By Ross Todd | April 12, 2024
Brendon DeMay and Priyanka Timblo of Holwell Shuster & Goldberg represented a company that claimed Walmart backed out of a deal struck during the pandemic to get into the business-to-business market for disposable nitrile gloves when demand for PPE cooled.
By Ross Todd | January 20, 2023
Finnegan's Douglas "Chip" Rettew helped client Under Armour avoid coming off like a Goliath by asking for just $1 in damages in an infringement trial involving the company's Armour-based trademark.
By Ross Todd | January 19, 2023
A trial team led by Robert Maldonado of Wolf, Greenfield & Sacks successfully defended luxury designer Thom Browne from claims that his four-stripe designs infringed Adidas' three-stripe trademark.
By Ross Todd | November 8, 2021
"Often in the lead-up to trial it's easy to get buried in details that are ultimately not going to matter to the jury," Durie said. "It was helpful to come back at it with a mentality of starting at 30,000 feet and asking 'What is the jury going to make of this?'"
By Ross Todd | July 27, 2021
"That might mean working in an area where you don't have as much experience as somebody else," Cope says, "but you're handling the matter, you know who to go to if you need help, and to really push to grow and support the business."
By Ross Todd | June 9, 2021
Amazon Inc. last month quietly changed language on its website that routed disputes with customers into individual arbitration. Leaders at Keller Lenkner, a law firm that has invested heavily in developing the ability to represent large numbers of individual clients in arbitration, including more than 75,000 bringing claims against Amazon, welcomed the move but don't expect other companies to follow suit.
By Scott Graham | April 14, 2021
Partner Sean Pak says his team trusted jurors to understand complex AI technology and took care to fully integrate local counsel into the trial over digitized key duplication.
By Ross Todd | March 30, 2021
Nike on Monday turned to Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer to sue New York-based design company MSCHF for trademark infringement. MSCHF sold a limited run of 666 Nike Air Max 97 sneakers that its website said included "60CC INK AND 1 DROP HUMAN BLOOD" and featured images and themes associated with Satanism.
By Scott Graham | March 3, 2021
PersonalWeb Technologies had accused more than 80 Amazon customers of infringement. A federal judge in San Jose wrote that, even accounting only for fees tied to PersonalWeb's misconduct, Amazon was entitled to about 75% of its request.
By Angela Morris | December 21, 2020
Courts in California, Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and elsewhere have split when asked if Amazon.com counts as a seller under products liability law. Now the question has also landed on the Texas Supreme Court's doorstep.
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