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Delaware dog custody battle wraps up with unexpected auction

Summary: Delaware's Chancery Court finalized a custody battle over a goldendoodle named Tucker. The court ordered a sealed bid auction to determine custody, with the highest bidder taking the dog. Joseph Nelson won the auction and gained custody; Karen Callahan received a monetary award. The case highlights evolving legal views on pets as family members rather than mere property. Delaware's Chancery Court, where some of the nation's largest businesses litigate billion-dollar disputes, has finalized a years-long custody battle between estranged lovers over a goldendoodle named Tucker. After fighting over Tucker’s custody in multiple courts, the dispute between Joseph Nelson and Karen Callahan was ultimately resolved by a Chancery Court judge in a way more suited to dividing a business asset than a beloved family pet. The case posed a question of first impression for the court and highlights an area of the law that experts say is gradually evolving to reflect the popular view that pets are family members. “Of course, the court will not order the physical division of a companion animal, even if the discerning wisdom of King Solomon teaches otherwise,” Vice Chancellor Bonnie David wrote in a ruling last year. Ultimately, she decided the best way to resolve the matter was a particular kind of auction in which both parties submitted a single, secret bid. The high bidder took Tucker and the loser got the winner's bid as monetary consolation. Nelson, who lived with Callahan in Bear and owns a local general contracting business, won the auction last month. And it appears the dispute is now finalized as the deadline for Callahan to continue to litigate through appeals passed recently. Court records do not disclose the bid amount and Nelson declined to say or be interviewed for this story. Through their attorneys, Nelson said he was “happy to close this chapter in his life,” while Callahan said she continues to miss Tucker. Both said they hope the case sets precedent to more quickly resolve similar disputes in the future. Nelson’s attorney wrote that the case highlights the issue of treating companion animals as personal property. "Delaware has recognized that pets are more than mere chattel in only limited situations," wrote Joseph Wolcott, Nelson's attorney. "My client hopes that this case can be used to help bolster protections for vulnerable companion animals that do not have their own voice." Callahan and Nelson were once next-door neighbors and reconnected at a funeral in 2018. That meeting blossomed into romance, dating and cohabitation at Nelson's residence. The two never married but shared different assets and eventually Tucker, who came into their lives in 2020. Callahan, who worked for JP Morgan, told the court Tucker was acquired as a support animal during her cancer treatments. Years later, Nelson told the court that was news to him. The two said they generally shared expenses for Tucker. The legal dispute over Tucker, along with parallel fights over property, began when the two split in 2022. Nelson told the court that Callahan abandoned Tucker with him. Callahan told the court Nelson locked Tucker in his truck and eventually took him out of the state. The two quarreled over other assets in relatively short court battles, but the fight for Tucker has wound on and on. It started in the Justice of the Peace Court, then went to the Court of Common Pleas and Superior Court, which affirmed Tucker was jointly owned. That, however, left the question of custody open. Callahan brought the dispute to Delaware's famed Chancery Court in 2024, asking for partition. In Delaware and most other jurisdictions, pets are considered property. Nelson argued against partition, telling the court it was inconsistent with recent legal changes made by the Delaware General Assembly. In 2023, the Legislature enacted three laws pertaining to pets caught in domestic strife. One specifically ordered Delaware's Family Court to consider the well-being of a companion animal when dividing marital property. Nelson argued the court should consider that public policy stance by lawmakers and deny Callahan's bid for partition. But Nelson and Callahan were not married, so David ruled partition was the appropriate remedy for such a division of property. The ruling set out that one party would get the dog and the other would get a monetary award. But it left open what that process would look like, and the judge ordered the two parties to negotiate that. They could not agree, so the question went back to the judge. David noted it was within Chancery's remit to consider all the consequences and balance them so as not to do more harm than good. She noted that dogs are property, but "they are not furniture; they are living, sentient beings with value that transcends economics." But she also wasn't convinced one side would be a better fit for Tucker, so she ordered an auction. Then the two fought over what kind of auction would occur. "It is clear that, having already spent tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees across four courts, these parties are highly motivated," David wrote. "A single-submission process will encourage the parties to think carefully about how much they are willing to spend and incentivize them to come forward with their best and final offers." This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: “Delaware dog custody battle wraps up with an unexpected auction” Reporting by Xerxes Wilson, Delaware News Journal / Delaware News Journal

Winklevosses’ Gemini Space Station sued by shareholders over strategy, departures

