Judge Newman Asks the Supreme Court to Intervene: Framing Judicial Independence as a Constitutional Imperative

by Dennis Crouch

I recently spoke by phone with Judge Pauline Newman. At 98 years old, she seemed sharp, engaged, and fully conversant -- particularly regarding the legal questions swirling around her case (and its impact on the patent system). She turns 99 in June.

Judge Newman has been barred from exercising any function of her judicial office since late 2023, when she issued her last opinion. She remains, in name, an active-service judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. But, in every practical respect, she has been removed from the bench by her colleagues, without impeachment, without an actual finding of disability, and without any court ever reaching the merits of her constitutional claims. This week, her attorneys filed a petition for certiorari asking the Supreme Court to consider her case.

Newman v. Moore, No. 25-___ (U.S. Mar. 12, 2026), presents two questions about the Judicial Conduct and Disability Act of 1980 (28 U.S.C. § 357(c)) that bars judicial review of judicial council "orders and determinations."

  • Whether that bar extends to ultra vires acts that exceed the council's statutory and constitutional authority.
  • Whether the bar forecloses claims seeking prospective injunctive relief against future unlawful orders.

Both questions arise against a factual backdrop that the D.C. Circuit itself described as raising "important and serious questions" about due process and judicial independence, while holding that its hands were tied by 25-year-old circuit precedent.


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Guest Post: Protectionist PTO Memo is on a Collision Course with TRIPS

Guest post by Sapna Kumar. Prof. Kumar is the Henry J. Fletcher Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School.

USPTO Director John Squires recently issued a memorandum regarding a new policy for instituting IPR and PGR proceedings. The memo argues that manufacturing moving overseas is causing “significant economic and national security damage” and claims that [t]hese developments bear directly” on the Director’s “statutory obligation to consider the effect of institution standards on the economy and the integrity of the patent system.” It further notes that large companies lacking “significant” U.S. manufacturing are the “most frequent users of IPR and PGR proceedings.” Based on these findings, the memo states that in determining whether to institute IPR and PGR proceedings, the Director will consider to what extent accused infringing products at issue in a parallel proceeding are U.S. manufactured or relate to U.S. manufacturing operations and to what extent the patent owner’s competing products are U.S. manufactured.

The United States is a member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and a signatory to the WTO-administered Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property (TRIPS). The USPTO has acknowledged that “TRIPS applies basic international trade principles to member states regarding intellectual property including national treatment.” As Article 3 states, “[e]ach Member shall accord to the nationals of other Members treatment no less favourable than that it accords to its own nationals” for IP protection. With regard to nondiscriminatory practices, Article 27 further specifies that “patents shall be available and patent rights enjoyable without discrimination as to the place of invention, the field of technology and whether products are imported or locally produced.”

Based on memo’s language, the USPTO will be more likely to institute an IPR or a PGR against a patent holder whose competing products are not manufactured in the United States, and will be less likely to do so against a patent holder that domestically manufactures its competing products. This means that the strength of U.S. patent rights will now vary based on whether patented products are produced in the United States or abroad. This appears to violate Article 27, given it limits enjoyable patent rights based on where products are being produced. (more…)

Untethered: USPTO Loosens the Article of Manufacture Requirement for Digital Designs

The USPTO today published new examination guidance that relaxes the rules for obtaining design patents on computer-generated interfaces and icons, completing a policy arc that began with a 2020 request for public comment on the meaning of "article of manufacture" in 35 U.S.C. § 171. Supplemental Guidance for Examination of Design Patent Applications Related to Computer-Generated Interfaces and Icons, Docket No. PTO-P-2026-0133 (Mar. 13, 2026). The guidance makes three practical changes that design patent prosecutors should take note of immediately.

