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Week In Review

Elissa D. Hecker - Editor

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By Christine Coleman

Edited by Elissa D. Hecker


Copyright Claims Board Now Offers Certified Final Determinations

The United States Copyright Office published a final rule regarding the Copyright Claims Board (CCB) and how it would handle requests for certified copies of final determinations. The rule most directly impacts parties who have been awarded damages by the CCB, but have been unable to collect. Though CCB judgments are enforceable in federal court, it’s been unclear how that enforcement would work. This new rule addresses one potential barrier, obtaining a certified copy of the final determination itself. It provides a new form users can submit through the CCB’s electronic filing system and sets the fee for the service at $15.


Entertainment

Menendez Brothers Getting Out of Prison? Diddy Investigated for Tupac's Murder?

In this video, legal analyst Emily D. Baker breaks down the main points of current pop culture and entertainment cases. She discusses the ongoing cases regarding Tupac, Karen Read, Hannah Gutierrez, Sarah Boone, Baby Reindeer, Matthew Perry, and the Menendez brothers.


Tupac Shakur’s Family Hires Team to Investigate Potential Link to Diddy

The family of the late rapper Tupac Shakur has hired New York attorney Alex Spiro to investigate an alleged link between Shakur’s death and Sean “Diddy” Combs. Former gang leader Duane “Keefe D” Davis, who was arrested in September 2023 and charged with one count of murder with a deadly weapon in connection to the attack, has previously claimed that Combs offered him $1 million for a hit on Shakur. In the past, Combs has denied any connection to Tupac’s attack.


Chili’s Parent Faces Second Copyright Lawsuit, This Time from Universal Music, As Beastie Boys Infringement Battle Continues

Universal Music Group (UMG) has filed an infringement complaint against Brinker International, the parent company of the Chili’s restaurant chain, in Texas federal court. Meanwhile, Brinker is also fending off infringement allegations from the Beastie Boys. Brinker purportedly used UMG’s protected music in promo clips via the main Chili’s social handles “without permission or payment.” Most of the alleged infringement seems to have occurred on TikTok, with the remaining alleged unauthorized usages attributed to Instagram clips.


Limp Bizkit Sues UMG for Unpaid Royalties, Breach of Contract, and More

Limp Bizkit has filed a massive royalties-related lawsuit against UMG. The band is suing for unpaid royalties, copyright infringement, breach of contract, and more. It estimates that UMG owes the group at least $200 million in damages.


The Menendez Brothers' Murder Case is Getting a Fresh Look Due to Netflix Docudrama

The Menendez brothers were convicted of murdering their parents in 1994. Now, 30 years later, their case is back in the public consciousness thanks to TikTok, Ryan Murphy’s Netflix show, Kim Kardashian, and the announcement by Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón that his office is reexamining evidence.


Naxos Sues Chinese Classical Music Platform Kuke

Classical music company Naxos has sued Kuke Music, which operates a classical subscription service and licensing business in China, over allegations that it has breached a digital distribution agreement, missed numerous payments, and now owes nearly $2 million. In the lawsuit filed in Tennessee, Naxos explains that it entered into an eight year digital distribution agreement with Kuke in 2018, giving it access to a large catalogue of classical recordings. However, Naxos says that Kuke stopped making payments under that deal at the end of 2021.


The Death of the Superhero Trademark

A tribunal of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) cancelled the registration of famous trademarks dating back to 1967. Those trademarks, jointly owned by Marvel and DC Comics, cover the term “superhero” and several variants of it. Marvel and DC have used their trademark registrations dozens of times to either block similar marks or prevent the use of the term in other projects. This is now no longer the case, because the USPTO has opened them up for others to use. These cancellations will have a major impact not just on future projects but also on projects that are currently contested using these marks.

 

.MUSIC Domain Registration Opens: Control Your Music Identity Now!

Years in the making, the registration and use of .MUSIC is exclusive to verified members of the global music community, enabling them to protect, control and oversee their music identities. For the first time in music history, the global music industry will be able to register their unique .MUSIC name and verified digital music identity.


