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UK’s Global Rivals Capitalize as PACCAR Funding Reform Stalls

By John Freund |

The United Kingdom's long-promised overhaul of litigation funding regulation has stalled again, and rival jurisdictions are moving to capture the investment that uncertainty is pushing offshore. Nearly three years after the Supreme Court's 2023 decision in *PACCAR* rendered most litigation funding agreements unenforceable by treating them as damages-based agreements, the government has yet to deliver the corrective legislation it pledged.

As reported by The Times, the continued delay is undermining the competitiveness of England and Wales as a global hub for commercial litigation and arbitration. The Ministry of Justice announced in December 2025 that it intended to clarify that litigation funding agreements are not damages-based agreements, with legislation to follow "when parliamentary time allows." But the 2026 King's Speech omitted any litigation funding bill from the legislative programme, leaving funders and claimants without the statutory certainty they had been promised.

Industry participants have voiced deep disappointment, warning that the absence of reform creates an opening for offshore centers that have already implemented clearer rules on funder involvement. While those jurisdictions compete for capital, the UK continues to develop its framework largely through case law, with little appetite for comprehensive statutory change.

The practical effect, observers note, is that funders weighing where to deploy capital may increasingly look beyond London. For a market that has long marketed itself as the world's premier venue for high-value disputes, the prolonged *PACCAR* limbo carries real economic stakes.

New York Ruling Opens Litigation Funding to Discovery in Fraud-Tainted Injury Suits

By John Freund |

A New York appellate ruling, paired with the state's newly enacted consumer litigation funding law, is giving defendants fresh tools to scrutinize the financing behind personal-injury claims they suspect are fraudulent. Together, the developments mark a notable shift toward transparency in a market that has historically operated outside the view of courts and opposing parties.

As reported by Law360, the Appellate Division, First Department, held in *Lituma v. Liberty Coca-Cola Beverages LLC* that defendants may obtain discovery into a plaintiff's third-party litigation funding where they present evidence suggesting the underlying claims arose from systemic fraud. The November 2025 decision was the first time the court affirmed an order compelling a personal-injury plaintiff to produce funding-related discovery, vacating the note of issue to allow further inquiry.

The ruling lands alongside New York's Consumer Litigation Funding Act, signed by Governor Kathy Hochul on December 19, 2025, and effective 180 days later. The law caps a funder's recovery at 25% of a case's gross proceeds, requires plain disclosure of all charges and cumulative repayment amounts, and gives consumers a 10-business-day right to cancel without penalty. Attorneys are barred from accepting referral fees or holding financial interests in funding companies.

Notably, the statute stops short of mandating disclosure of funding arrangements during active litigation. For now, defendants seeking to expose questionable financing must rely on rulings like *Lituma* to pry those agreements into the open.

Peter Thiel-Backed “Objection” Turns the Gawker Playbook Into an AI Tribunal for Journalists

By John Freund |

A decade after he secretly bankrolled Hulk Hogan's lawsuit that bankrupted Gawker, billionaire Peter Thiel is again funding an effort aimed at the press — this time through a startup that lets the wealthy pay to put reporters on trial before an artificial-intelligence "jury." The venture, called Objection, was founded by Aron D'Souza, the lawyer who orchestrated the Thiel-financed campaign against Gawker, and launched in April 2026 with seed money from Thiel, Balaji Srinivasan, and venture firms Social Impact Capital and Off Piste Capital.

As reported by The Hollywood Reporter, Objection works as a private arbitration service. For a starting fee of roughly $2,000, a client can challenge a published article. Human investigators — ranging from recent graduates to former CIA and FBI agents — gather evidence, which is then assessed claim-by-claim by multiple large language models acting as jurors. The system issues an "Honor Index" score grading a journalist's accuracy and integrity, and clients can pay extra to amplify favorable findings on social media.

The company's first target is a Hollywood Reporter investigation, brought by a Purdue Pharma heir disputing 2021 coverage of his image as an ethical investor. Media lawyers and First Amendment scholars warn the model could chill reporting that relies on confidential sources, with one attorney describing it as "a high-tech protection racket for the rich and powerful." The case underscores how litigation — and the money behind it — has become a tool to shape, and sometimes silence, coverage of the powerful.

The Milestone Foundation Announces 2026 Compassionate Counsel Honorees 

By John Freund |

Today, The Milestone Foundation, the only nonprofit organization providing fair and transparent litigation funding to plaintiffs, announced the honorees of its 2026 Compassionate Counsel Program.  

