Professor Osborn cited by the Supreme Court of Oregon

RALEIGH, N.C. – Campbell Law Associate Professor Lucas Osborn’s scholarly work was recently cited by the Supreme Court of Oregon in Comcast v. Oregon Dep’t of Revenue, 356 Or. 282, 332 n. 29 (2014). Osborn’s article, “Regulating Three-Dimension Printing: The Converging Worlds of Bits and Atoms,” was published earlier this year in the San Diego Law Review.

Osborn’s article is available via this link, while the case is accessible here.

“It is wonderful to see courts citing the works of Campbell Law professors,” said Osborn. “We strive to craft scholarship that is both theoretically rigorous and practically relevant. Each time a court reads and uses our scholarship, it demonstrates we are achieving our goal.”

The director of Campbell Law’s Intellectual Property Law program, Osborn is an expert in the area of Intellectual Property Law, with a focus on Patent Law. He has authored more than half a dozen articles in this area, presented his research over 20 times across the nation, and been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg News and several local and regional publications. In November 2013 he was named to the Triangle Intellectual Property Law Association’s Board of Directors.

Prior to Campbell Law, Osborn clerked for the Honorable Kenneth M. Hoyt on the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas and served as an attorney in the Intellectual Property section of Fulbright & Jaworski in Houston, Texas (now Norton Rose Fulbright). At Fulbright, his practice focused on patent litigation, patent prosecution and intellectual property licensing. He is also licensed to practice in front of the U.S. Patent and Trademark office.

Professor Osborn’s past work has looked at patent infringement for making an “offer to sell” an infringing device, the doctrine of patentable subject matter and the Federal Circuit’s jurisprudence. His works appear in journals including the U.C. Davis Law Review, San Diego Law Review, Texas A&M Law Review, the Stanford Technology Law Review, Santa Clara Law Review, and the Saint Louis University Law Journal.

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