire in March 2025 from the consumer protection and antitrust agency. Slaughter's term was due to run until 2029. In a legal challenge to her removal, Slaughter cited a 1914 law that allowed a president to remove FTC commissioners only for cause — such as inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office — but not for policy differences. Similar protections have covered officials at more than two dozen other independent agencies, including the National Labor Relations Board and Merit Systems Protection Board. A PRECEDENT OVERTURNED Lower courts that reviewed Slaughter's claim upheld these tenure protections for FTC members under a 1935 Supreme Court decision in a case called Humphrey's Executor v. United States that recognized congressional authority to protect leaders of certain regulatory agencies from presidential removal at will. The court in the Humphrey's Executor decision rebuffed Roosevelt's attempt to fire an FTC member over policy differences despite the tenure protections given by Congress. In that decision, the court said restricting a president's removal of commissioners was lawful because the FTC performed tasks more closely resembling legislative and judicial functions rather than those belonging squarely to the executive branch, headed by the president. The Trump administration had argued that the modern FTC grew ⁠to wield substantial executive power in the decades since the Humphrey's Executor decision, draining that ruling of its force. The court in Monday's decision agreed, overruling Humphrey's Executor. The court's three liberal justices dissented. The Supreme Court in recent decades had narrowed the reach of Humphrey's Executor but stopped short of overturning it. In a 2020 ruling, it said the Constitution's Article II gives the president the general power to remove heads of agencies at will but that the 1935 precedent had carved out an exception that allowed for-cause removal protections for certain multi-member, expert agencies. Christine Chabot, a professor at Marquette University Law School in Wisconsin, said, "The court's decision to overrule Humphrey's Executor is the biggest win to date for the 'unitary executive' theory." Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the University of California, Berkeley Law School, said he expects Monday's ruling overruling Humphrey's will lead to further politicization of federal regulatory agencies that Congress sought to entrust to nonpartisan experts. "I think agency independence is now gone," Chemerinsky said. "Agencies, like cabinet departments, will need to do what the president wants." The likely outcome will be broader swings in regulatory policy when the presidential administration of one political party replaces the other party. University of Illinois Chicago law professor Steve Schwinn, who criticized the ruling, said he expects it will result in the "hyper-politicization of previously independent federal agencies." "I fear that we as a people won't fully appreciate the impacts for years or decades," Schwinn said. Reporting by John Kruzel; Editing by Will Dunham

US Supreme Court takes up Pepsi ‘Mtn Dew Rise’ trademark dispute

Summary: U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Rise Brewing appeal 2nd Circuit overturned initial trademark block Pepsi renamed Mtn Dew Rise before discontinuing it The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on June 29 to hear a bid by canned-coffee maker Rise Brewing to hold PepsiCo liable for alleged trademark infringement concerning Pepsi's morning energy drink "Mtn Dew Rise." The justices took up Rise's appeal of a lower court's ruling rejecting the company's claim that the product name "Mtn Dew Rise" infringes its trademarks and creates customer confusion with its coffee brand. The Supreme Court is expected to hear the case during its next term, which begins in October. Pepsi launched Mtn Dew Rise, a fruit-flavored energy drink marketed to morning drinkers, in 2021. Stamford, Connecticut-based Rise sued Pepsi later that year, alleging trademark infringement. Rise sought an unspecified amount of monetary damages and a court order blocking Pepsi from using the "Rise" name. It argued that Pepsi, which also distributes Starbucks coffee drinks, was trying to "destroy a leading competitor" by flooding the market with a similarly named product. Manhattan-based U.S. District Judge Lorna Schofield granted Rise's request to temporarily block Pepsi's use of the "Mtn Dew Rise" name, citing evidence that it posed an "existential threat" to Rise's business. Pepsi renamed its drink "Mtn Dew Energy" after the ruling before discontinuing it altogether in 2024. The Manhattan-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned Schofield's order in 2022. Pepsi convinced Schofield to throw out the case in 2023 in light of the appeals court's decision. The judge said Rise's trademark rights were weak because of the "strong logical associations between 'Rise' and coffee," and agreed with the 2nd Circuit's finding that the differences in the drinks' branding were "far more notable than the similarities." The 2nd Circuit affirmed that ruling in 2024. Rise told the Supreme Court in a filing that the strength of its trademarks was a factual question that should not have been decided by a judge, and that other federal appeals courts that have considered the issue have left that matter to juries to decide. Pepsi responded in a filing that the case was a "run-of-the-mill trademark dispute," and that Rise's argument implicated no split among federal appeals courts and "lacks sufficient importance" to warrant Supreme Court intervention. President Donald Trump's administration urged the Supreme Court not to hear Rise's appeal. Reporting by Blake Brittain; Editing by Will Dunham