Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Allison Dunn | October 28, 2022
"I agree with the Hymans. Although Merrill may terminate her late husband's licensing deals, she has no right to cancel his royalty deals," Judge Jeffrey Alker Meyer wrote.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Mason Lawlor | September 29, 2022
The U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut granted "Friday the 13th" screenwriter Victor Miller partial attorney fees, totaling more than $886,564, in his long-running fight against the 1980 horror film's production company, Manny Co., over proceeds from the film.
By Scott Graham | September 27, 2022
The court kicks off Term 2022 with arguments next month in the Andy Warhol fair-use case. Multiple life science companies are also asking the court to take up their patent cases, while a case on trademark extraterritoriality appears destined for certiorari.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | August 30, 2022
Shearman & Sterling patent litigator Mark Hannemann has moved to Locke Lord in New York, after looking for a firm with a strong IP presence.
By Scott Graham | August 15, 2022
Mattel v. Rap Snacks is part of a surge in trademark litigation detected last week by Law.com Radar.
By Scott Graham | June 14, 2022
The Federal Circuit ruled that a patent on a CAR-T treatment did not meet patent law's written description requirement. Jones Day and Irell & Manella are arguing for Bristol-Myers Squibb that the Federal Circuit has added judicial requirements to the statute that are virtually impossible for life sciences companies to meet.
By Scott Graham | June 6, 2022
Three Federal Circuit judges suggest that the language of the Patent Act limits inventors to human beings. Judge Richard Taranto adds that it's "not self-evident" that extending inventorship to machines would be good policy, either.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Andrew Larson | March 21, 2022
The lawsuit accuses former employees of stealing 'the hard work of Pfizer's scientists and clinicians for their own profit and gain.'
By Ellen Bardash | October 25, 2021
Lawyers from Sheppard Mullin secured the award in a case over a patented technology, used without authorization by the federal government, at airport-security checkpoints in a case litigated for a decade.
By Scott Graham | October 19, 2021
The judge said that a recent patent infringement trial involving an Israeli company had nothing to do with ethnicity or prejudice, and that he was "extremely offended" at the inference that he let Amazon.com play on cultural stereotypes. Albright's order clears Fenwick & West of "harsh accusations," and the judge hinted that some penalty against Kramer Levin could be forthcoming.
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