By Allison Dunn | June 22, 2023
"Amazon has no reason to believe that you have engaged in any professional misconduct before the USPTO, nor do your clients need to change counsel to proceed with ABR enrollment," said an apology letter to trademark attorney, Nazly Aileen Bayramoglu, from Benjamin U. Okeke, Amazon's senior corporate counsel.
By Cheryl Miller | July 12, 2022
AB 2962, inspired by a legislative staffer's frustration at the costs of a court case search, would allow courts to continue charging fees for commercial users.
By Scott Graham | February 9, 2022
The Federal Circuit rules 2-1 that the San Francisco judge abused his discretion by ordering Uniloc to disclose license deals with 109 third parties. Alsup had argued that because Uniloc's power to exclude is conferred by government-issued patents, the public has a strong interest in knowing the terms and conditions involved in Uniloc's exercise of its patent rights.
By Marcia Coyle | March 4, 2021
The "customary criteria" for a debut majority decision at the U.S. Supreme Court, one court scholar writes, is a "unanimous decision in a case lacking great controversy."
By Cheryl Miller | February 5, 2021
The feedback on the exam was included in 932 pages of public-record documents related to the October test obtained by The Recorder.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 15, 2020
Thirteen federal district courts will start offering audio livestreams of hearings in civil cases "of public interest" by February.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 8, 2020
Rep. Hank Johnson argued that the judiciary's claim that creating a free court records system could cost $2 billion was "to confuse and try to derail passage of this very common sense, necessary legislation that brings judicial records into the 21st century."
By Mike Scarcella | November 24, 2020
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg in Washington said "there currently exists no public record of the identities of over 87% of PPP loan recipients" based on information the U.S. Small Business Administration has withheld.
By Mike Scarcella | November 13, 2020
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg last week ordered the government to provide exact dollar amounts for all PPP loans and also to provide the identities of any loan recipient who secured relief under $150,000. The ruling was a major win for transparency advocates.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | October 12, 2020
Senate Democrats have said they're concerned over materials omitted from Judge Amy Coney Barrett's Senate questionnaire, including public statements on overturning the precedent on legal abortion established by Roe v. Wade.
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