Arts

The Role of New York’s Lauded Looted Art Unit Is Challenged in Court

The Art Institute of Chicago has refused the Manhattan district attorney’s art trafficking unit’s efforts to seize a work by expressionist Egon Schiele that it holds after the unit presented evidence that its Schiele had been seized by the Nazis from an Austrian cabaret artist murdered because he was Jewish. Instead, the museum is waging a sustained and very public battle in court to challenge the trafficking unit’s authority. In a sprawling hearing that extended over four days in recent weeks, the museum argued that the investigators are not only wrong on the facts, but also lack any jurisdiction in this case, and by extension, many others.


Salman Rushdie Will Testify at Trial of Man Accused of Stabbing Him

The author Salman Rushdie, who was stabbed and blinded in one eye two years ago by Hadi Matar, who rushed him onstage in front of hundreds of people, will testify at Matar’s trial. Matar is charged with second-degree attempted murder and assault with a weapon in connection with the August 2022 attack. Prosecutors say the attack, during which Rushdie was stabbed about 10 times, was premeditated. Matar has pleaded not guilty.


Removing Books From Libraries Often Takes Debate. But There’s a Quieter Way.

“Weeding” is a standard practice in libraries that involves removing books that are damaged, out of date or haven’t been checked out in a long time. However, after three years into a surge and in challenges and removals of books from libraries, weeding is sometimes being used to remove books because of the viewpoints they express or the stories they tell. Advocates argue that administrators and library board officials are increasingly using this approach to avoid the public spectacle of formally pulling books because of their content.


The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Next Fashion Blockbuster Takes On the Politics of Race

The Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art is wading into the politics of race relations. The museum announced that its spring 2025 blockbuster fashion show will be “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,” focusing on the history of the Black dandy and the way peacocking goes beyond aesthetics to empowerment. The Met’s first fashion exhibition to focus solely on the work of designers of color, as well as the first in more than two decades to focus explicitly on men’s wear, the show is another step in the Costume Institute’s efforts to rectify its own historic failures in diversity and inclusion.


A Woman Won South Korea’s First Literature Nobel, Which Speaks Volumes

The awarding of the Nobel Prize in Literature to Han Kang stands as yet another validation of the outsize soft power of the South Korean cultural juggernaut. Han is both the first South Korean and the first Asian woman to win the Nobel in its 123-year history.  The win by Han, who is best known outside her home country for “The Vegetarian,” is fitting at a time when female novelists and poets from South Korea have flourished, particularly in translation, sending a wave of works into the hands of international readers. But while her victory was widely celebrated as a crowning cultural achievement for South Korea, what Han and these female writers represent is a form of rebellion against South Korean culture, which remains deeply patriarchal and often misogynistic.


Sports

Businessman Convicted of Cheating Ex-National Basketball Association Star Dwight Howard In Scam to buy WNBA Team

Calvin Darden Jr., a Georgia businessman, was convicted of scamming former National Basketball Association (NBA) star Dwight Howard out of millions of dollars in a bogus scheme to buy the WNBA's Atlanta Dream. The jury returned its verdict against Darden after a trial in New York City. Howard testified during the trial that Darden fooled him into giving him $7 million by convincing him that it was an investment toward the purchase of the Dream. In reality, a three-member investor group that included former player Renee Montgomery bought the team in 2021. Darden faces 11 to 14 years in prison and will be sentenced early next year.


National Football League Settles Racial Discrimination Lawsuit With Reporter Jim Trotter

The National Football League (NFL) settled a racial discrimination lawsuit with reporter Jim Trotter. Trotter said in his September 2023 complaint that NFL Network did not renew his contract in retaliation for speaking out about the NFL’s lack of diversity and challenging commissioner Roger Goodell on the topic. Trotter confirmed the resolution in a statement, said that he will be creating a scholarship foundation for journalism students at historically Black colleges and universities, and that the NFL has agreed to make a donation in support.

 

Trump and Republicans Bet Big on Anti-Trans Ads Across the Country

With just four weeks until the election, Donald Trump and Republican candidates nationwide are putting transgender issues at the center of their campaigns, tapping into fears about transgender women and girls in sports and about taxpayer-funded gender transitions in prisons. Since the beginning of August, Republicans have poured more than $65 million into television ads in more than a dozen states on these topics in some of the country’s most competitive races. The flood of ads in races for the House, Senate and White House inflame cultural divisions and cast Democrats as outside the mainstream. Republicans are returning to a message that was tried, mostly unsuccessfully, in the 2022 midterms, as they attempt to motivate their base and curb their losses with female voters repelled by the party’s stance on abortion.

