Dan Huttle is Of Counsel in the New York office of Lombard Geliebter Cohen. Over 8 years of IP and technology law experience, Dan has advised clients asserting or defending against claims of IP infringement at state and U.S. District Courts across the country, the International Trade Commission, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. He has also helped clients secure patent and trademark protection, monetize their IP portfolio, and clear current and future operations against potential infringers. Across his career, he has been hands-on working with a wide range of technologies, including consumer electronics and computers, wireless communications, semiconductors, video encoding, polymers, and software.
Combining his technology and legal backgrounds, Dan has developed expertise in bridging the gap between his clients and judicial fact-finders, whether it be breaking down complex technology into readily digestible chunks or helping corporate officers and engineers understand the key legal issues that will make or break their case.
Prior to LGC, Dan was general counsel at two biotechnology start-up companies. Prior to that, he was a litigation associate at a prominent intellectual property boutique firm and an intellectual property associate at one of the largest law firms in the country. He represented clients ranging from the largest and most prominent technology companies in the world to two-person startups and nonprofits, and every stage in-between. Prior to law school, Dan worked in data analytics and project management, most notably designing and optimizing systems streamlining the process for victims of the 2006 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico to receive compensation for the harms they suffered.