1. JD Supra Morning Brief: Year-end Tax Planning, Criminal Antitrust Fines, Social Media in the C-Suite, Good Advice from Bad Santa

    Made your dinner plans for New Year’s Eve yet? Our recommendation: smoked salmon, sparkling wine, and the JD Supra Morning Brief.

    Q: when is 30 hours a week full time? A: when the Affordable Care Act is counting (McNees Wallace & Nurick

    What’s all the uproar about arbitration, anyway? (BakerHostetler

    Corporate executives can get into a lot of hot water on social media. Here’s how to state cool (Social Media Today

    How’s your year-end tax planning coming? ‘Cause you only have, like, two weeks… (JD Supra contributors

    Will big data help us avert the next mortgage loan crisis? (Foley & Lardner

    It’s been a good year at the DOJ’s criminal Antitrust Division (and by good year we mean record fines and prison sentences) (Pepper Hamilton

    Bad Santa gives good advice – if you do the opposite of what he says, that is… (Constangy, Brooks & Smith

    UBS just agreed to a $1.5 billion fine for manipulating the LIBOR rate. But that’s not even the biggest bank fraud settlement of the week (Shipkevich PLLC

    Can Congress ban paid political ads from public television? We’ll know soon enough (Jackson Walker

    “Stevia in the Raw” is composed of approximately 5% stevia and 95% bulking agent (Foley Hoag

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    Follow the Buzz on Twitter: @JDSupraBuzz

  2. Obamacare Legal Analysis: An Audio & Video Roundup

    Here’s a quick look at recent audio and video legal analysis posted on JD Supra covering last week’s Supreme Court Health Care Reform decision:

    [Link: Goldstein: What Conservatives Won in the Health Care Case - Bloomberg Law]

    [Link: Supreme Court Upholds PPACA’s Individual Mandate, Alters Medicaid Provision—Mintz Levin’s Thomas Crane - LXBN]

    [Link: Why Did John Roberts Decide to Uphold the Affordable Care Act’s Individual Mandate?—Max Kennerly - LXBN]

    Also see the following related piece from law firm Allen Matkins, posted in advance of last week’s ruling:

    [Link: Healthcare Summit Reveals Industry Movement Independent of the Supreme Court Decision - Allen Matkins]

    We’ll post additional video updates as they come in…

  3. Health Reform Law: A Roundup of Obamacare Legal Analysis

    You know what the Supreme Court decided on Thursday. Since then, everyone has been trying to make sense of it all.

    For your reference, here’s a roundup of posts we’ve written thus far, as we organize the excellent PPACA legal analysis written by lawyers and law firms over the past few days.

    You should see:

    - Obamacare Ruled Constitutional: What It Means for You

    One of our very first posts on the decision, this includes a long list of links to early analysis by lawyers and law firms writing on JD Supra.

    A good starting point»

    - 5 Immediate Steps for Businesses Now That Obamacare Upheld

    “The U.S. Supreme Court ruling to uphold the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act doesn’t mean the end of legal challenges to health care reform efforts, but it does mean that employers can no longer wait to make the changes required by the law…”

    Read the entire analysis for business owners»

    - What the Obamacare Ruling Means for Health Care Providers

    “The decision will allow institutional health providers (hospitals, etc.) to begin implementing long-considered plans for a no-longer-distant future. What might that future bring? Three themes…”

    Read the entire analysis for health care providers»

    - Biosimilars Benefit From Healthcare Reform Decision

    In the words of law firm Dechert LLP: “Presumably it will be full speed ahead through the regulatory process, and we will see biosimilar applications for approval and attendant patent litigation before too long…”

    Read the entire analysis on the benefits for biologics»

    - And on JD Supra

    Here’s where you can keep track of all the new law firm advisories as they come in to JD Supra. We’ll be writing additional, theme-specific blog posts in the coming days. In the meantime:

    Healthcare reform updates on JD Supra»

    @JDSupra

  4. Obamacare Ruled Constitutional

    [Link: Goldstein: What Conservatives Won in the Health Care Case - Bloomberg Law]

    On June 28, 2012, the Supreme Court ruled that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is constitutional, upholding essentially all provisions of the health care reform law. 

    Our first analysis of the historic ruling came from law firm Constangy, Brooks & Smith LLP:

    “In one of the most anticipated decisions in decades, this morning the U.S. Supreme Court held that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 is constitutional.  The Court upheld virtually every part of it.  The most controversial and discussed aspect of the law, the ‘individual mandate’ to purchase health insurance or pay an annual penalty, survived even though many observers believed that the court would strike it down.  The Court’s rationale:  the penalty is itself a tax and therefore within the power of Congress to impose. 

    The Supreme Court views the individual mandate to purchase insurance as a tax, which it upheld as constitutional.

    Chief Justice John Roberts authored the majority opinion, and the vote was a narrow 5-4 in favor of the Act.  Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the dissenting opinion in which he states that four of the nine justices would have struck down the law in its entirety… 

    The effect of the Court’s decision:  all existing provisions of the Act, such as the coverage of adult children up to age 26 and the prohibitions on lifetime benefit limits, remain in effect.  More importantly, the penalties on larger employers for failing to provide minimum essential coverage and availability of coverage through government-sponsored exchanges will become effective as scheduled, on January 1, 2014.”

    One aspect of the law will have to be rewritten, however. Law firm Franczek Radelet:

    “… the Court did find one part of the law’s Medicaid expansion rules to be unconstitutional. Under the law as written, the federal government has the power to withhold state Medicaid funds if a state does not comply with the new Medicaid expansion rules. The Court held, however, that it is unconstitutional for the federal government to withhold existing Medicaid funding for a state’s failure to comply with the new expansion rules.”

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    Read the updates:

    Supreme Court: “Constitutional!” Health Care Reform Law Survives - Constangy, Brooks & Smith, LLP 

     Supreme Court Upholds Federal Health Care Reform Law - Franczek Radelet P.C.

    [Audio] Goldstein: What Conservatives Won in the Health Care Case - Bloomberg Law

     Supreme Court Upholds Health Care Reform Law - Ford & Harrison LLP

     U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Health Care Act - Loeb & Loeb LLP

     Supreme Court Upholds Individual Mandate in the Affordable Care Act, but Medicaid Expansion is in Question - Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP 

     Supreme Court Rules on Affordable Care Act - Ober|Kaler 

     Biosimilar Developers Can Breathe a Sigh of Relief - Dechert LLP 

     Obamacare Ruled Constitutional: What It Means for You 

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    Read the Supreme Court decision

    National Federation of Independent Business et al. v. Sebelius, Secretary of Health and Human Services, et al.

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    Check back during the day, we’ll be adding additional legal commentary and analysis as it comes in. We’re expecting video shortly.

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    Also follow the news on Twitter via @JDSupra and @HealthLaw