  • First, it removes the longstanding requirement in MPEP § 1504.01(a) that drawings depict a display panel or portion thereof in solid or broken lines for applications directed to computer-generated interfaces or icons, so long as the title and claim properly identify an article of manufacture.
  • Second, it reverses the 2023 position on claim language, now holding that titles and claims using the preposition "for" (such as "icon for display screen" or "projected interface for computer") adequately describe a design for an article of manufacture under § 171.
  • Third, it extends design patent eligibility to projected and holographic interfaces and to virtual and augmented reality designs for computers and computer systems.

Under the old practice, the claim put the article of manufacture first and described the GUI as being "with" or "on" it: "The ornamental design for a display screen or a portion thereof with a graphical user interface, as shown and described." And the drawings had to include a broken-line border showing the display panel. Under the new guidance, applicants now have the option to flip the grammar so the design element leads and the article follows the word "for": "The ornamental design for a graphical user interface for a display screen, as shown and described." Or broader still: "The ornamental design for a graphical user interface for a computer, as shown and described." The guidance also accepts "computer icon" standing alone as adequate claim language, since the word "computer" in that compound term is treated as identifying the article of manufacture.

GUI Design Patents Are Growing — But So Is Everything Else
U.S. design patents issued for graphical user interfaces, icons & display screens (2011–2025)
Source: USPTO Patent Public Search (calendar year grant dates)GUI patents classified in USPC D14/485–495
PATENTLY-O
27,660
Total GUI Patents2011–25
2,787
2025GUI Patents
3,111
Peak Year2016
5%
2025GUI Share

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This new guidance gives applicants (at least) two additional degrees of freedom.


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Made in America: Director Squires Ties IPR Institution to Domestic Manufacturing

by Dennis Crouch

The International Trade Commission conditions patent relief on a showing that the patent holder maintains a "domestic industry" in the United States. 19 U.S.C. § 1337(a)(2)-(3). That statutory requirement is derived from ITC's trade-protection mission: the agency exists to guard American industry from unfair imports, not to serve as a general-purpose patent court. Until now, no other patent forum has imposed anything comparable.

Director Squires signature on manufacturing memorandum

USPTO Director John Squires issued a memorandum on March 11, 2026, announcing three new discretionary factors for IPR and PGR institution decisions, all organized around U.S. manufacturing and small business status. When deciding whether to institute review, the Director will now consider:

  1. The extent to which products accused of infringement in parallel litigation are manufactured in the United States or relate to investments in American manufacturing operations;
  2. The extent to which competing products made, sold, or licensed by the patent owner are manufactured in the United States; and
  3. Whether the petitioner is a small business sued for infringement of the patent at issue.

The memo applies immediately to all pending IPRs and PGRs where the patent owner's discretionary brief deadline has not yet passed.


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From Graham to Gramm: A New Deere Case Arrives at the Federal Circuit

by Dennis Crouch Patent attorneys will recognize the case name Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1 (1966), as the Supreme Court's foundational statement on obviousness under 35 U.S.C. § 103. Sixty years later, a new case with nearly the same name has arrived at the Federal Circuit, though this one is spelled with two m's. Gramm v. Deere & Company, No. 2024-1598 (Fed. Cir. Mar. 11, 2026), involves neither obviousness nor the Graham factors. Instead, it offers an illustration of means-plus-function claiming under § 112(f) and the doctrinal hazards. The Federal Circuit, in a unanimous opinion by Judge Reyna joined by Judges Lourie and Cunningham, reversed the district court's indefiniteness finding and remanded for further proceedings.

Figure 1 of U.S. Patent No. 6,202,395 showing a crop harvester with header, controller interface, and head controller


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The Razor Returns: AIPLA Tells the Supreme Court That Alice Step Two Has Revived the Pre-1952 ‘Invention’ Requirement

by Dennis Crouch

The American Intellectual Property Law Association has filed an amicus brief urging the Supreme Court to grant certiorari in United Services Automobile Association v. PNC Bank N.A., No. 25-853 (U.S. filed Mar. 2, 2026). The AIPLA brief does not focus on the particular merits of USAA's mobile check deposit patents. Instead, it frames the case as an opportunity for the Court to correct what the brief calls a historical regression: the Federal Circuit's application of the Alice/Mayo eligibility framework has revived the same subjective "inventive concept" inquiry that the Patent Act of 1952 was specifically designed to eliminate. The brief, filed by Barbara Fiacco and Valerie Orellana of Foley Hoag on behalf of AIPLA, traces this argument through more than a century of patent law, from the commingled eligibility/obviousness/definiteness standards of the 19th century through the 1952 reforms and back to the present "confusion."