 

International Boxing Association Submits Formal Complaint to Protect its National Federations From External Interference

The International Boxing Association (IBA) submitted a formal complaint to the Swiss Competition Commission, accusing the International Olympic Committee (IOC) of unfairly dominating the global market for organizing and marketing the Olympic Games. The IBA is accusing the IOC of using its influence to prevent boxers from participating in the Olympics if their National Federation is affiliated with IBA, which violates fair competition standards under Swiss law. The IOC has pressured National Olympic Committees (NOCs) to exclude IBA-affiliated National Federations from its membership and restrict any formal relations between the NOCs and these Federations. IBA argues that this behavior is unlawful and has raised it with the Swiss Competition Commission.


Ethiopian Olympic Committee President Under Investigation for Human Trafficking Charges

Dr. Ashebir Woldegiorgis, President of the Ethiopian Olympic Committee, is under investigation for human trafficking charges related to the Paris 2024 Olympics. This development has sent shockwaves through the international sports community, raising serious concerns about governance and integrity within the Ethiopian Olympic Committee. An open letter addressed to the IOC has called for a thorough investigation and immediate action regarding the charges against Dr. Woldegiorgis. The letter emphasizes the need for transparency and accountability, urging the IOC to take decisive steps to address the issue and uphold the Olympic movement’s values.



Technology/Media

TikTok Faces Barrage of Lawsuits Around Teens and Mental Health

Thirteen states and the District of Columbia sued TikTok, accusing the company of creating an intentionally addictive app that harmed children and teenagers while making false claims to the public about its commitment to safety. In separate lawsuits, a bipartisan group of attorneys general cited internal company documents to paint a picture of a multibillion-dollar company that knowingly contributed to a mental health crisis among American teenagers to maximize its advertising revenue. They said that TikTok had relentlessly designed features to prompt heavy, compulsive use of TikTok and that many children were using the app late at night when they would otherwise have been asleep.


Judge Rules That Google Must Open Android to Other App Stores and Billing Options

Judge James Donato of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California ordered Google to make a series of changes to address its anticompetitive conduct. For three years starting November 1, the company must allow developers to bring their own app stores to the Android mobile operating system. It must also allow app makers to charge users with their own billing systems, outside the Android ecosystem. The order was a victory for the videogame company Epic, which has waged legal battles against Google and Apple since 2020 in an effort to weaken their power over the app economy.


‘Musi’ Sues Apple Over App Store Removal Following YouTube Complaint

Musi, a music streaming app, filed a lawsuit against Apple after being removed from the App Store. Musi claims the app's removal, which was prompted by a YouTube complaint, was unjustified. Musi sues Apple for breach of contract, seeking reinstatement and damages. The lawsuit raises questions about YouTube-related copyright claims, which have yet to be answered.


Can a Start-Up Help Authors Get Paid by A.I. Companies?

The Authors Guild is teaming with a new start-up, Created by Humans, to help writers license rights to their books to artificial intelligence companies. The partnership comes as authors and publishers are wrestling with the rapid incursion of artificial intelligence into the book world. By endorsing Created by Humans’ platform, the Authors Guild is acknowledging that there is no avoiding the disruption that A.I. has unleashed on the book business. Through their partnership, the Authors Guild will help Created by Humans develop informational webinars for authors that will explain how licensing works and what their options are.


Warner Music Inks Multi-Year Meta Pact, Including WhatsApp

Warner Music Group has inked a new multi-year licensing deal with Meta, according to a new report from Billboard. The partnership covers both Warner’s recorded music and Warner Chappell publishing operations, across all of Meta’s platforms, including, for the first time, WhatsApp. The deal will also come with additional promotion and marketing support for Warner’s artists and songwriters, and includes an agreement involving the two companies working together to continue discussions about generative AI content on all Meta platforms.


Their Uber Driver Crashed. A Pizza Order Unraveled Their Injury Lawsuit.

