Online legal services part of changing landscape
Online legal services are not going away, so traditional attorneys need to adapt to the changing marketplace, according to panelists at a San Diego Law Library event last month.
Education
Law School/Year: University of Chicago, 1997
College/Year: Kansas State University, 1993
Bar Admissions
California
Practice Areas
Civil Litigation; Intellectual Property; Patent, Trademark & Copyright
Major Cases
I first-chaired a jury trial for Microsoft where the plaintiff accused Microsoft of infringing patents on video compression technology and sought more than $400 million in damages. The jury found Microsoft did not infringe. I’ve also represented Microsoft in two recent cases — Lucent v. Microsoft and Uniloc v. Microsoft — that have changed the landscape of damages law in patent cases, making it more difficult for plaintiffs to seek huge awards. I’ve also represented Allergan in a number of major cases protecting their patents on glaucoma drugs and Callaway Golf in a number of cases relating to golf ball technology.
Professional Background
I have been a trial lawyer specializing in patent and other technology cases my entire career. With a degree in electrical engineering, I enjoy the challenges of learning new technologies and explaining them to a jury. I started my career at Brown & Bain in Phoenix, and I moved to Fish & Richardson in San Diego in 2003. I have been the managing principal of the San Diego office since 2009, and I have been firm-wide hiring principal since 2007.
Professional Affiliations
I serve on the board of governors of the San Diego chapter of the ABTL; I am a Master in the Clifford Wallace Inn of Court; and I am a member of the San Diego Intellectual Property Association. I frequently lecture on topics relating to intellectual property law and trial practice.
Personal Background
I grew up as a country boy in small-town Kansas, and my first jobs were farm jobs: planting and harvesting wheat, working cattle and shoveling pig manure. Because of my interest in science, I majored in engineering, but I was always drawn to the law. After I got my law degree from the University of Chicago, we had the good sense to move to warmer climates. When I’m not working, I spend most of my time with my wife (celebrating our 18th anniversary this month), our two daughters (eight and five) and our son (one).
Online legal services are not going away, so traditional attorneys need to adapt to the changing marketplace, according to panelists at a San Diego Law Library event last month.
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