Photo of Bradley Weber

Brad co-leads the firm’s Antitrust Practice, is a past chair of the Antitrust & Business Litigation Section of the State Bar of Texas, and a past president of the Dallas Bar Association. For the past 11 years, he has been rated by Chambers USA for antitrust law, and he was recognized by The Best Lawyers in America as the “Lawyer of the Year” for Antitrust Law in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area for 2022 and 2024, an honor bestowed each year to only one attorney in a practice area and metropolitan area. Brad’s recent antitrust cases have involved clients from a wide range of industries, including energy, financial services, real estate, multifamily property management, insurance, travel services, building products, and agriculture. He also has extensive experience representing clients in class actions and multidistrict litigation.

Key point: California’s expansion of its antitrust law — targeting algorithmic pricing and lowering the bar for litigation — signals a major shift in how companies must approach algorithmic pricing tools and compliance.

On October 6, 2025, Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law two significant amendments to California’s Cartwright Act: AB 325 and SB 763. These amendments to the Cartwright Act are the most significant updates to the law in recent years. AB 325 addresses algorithmic price-fixing by prohibiting the use or distribution of pricing algorithms among two or more entities to coordinate prices or commercial terms. SB 763 substantially increases corporate and individual criminal fines for violations. The new laws take effect on January 1, 2026.