FisherBroyles Welcomes New Patent Partner to its Seattle Office

FisherBroyles, LLP is pleased to welcome Micah D. Stolowitz, Esq. as a partner in the firm. He Joins from Schwabe, Williamson & Wyatt.

Stolowitz has represented clients for over 35 years in intellectual property matters, with a focus on patent matters including IP protection as well as licensing and sale transactions. He works mainly in electronic circuits, memory, software, wireless and other sectors. Stolowitz’ clients have included start-up tech companies in the Pacific Northwest as well as large semiconductor manufacturers, SaaS cloud services providers, and mobile telecom providers. He has deep experience in patent prosecution in the U.S. and around the world.

He has testified as an expert witness in patent litigation, and served as Special Master, appointed to assist the district court in Lizardtech, Inc. v. Earth Resource Mapping, Inc., 424 F.3d 1336 (CAFC 2005), where his work on claim construction and summary judgment motions was affirmed by the Federal Circuit on appeal. Micah has been recognized by his peers as a Superlawyer® in IP every year for over 10 years. He teaches occasionally as Adjunct Professor of Patent Law at the Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College.

“FisherBroyles is a national, well-recognized law firm and provides me with the perfect platform to serve my clients and grow my business. Clients that need a nationwide bench and the full spectrum of transactional, litigation, and intellectual property related legal services get experienced attorneys while receiving service with efficiency and personal attention,” said Stolowitz. “I am excited to join the amazing team of top-notch lawyers at FisherBroyles.”

FisherBroyles’ Intellectual Property Managing Partner T.J. DoVale boasts that Mr. Stolowitz is a perfect example of the quality attorneys that reside in FisherBroyles’ deep patent prosecution bench of 36 practitioners. Our Law Firm 2.0® model enables FisherBroyles to compete with other world-class intellectual property law groups in terms of both price and capabilities.”

Source:  www.fisherbroyles.com