By Dan Roe | March 3, 2023
The intellectual property-focused firm boosted gross revenue and equity partner profits by roughly 10% in 2022.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Justin Henry | March 1, 2023
In-demand areas of legal representation and efficiencies derived from investments in business functions put the firm in a fortuitous financial position heading into the current year.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 24, 2023
"This case got to trial because the plaintiff refused to come to their senses before trial," defense counsel Brian Rosenthal said. "We obtained a number of serious exclusions of evidence prior to trial, and told them very early on the case no merit."
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 7, 2023
The system, which includes stand-alone pods, some embedded in concrete walkways and in walls, supports communications of video and data to handheld devices.
By Adolfo Pesquera | February 6, 2023
A jury in Delaware federal court found Boston Scientific's SYNERGY stents were derived from information given to the company executives both in person at a conference and again via email exchanges.
By Vanessa Blum | January 26, 2023
Graham, who writes Law.com's Skilled in the Art briefing on intellectual property, made his mark as a keen observer of appellate arguments and mentored generations of ALM journalists.
By Scott Graham | January 18, 2023
Administrative Patent Judge Steven Amundson wrote that Centripetal Networks' claim of bias 'lacks merit,' but that he was withdrawing to simplify the issues and give a replacement judge more time to get up to speed. It's the latest move in a tit-for-tat fight between Centripetal and Cisco over judicial recusals.
By Scott Graham | January 17, 2023
The justices have asked Elizabeth Prelogar's office to weigh in on long-running controversy involving the America Invents Act: The scope of the AIA's estoppel provision that prevents litigants from raising invalidity defenses in district court litigation.
By Scott Graham | January 12, 2023
The former PTO director gamely argued for reinstatement of a patent infringement suit against Red Hat and customers of its virtualization products. But the appellate court sounded inclined to affirm a claim construction ruling that doomed the suit.
By Scott Graham | January 9, 2023
Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley rejected a consumer class' tying allegations over the chip giant's "no license, no chips" policy. But the class' allegations of exclusive dealing with Apple may proceed for now, the judge ruled.
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