Now in its fourth consecutive year, the Compassionate Counsel Program recognizes trial lawyers who go above and beyond in serving their clients, not only as skilled legal advocates, but as trusted guides through some of the most difficult periods of their clients' lives. Honorees are nominated by peers, clients, and organizations, and selected by a review panel evaluating each nominee against the program's core criteria: putting clients' wellbeing first, demonstrating empathy alongside legal skill, and upholding the highest standards of integrity in the pursuit of justice. This criteria collectively reflects The Milestone Foundation’s mission and values.  

"Trial lawyers who practice with compassion are the backbone of our civil justice system," said Rachel McCarthy, Executive Director of The Milestone Foundation. "The Compassionate Counsel Program exists to celebrate those attorneys and to inspire every member of the plaintiffs’ bar to approach their work with the same humanity and commitment. We are proud to honor this year's remarkable group of honorees as we mark a decade of impact for the Foundation." 

The honorees will be formally celebrated at the Foundation's 10-Year Anniversary Celebration on Saturday, July 25th at Avli on the Park in Chicago, Illinois.  

The 2026 Compassionate Counsel honorees are: 

Daisy Ayllón | Romanucci & Blandin 

Kate Feroleto | Feroleto Law 

Rayna Kessler | Robins Kaplan 

John Reagan | Kisling Nestico & Redick 

Laura Yaeger | Yaeger Law  

About the 2026 Compassionate Counsel Honorees 

Daisy Ayllón | Romanucci & Blandin 

Daisy Ayllón is a Partner at Romanucci & Blandin, where she represents individuals and families in cases involving sexual abuse, medical malpractice, civil rights violations, and other catastrophic injuries.  Daisy chose plaintiffs’ work because she believes working-class people, immigrant families, survivors, and people facing powerful institutions deserve excellent legal representation when they have been harmed. 

She played a leading role in representing more than 200 women in the widely reported Ortega sexual abuse matters, which resulted in substantial resolutions for the survivors. Daisy also served as first chair in a $15 million verdict against a school district for failing to protect a male student from sexual abuse by a teacher. She has played a role in other significant cases, including a $40 million verdict for a child left paralyzed after a botched surgery and a $35 million settlement for a girl injured at birth. For Daisy, “compassionate counsel” means pairing fierce advocacy with the patience, empathy, and care required to earn a client’s trust and pursue justice with humanity. 

Kate Feroleto | Feroleto Law 

Kate Feroleto is a nationally recognized trial lawyer and leader in personal injury and trucking litigation. A passionate advocate for injured individuals and their families, she is known for combining compassionate client representation with relentless advocacy against insurance companies and corporate defendants. 

Kate serves as President of the Western Region Affiliate of the New York State Trial Lawyers Association and Dean of the NYSTLA Trial Lawyers Institute. She is a member of the Academy of Truck Accident Attorneys and has held national leadership roles dedicated to advancing the representation of victims of commercial trucking crashes. In addition to her litigation practice, Kate is a frequent lecturer, mentor, and educator on catastrophic injury litigation, traumatic brain injury cases, trial advocacy, and trucking accident law.  

Rayna Kessler | Robins Kaplan 

Rayna Kessler is a Partner at Robins Kaplan and Deputy Chair of the firm’s National Mass Tort Group. A nationally recognized leader in emerging mass tort litigation and advocacy for survivors of child sexual abuse, she has held court-appointed leadership roles in complex, high-profile matters including the Taxotere, Abilify, and Olmesartan multi-county litigations. She currently serves as MDL Liaison Counsel in the Exactech knee and hip replacement litigation in the Eastern District of New York. 

In October 2025, Rayna secured a $5 million jury verdict on behalf of a survivor of child sexual abuse against the Order of St. Benedict of New Jersey, which operates the prestigious Delbarton School in Morristown. The verdict is the first known in New Jersey against an entity of the Catholic Church for the sexual abuse of a minor, marking a significant milestone in institutional accountability litigation. 

John Reagan | Kisling Nestico & Redick 

John J. Reagan is a Partner at Kisling, Nestico & Redick (KNR), where he devotes his practice exclusively to personal injury, wrongful death, insurance coverage, bad faith, and class-action litigation. He brings a rare dual perspective to plaintiff-side work, having spent more than a decade as lead trial counsel defending national insurance companies, product manufacturers, and trucking companies — including being a shareholder for nearly ten years at one of Ohio's largest regional defense firms. 

That background shifted when John took on a seriously injured motorcycle accident victim whose own insurer denied his claim. John secured a six-figure jury verdict well in excess of policy limits, then obtained an additional substantial settlement against the same carrier for bad faith claims handling. The experience reoriented his practice toward representing individuals, and he joined KNR in 2010. Since then, John has secured significant recoveries for clients in personal injury, wrongful death, and insurance bad faith matters.  