New Jersey couple Georgia and John McGinty were heading home from dinner in an Uber in March 2022 when their driver T-boned another car, leaving them with serious injuries, including spine and rib fractures. The couple sued Uber nearly a year later. Now, their effort to bring the case to court could be hampered by a terms of service agreement that they say their 12-year-old daughter signed while ordering pizza using her mom’s Uber Eats account. A New Jersey appeals court found last month that the agreement’s arbitration provision, which says that most disputes between Uber and its customers must be litigated privately was “valid and enforceable,” reversing a lower court’s decision that would have allowed the couple’s personal injury lawsuit to be heard by a jury.


Internet Archive Breach Exposes 31 Million Users

An illicit JavaScript pop-up on the Internet Archive proclaimed that the site had suffered a major data breach. Hours later, the organization confirmed the incident. The hack exposed the data of 31 million users as the embattled Wayback Machine maker scrambles to stay online and contain the fallout of digital and legal attacks.


The Tech Lobbying Group Helping to Broaden the First Amendment’s Reach

Ahead of a recent vote in Congress on The Kids Online Safety Act, NetChoice, a powerful tech lobby representing Google, Meta, and other major tech firms sent a forceful warning to lawmakers. The bill, which would require social media platforms and other sites to limit features that can promote cyberbullying, harassment, and the glorification of self-harm, has been a rare piece of legislation with bipartisan support. However, it has largely stalled in Congress, thanks in part to NetChoice’s efforts. The group is the driving force behind lawsuits that have derailed several state laws regulating the tech industry, relying on a novel legal application of the First Amendment. NetChoice has effectively argued that the state laws amount in various ways to censorship. In these arguments, Big Tech is testing the bounds of the First Amendment, expanding interpretations of the amendment’s definition of freedom of religion, press, and speech to provide protections in the internet era.

 

Another Hurdle in Recovery From Helene: Misinformation Is Getting in the Way

As thousands across the Southeast grieve the deaths and damage left by Hurricane Helene, a torrent of conspiracy theories, rumors, and lies threatens to undermine efforts to provide accurate information and crucial resources. Disinformation has been particularly rampant in Georgia and North Carolina, and the sheer number of falsehoods has alarmed officials, workers, and experts. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/06/us/hurricane-helene-north-carolina-misinformation.html?searchResultPosition=1

 

Antisemitism and Threats Directed at Officials Over Storm Response

In addition, a wave of antisemitic rhetoric and online threats has been leveled at state and federal officials in North Carolina in recent days as they respond to the destructive aftermath of Hurricane Helene, according to a report released by Researchers with the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a nonprofit research group that studies online platforms. The nonprofit found that on X, 33 posts that contained misinformation about the flood response had together generated more than 160 million views as of Monday. The posts have driven many of the false claims that have been swirling since the remnants of Helene decimated western North Carolina with extreme flooding and mudslides.


Ukrainian Journalist Has Died in Russian Captivity, Ukraine Says

Viktoria Roshchina, 27, a Ukrainian journalist who went missing in August 2023 while reporting from territories occupied by Moscow’s forces, has died in Russian custody, Ukrainian officials said. Roshchina had reported at great risk from areas in southern Ukraine and had reportedly traveled to eastern Ukraine to document the Russian occupation there. The news of her death outraged the international journalism community, with several organizations calling on the Russian authorities to promptly investigate what happened.



General News

Bruised Supreme Court Returns to Bench With Possible Election Cases Looming

The new Supreme Court term features cases on transgender rights, untraceable “ghost guns”, and whether Mexico may sue American firearms manufacturers. The coming months may also bring voting disputes that could decide the presidential election. Still, after three momentous terms in which the Court eliminated abortion rights, did away with race-conscious college admissions, and created substantial immunity for presidential crimes, the docket is, for now at least, back to a sort of normalcy, promising decisions that will produce sharp divisions among the justices and ripple through American life but fall short of producing the titanic societal shocks of recent years.


Majority of Supreme Court Appears Receptive to Biden Administration Limits on ‘Ghost Guns’

The Supreme Court recently considered the Biden Administration’s restriction on "ghost guns," which are homemade firearms that lack serial numbers and are often assembled from kits. At least five justices seemed to favor the measures. Proponents of stricter regulations argue that these guns pose significant public safety risks, while opponents cite concerns about individual rights and the impact on law-abiding citizens. Should the limits be upheld, the ruling would be a departure for a Court that has often proved unreceptive to the power of administrative agencies or gun restrictions more broadly.


