Winner, Intellectual Property: Orrick
Time after time, Orrick makes its name by saving the day.
December 21, 2015 at 01:36 AM
5 minute read
It was only eight weeks before the start of trial when Ruckus Wireless Inc. general counsel Scott Maples realized that his legal team did not have much of a strategy. Then only a year into the job with the Wi-Fi equipment maker, Maples had inherited the case against Netgear Inc., which had asserted patents in U.S. district court in Wilmington after being sued by Ruckus in 2008.
Though Maples says that this wasn't a bet-the-company case from a monetary standpoint, Ruckus considered the case a must-win. Netgear was the first company licensed to sell Ruckus' Wi-Fi antenna, but soon after making the deal, Netgear dropped Ruckus for a company that made the equipment at a lesser cost, according to Maples. Ruckus' founders felt as if they'd been stabbed in the back.
As Maples remembers it, when he asked the in-house IP lawyer about plans for a mock trial, he got a blank stare. Ruckus' outside counsel, a small boutique, had done some work on the case, but Maples felt he needed bigger guns.
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