Laura Yaeger | Yaeger Law 

Founder of Yaeger Law and Yaeger Legal Consulting, Laura Veronica Yaeger is a lawyer, consultant, educator, and nationally recognized leader whose career has been defined by a commitment to helping others. For more than 25 years, Laura has represented individuals harmed by defective medical devices, dangerous pharmaceuticals, toxic substances, and other forms of negligence.  

A dedicated servant leader, Laura has devoted more than two decades of service to the American Association for Justice (AAJ). She currently serves as AAJ Parliamentarian and is a past Chair of the Women's Trial Lawyers Caucus, co-founder and past Chair of the LGBT Caucus, former member of the Executive Committee, and longtime member of the Board of Governors. She is also a graduate of AAJ's Leadership Academy and has served on numerous committees and leadership initiatives dedicated to strengthening the organization and expanding opportunities for others. Laura's contributions to the legal profession have earned her numerous honors, including the AAJ Harry Philo Award in 2021 for outstanding contributions to the civil justice system and the Richard D. Hailey Distinguished Service Award in 2025 for her years of exceptional service and leadership. She also serves on the Board of Directors of the Florida Justice Association. 

About The Milestone Foundation 

The Milestone Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization providing an ethical funding solution to individuals pursuing justice after suffering a catastrophic incident. Through simple interest-only rates, attorney collaboration, and a mission-driven approach, the Foundation provides plaintiffs with fair access to the financial resources they need to pursue justice. For more information, visit https://themilestonefoundation.org/.    

Burford Capital Asks Supreme Court to Reverse Third Circuit Arbitration Ruling

By John Freund |

Burford Capital has urged the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a Third Circuit decision that dismissed, on jurisdictional grounds, the litigation funder's bid to arbitrate a dispute tied to German antitrust litigation. Burford contends the appeals court committed what it called a "fundamental error" in concluding that federal courts lacked authority over the matter.

As reported by Law360, Burford told the justices on June 16 that the Court's own decision earlier this year in Jules v. Andre Balazs Properties is reason enough to undo the Third Circuit's ruling. In Jules, the Court held that a federal court which compels arbitration of federal claims under Section 4 of the Federal Arbitration Act retains subject-matter jurisdiction to confirm or vacate the resulting award, even without an independent basis for federal jurisdiction over the post-award proceeding.

Burford argues that principle squarely governs its case, and that the appeals court's contrary conclusion cannot stand in light of the new precedent. The funder is asking the justices to take up the matter and correct what it describes as a clear jurisdictional misstep.

The stakes extend beyond a single dispute. For funders, the ability to confirm and enforce arbitral awards in federal court is central to monetizing cross-border claims, and a jurisdictional dead-end at the enforcement stage raises both cost and risk. A decision to hear the case could bring welcome clarity for funders pursuing international, arbitration-related recoveries.

Chicago Litigation Finance Summit Debuts as New Industry Gathering

By John Freund |

A new entrant has joined the litigation finance conference circuit. The inaugural Chicago Litigation Finance Summit convened at the Museum of Contemporary Art in early May, organized by Charles Zuo, a graduating JD/MBA candidate at Northwestern University.

As reported by Above the Law, Zuo built the program around a deliberately broad agenda, with panels spanning deal structures, funders operating across different capital structures, policy and academic perspectives, and legal technology. He described aiming for "both a diverse set of people and a diverse set of topics," pairing speakers who shared expertise but brought genuinely different vantage points.

Zuo's path to convening the summit included externing at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois, clerking at Patterson Law, working at Bridge Legal, and serving as a law school ambassador for Harvey AI, alongside degrees in English literature, business analytics, and machine learning.

According to the profile, the inaugural event secured robust sponsor backing while maintaining editorial independence, and organizers reported strong feedback from attendees on the return generated by their participation.

The summit's arrival adds Chicago to a growing roster of regional venues where funders, lawyers, academics, and technologists gather as litigation finance continues to mature into an established asset class. Above the Law published the profile as the first installment of a two-part series.

Insurer Sues Litigation Funder Case Cash Over Alleged Inflated Personal-Injury Claims

By John Freund |

A new lawsuit casts a harsh light on the consumer litigation funding model, with a major insurer accusing a New York funder of engineering a scheme to inflate personal injury claims at carriers' expense.

As reported by Insurance Business, New York Marine & General Insurance Company has sued Case Cash Funding and its principal, Gregory Elefterakis, a suspended attorney, in Manhattan federal court. The complaint, filed June 12, alleges that Case Cash advanced modest sums to injured claimants as "non-recourse" funding, then used its control over the claims to balloon them into multimillion-dollar demands.