Supreme Court Turns Down Biden’s Appeal in Texas Abortion Case

The Supreme Court turned down an appeal from the Biden administration urging the justices to allow some emergency abortions in Texas. The administration said that Texas’s strict abortion law conflicted with a 1986 federal law, the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, that requires emergency rooms in hospitals that receive federal money to provide some forms of emergency care. The order let stand a decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit that said the federal law did not apply to emergency abortions. The Court’s order was broadly consistent with two rulings in abortion cases in June. The theme that runs through the rulings is that the justices are not eager to return to the subject of abortion.


Splintered Supreme Court Wrestles With Case of Oklahoma Death Row Inmate

A fractured Supreme Court struggled to decide whether to grant a new trial to Richard Glossip, a death row inmate in Oklahoma, whose challenge to his conviction gave rise to an extraordinary concession from the state’s attorney general. Some justices wondered whether they had the power to rule for Glossip at all in light of a state court ruling against him that was grounded in part in state law. The likeliest outcome, proposed by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, was a half-measure that would satisfy neither side: sending the case back to Oklahoma for an evidentiary hearing on the meaning of a prosecutor’s long-suppressed notes.


Biden Requires Lead Drinking-Water Pipes to be Replaced Nationwide

Marking the 10th anniversary of the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, President Biden gave water utilities 10 more years to replace virtually every lead pipe in the country, imposing the strictest limits to date on a neurotoxin that is particularly dangerous to infants and children. Biden described the new regulation as an overdue environmental justice breakthrough for disadvantaged communities that he said had “borne the brunt of lead poisoning for damn too long.” The new rule, issued by the Environmental Protection Agency, sets the most aggressive restrictions on lead in drinking water since federal standards were first set decades ago.

 

Here’s What a Shocking New Number on Wildlife Declines Really Means

Wildlife populations around the world continue dropping precipitously, according to an important but limited and often misinterpreted assessment by Living Planet Index that is issued every two years. The declines reported have been so steep as to feel disorienting, with a reduction of 73% in the average size of monitored wildlife populations in a mere 50 years, from 1970 to 2020. The previous figure was similar, a 69% decline through 2018. However, the findings do not mean that wildlife in general has dropped by that much. Changes in tiny populations can have outsized effects on the global count because they are averaged together with much larger ones. Beyond that, the data is too varied and inconsistent to make confident estimates, some researchers say.


Trump Holds Up Transition Process, Skirting Ethics and Fund-Raising Rules

Less than a month before Election Day, Donald Trump’s campaign has yet to participate in the government’s official presidential transition process, a significant break from past practice that could threaten the seamless transfer of power should he win the election. Trump’s approach is a clear departure from how previous presidential candidates prepared to take control of the federal bureaucracy. It appears to be guided by Trump’s deep suspicion and mistrust of the government he is running to lead. Experts note that Trump may also have other incentives. His refusal to sign the documents allows him to circumvent fund-raising rules that put limits on private contributions to the transition effort, as well as ethics rules meant to avoid possible conflicts of interest for the incoming administration.


Book Revives Questions About Trump’s Ties to Putin

In his latest book, journalist Bob Woodward cited an unnamed aide saying that Trump had spoken with Vladimir Putin as many as seven times since leaving office in 2021, even as Trump was pressuring Republicans to block military aid to Ukraine to fight Russian invaders. Multiple sources say they cannot confirm that report.


Nobel Physics Prize Awarded for Pioneering A.I. Research by Two Scientists

John J. Hopfield and Geoffrey E. Hinton received the Nobel Prize in Physics for discoveries that helped computers learn more in the way the human brain does, providing the building blocks for developments in artificial intelligence. The award is an acknowledgment of A.I.’s growing significance in the way people live and work. With their ability to make sense of vast amounts of data, artificial neural networks already have a major role in scientific research, the Nobel committee said, including in physics, where it is used to design new materials, crunch large amounts of data from particle accelerators, and help survey the universe. The machine learning breakthroughs of Dr. Hopfield and Dr. Hinton “have showed a completely new way for us to use computers to aid and to guide us to tackle many of the challenges our society face,” the Nobel committee said.