Summary: Shareholders filed a class action lawsuit against Gemini and founders Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss on March 18, 2026. The suit alleges false statements about Gemini's crypto platform viability and international growth in its 2025 IPO marketing. Gemini announced a 25 percent workforce cut, executive departures, and a $602 million projected net loss for 2025. Gemini shares dropped over 75 percent below IPO price after these disclosures, prompting shareholder claims of deception. Gemini Space Station and its billionaire founders, Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, are being sued by shareholders who say they were defrauded about the cryptocurrency exchange's business prospects and suffered losses as a strategy shift, job cuts and executive departures caused the stock price to fall. In a proposed class action filed on March 18 in Manhattan federal court, shareholders said Gemini made false and misleading statements in marketing documents for its Sept. 11, 2025, initial public offering by overstating the viability of its crypto platform and its ability to grow internationally. They also said the New York-based company did not disclose it was poised for an "abrupt corporate pivot" to focus on prediction markets, in which users wager on the likelihood of future events. Shareholders said Gemini's problems surfaced in February when the company said it would cut about 25% of its workforce and wind down European Union, UK and Australian operations; announced it was "parting ways" with its chief operating officer, chief financial officer and chief legal officer; and projected a potential $602 million net loss for 2025. Gemini shares fell after those announcements to below $7, more than 75% below the $28 IPO price. Shareholders said Gemini and the Winklevosses intended to and did "deceive the investing public." The complaint seeks damages for shareholders between Sept. 12, 2025, and Feb. 17, 2026. Gemini did not respond on March 19 to requests for comment. After markets closed, Gemini reported a full-year net loss of $582.8 million, or $258 million before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization and other adjustments. In an accompanying shareholder letter, the Winklevosses said prediction markets "will be as big or bigger than today's capital markets," and focusing on the United States will reduce expenses and "meaningfully accelerate our path to profitability." They also said artificial intelligence was a factor in the job cuts. Tyler Winklevoss is Gemini's chief executive, and Cameron Winklevoss is president. The identical twins are each worth $2.7 billion, according to Forbes magazine. Gemini shares closed up 5 cents at $6.01 on Thursday. They rose 11% after market hours to $6.67. (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York, Editing by Franklin Paul, Diane Craft and Bill Berkrot)

Company admits it diverted private patient records to law firms

Summary: GuardDog Telehealth admitted to diverting patient records to law firms in a lawsuit by Epic Systems. The records were taken from Reid Hospital & Health Care Services, Trinity Health, and UMass Memorial Health Care. Epic Systems filed the lawsuit alleging improper access and sale of patient records to lawyers for litigation. GuardDog settled the case in U.S. District Court in California on March 13, 2024. A health technology company has admitted it built a business on scooping digital medical records of individual patients from multiple health systems and distributing the information to law firms, according to court documents. The admission by GuardDog Telehealth came in response to a lawsuit brought by Epic Systems, the nation’s largest vendor of electronic medical records software. In January, Epic alleged that a “syndicate” of companies had improperly gained access to patient records and was selling them to lawyers for potential use in litigation. The case is important because it sheds light on the value of patient records in the commercial marketplace and the potential points of failure for hospitals, doctors and network operators who are charged with keeping them safe. Epic noticed in the fall of 2022 that law firms appeared to have access to patient records. GuardDog is the first of the several companies being sued to reach an agreement with Epic in the case filed in U.S. District Court in California. Epic called the agreement, entered on March 13, “a step forward for patient privacy.” The “stipulated judgment” says GuardDog may have scooped up records at Reid Hospital & Health Care Services, a health system in Ohio and Indiana; Trinity Health, which has providers in 25 states; and UMass Memorial Health Care, which operates in central Massachusetts. Each of those systems is an Epic customer. In all, Epic has said in its lawsuit that GuardDog was responsible for 6,000 of a total of 300,000 records improperly taken by various companies without patient consent. GuardDog represented itself as having legitimate health care reasons to access patient records on the digital highway that connects medical networks, according to the agreement, but its business “instead focused on requesting, reviewing, and summarizing medical records, and providing those medical records to law firms.” GuardDog Telehealth is listed in business records as having an address in Lindale, Texas. The court documents say its predecessor corporation is Critical Care Nurse Consulting, which is operated by Keli Heskett, who says on a professional website that she also is co-founder of Mass Tort Medical Consultants. Heskett did not respond to a request for a phone interview. In a statement, GuardDog said it “has always maintained that it acted in good faith, with the goal of supporting patient care to the best of its abilities, whether its patients were involved with the justice system or not.” The agreement with Epic says that GuardDog believed that another defendant in Epic’s lawsuit, Health Gorilla, which serves as a gatekeeper for digital health networks that share access to patient data, was aware of GuardDog’s activities. Epic has taken aim at Health Gorilla, alleging that it is “in league with its connections’ misuse of health information as a commodity.” Health Gorilla blasted Epic in a statement, calling its agreement with GuardDog “incomplete at best and misleading at worst.” It said it can prove that GuardDog never informed Health Gorilla it was using patient data for nonmedical purposes. “Epic’s lawsuit remains an attack on interoperability that threatens patient safety and efficient healthcare nationwide, made worse by misleading submissions like its agreement with GuardDog,” Health Gorilla said.