According to the suit, the defendants paid referral fees to medical clinics, steered claimants toward favored attorneys, conditioned funding on claimants undergoing surgery, and blocked settlements that did not maximize their returns. In one instance, the parties had agreed on a $750,000 settlement, but the funder allegedly refused and asserted a lien of more than $1.4 million instead. The complaint cites a claimant who received just 13.3% of a $3.75 million settlement while the funder collected 47.5%, and another facing an effective interest rate of roughly 170%.

The filing also points to a securitization instrument, PEAR 2022-1, said to contain more than $84.6 million in receivables across nearly 16,807 advances—underscoring the scale of the operation. The case adds to mounting insurer pushback against consumer legal funding practices and feeds the broader debate over disclosure and regulation of the industry.

UK Tribunal Approves £480M Qualcomm “Drop-Hands” Settlement, Leaving Funded Class With Nothing

By John Freund |

In a striking outcome for funded collective actions, the UK's Competition Appeal Tribunal has signed off on the discontinuation of a £480 million claim against Qualcomm that delivers no compensation to the millions of consumers it was meant to benefit.

As reported by CDR News, the Tribunal approved a "drop-hands" settlement on June 10 under which all parties discontinue proceedings and bear their own costs. The claim, brought by the Consumers' Association (Which?) as class representative, had alleged that Qualcomm abused its market dominance to overcharge for smartphone chips, inflating handset prices.

The Tribunal assessed the claim's prospects at just 10% to 15%, concluding that the class representative "no longer had a realistic prospect of success." The result is believed to be the first CAT settlement resolved on a drop-hands basis, with neither the class nor the funder receiving any payment despite the claim's headline valuation.

The action had been backed by litigation funder Augusta Ventures alongside law firm Hausfeld. For the funder, the outcome represents a total loss on its investment in the case—a pointed illustration of the downside risk inherent in the opt-out regime.

The decision lands amid intensifying scrutiny of funded class actions in the UK, where the Tribunal has shown a growing willingness to test the merits, economics, and consumer benefit of collective proceedings before allowing them to advance or settle.

Op-Ed: Policymakers Must Fix the Tax Treatment of Litigation Funding

By John Freund |

As private equity firms extend their reach into the legal industry, a new commentary argues that the tax code has failed to keep pace with how litigation funders actually earn their returns.

Writing for RealClearMarkets, Michael Toth contends that third-party litigation funders routinely claim favorable capital gains treatment on their returns when that income should be taxed as ordinary income. He notes that the Treasury Department "has never bothered to clarify the proper tax treatment of TPLF returns," leaving a roughly $20 billion industry to structure deals as "derivative contracts" despite funders performing work that closely mirrors that of plaintiffs' attorneys—vetting cases, advising on strategy, and managing litigation budgets.

The piece opens with Fortress's recent $125 million investment in an Arizona personal injury firm, which Toth frames as evidence that funders are shifting from wagering on individual case outcomes toward financing law firms' back-office operations and steadier revenue streams. He argues that the disclosure bills congressional Republicans have introduced since 2019 are "focused on yesterday's market," addressing single-case funding even as investors move toward portfolio and operational models. He also flags that nonresident foreign funders can often avoid federal tax on U.S. litigation gains altogether.

Toth's proposed fix relies on existing authority: he urges Treasury to apply the substance-over-form doctrine and tax funding returns as ordinary business income, while noting that Congress could amend the definition of capital assets to exclude legal claims.

Are Class Members Out of Reach? Low Take-Up Tests the UK’s Opt-Out Regime

By John Freund |

The credibility of the UK's opt-out collective action regime increasingly depends on a stubborn problem: persuading class members to actually claim the damages won on their behalf.

As reported by The Law Society Gazette, Rachel Rothwell, editor of Litigation Funding, examines how little of the money awarded in landmark cases is reaching the consumers it is meant to compensate. In Gutmann v South Western Trains, the boundary fares case, roughly £25 million was awarded—yet take-up was less than 1%, with only about £200,000 distributed to class members and £3.8 million directed to the Access to Justice Foundation. Many passengers, she notes, abandoned their claims once asked to supply bank details, wary of fraud.

The forthcoming Merricks v Mastercard payout will test the regime on a far larger scale. With £100 million of the £200 million settlement ringfenced for as many as 44 million potential claimants—roughly £45 to £70 each—the case has become a referendum on whether opt-out actions can deliver for the public rather than primarily for lawyers and funders.

Rothwell canvasses several proposed fixes: a central public register of claims endorsed by government or the courts; compelling defendants, particularly in the tech and utility sectors, to assist with distribution; and building trust through charities and consumer groups while offering vouchers in place of direct bank transfers. Legitimacy, she argues, hinges on a meaningful share of damages reaching those actually harmed.

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