Nobel Prize in Chemistry Goes to Three Scientists for Predicting and Creating Proteins

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to three scientists, Demis Hassabis, John Jumper, and David Baker, for discoveries that show the potential of advanced technology, including artificial intelligence, to predict the shape of proteins, life’s chemical tools, and to invent new ones. Hassabis and Jumper of Google DeepMind used A.I. to predict the structure of millions of proteins. Baker of the University of Washington used computer software to invent a new protein.


City Hall Official Charged With Witness Tampering in Adams Inquiry

Mayor Eric Adams’s former chief liaison to the Muslim community, Mohamed Bahi, was arrested on federal witness tampering and destruction of evidence charges that had grown out of the investigation that led to the mayor’s indictment last month. Bahi was charged by the F.B.I. in a criminal complaint in connection with the investigation of illegal contributions made to Adams’s 2021 mayoral campaign.


Top Deputy Mayor to Eric Adams Resigns, Intensifying Wave of Departures

Sheena Wright, a longtime ally of Mayor Eric Adams, has resigned from her post as first deputy mayor, making her the seventh senior official to leave the administration during a time of crisis in New York City government. Wright has been replaced by Maria Torres-Springer, who was deputy mayor for housing, economic development and work force. The departures seem to reflect the administrative housecleaning that Gov. Kathy Hochul, as well as some of Adams’s own advisers, has sought as four federal investigations have enveloped City Hall and cast doubt on Adams’s viability as mayor.


New Adams Administration Inquiry Focuses on City Leases

As federal prosecutors scrutinize Adams and his top aides, the Manhattan district attorney’s office has opened yet another corruption investigation into City Hall, this one involving the city’s leasing of commercial properties. As part of the inquiry, investigators have seized the phones of at least five people, including Adams’s chief adviser, Ingrid Lewis-Martin. The investigation has focused on possible bribery, money laundering and other crimes. This is the fifth corruption inquiry surrounding Adams and represents another area of scrutiny for the many law enforcement agencies examining Adams and his top aides.


Texas Man Drops Suit Against Women Who Helped Ex-Wife Get Abortion Pills

Marcus Silva has dropped his lawsuit against three women,  Jackie Noyola, Amy Carpenter, and Aracely Garcia, who helped his ex-wife obtain abortion pills. The case was widely seen as designed to discourage private citizens from aiding women in using the pills in states where abortion is all but banned. The move by Silva was part of a settlement with the defendants. The exact details of the settlement were not made public, but they did not involve any financial terms, according to lawyers for both sides. Silva filed his suit shortly after the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade and one year after Texas essentially banned most abortions with a law that also deputized private individuals to sue anyone who “aids or abets” a woman seeking an abortion.


The War That Won’t End: How Oct. 7 Sparked a Year of Conflict

The war in Gaza has been going on for a year, with no end in sight. It is the longest war between Israelis and Arabs since the end of the conflict that set the boundaries of the Israeli state in 1949. It is also the deadliest. More than 1,500 Israelis have been killed, mostly during Hamas’s attack on Oct. 7, and roughly 250 others were abducted. More than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s counterattack, which began with one of the most intense bombardments ever recorded in modern warfare. A wider, multifront war between Israel and Hamas’s regional allies is now unfolding, most recently with Israel’s invasion of Lebanon and Iran’s bombardment of Israel, but the core of the conflict remains the original battle between Hamas and Israel, and the challenge of ending it.


A U.N. Official’s Payments: Zero Interest Loans, a Mercedes, and a Tennis Sponsorship

Vitaly Vanshelboim, a high-ranking United Nations official, secretly took $3 million in gifts from David Kendrick, a British businessman, while he steered more than $58 million of the organization’s money to Kendrick’s companies, according to a ruling from an internal U.N. court. The court found last week that Vanshelboim, a Ukrainian, had committed fraud and “blatant misconduct” by failing to disclose the gifts from Kendrick. It said Vanshelboim had received interest-free loans, home repairs, a new Mercedes, and a $1.2 million sponsorship for his teenage son, who was a tennis player.

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