USAA's petition presents two questions:

  • Whether the Federal Circuit has wrongly extended the "abstract idea" prohibition to cover concrete technological processes; and
  • Whether it has improperly held that computer-implemented inventions are patent-eligible only if they improve the computer's own functionality.

In 2025, the Federal Circuit reversed a $218 million jury verdict for USAA, holding that its claims directed to mobile check deposit using a handheld device were ineligible. The Supreme Court has signaled some interest by issuing a "Response Requested" and PNC's response is now due April 8, 2026, following an extension. See Dennis Crouch, USAA Petitions SCOTUS: Is Mobile Check Deposit Just an "Abstract Idea"?, Patently-O (Jan. 19, 2026).


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PTA Keeps Score: Patent Term Adjustment as a Measure of the USPTO Backlog

by Dennis Crouch

Patent Term Adjustment (PTA) offers one of the most revealing windows into the USPTO's examination backlog. Under 35 U.S.C. § 154(b), the USPTO guarantees certain examination timelines: a first action within 14 months of filing, responses to applicant submissions within four months, and total prosecution wrapped up within three years. When the Office misses these marks, the patent term is extended day-for-day. The result is that average PTA across newly issued patents serves as a rough measure of how well the agency is keeping up with its own workload.

The chart above tracks the average PTA for utility patents issued each week from 2015 into early 2026, smoothed with a six-week moving average. The pattern is striking. In 2015, the average PTA hovered around 320 days, reflecting the agency's long struggle with a massive examination backlog. Over the next six years, the Office steadily ground that number down, reaching a low of approximately 120 days in mid-2021 as part of the COVID slow-down in filing. That progress has now fully reversed. Average PTA climbed back to 296 days by December 2025, approaching the decade-earlier peak. The agency spent years working down the backlog and has now given back nearly all of that progress.


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Too Late to Invent an Inventor: Forfeiture and § 256 in IPR Proceedings

by Dennis Crouch

Section 256 of the Patent Act is a remarkable statutory provision. It declares that a patent "shall not be invalidated" on the grounds of incorrect inventorship so long as the error "can be corrected." 35 U.S.C. § 256(a). Unlike its neighboring provisions for correcting other types of patent errors, Section 256 operates retroactively, reaching back to the patent's original filing date. And the statute imposes no express timing requirement: it does not say "if corrected within X days" or "if diligently pursued." The statute simply says "if it can be corrected." In Implicit, LLC v. Sonos, Inc., No. 2020-1173 (Fed. Cir. Mar. 9, 2026), however, the Federal Circuit held that the absence of a statutory deadline does not immunize a patentee from the consequences of delay. Forfeiture principles, the court ruled, can prevent a patent owner from relying on a Section 256 correction to mount a new argument in an inter partes review that it failed to raise during the original proceeding.

The case involved two patents owned by Implicit that originally named Edward Balassanian and Scott Bradley as co-inventors. Both were employees of BeComm Corporation, Implicit's predecessor. A third engineer, Guy Carpenter, had written the source code and authored the document that became the provisional application, but was not a named inventor.


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The Expanding Patent Document: Fewer Claims, More Words, and a Trend That Predates Alice

by Dennis Crouch

When I set out to update my 2008 study on patent document size, I had a specific hypothesis in mind. The Supreme Court's 2014 decision in Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank International, 573 U.S. 208 (2014), transformed how patent attorneys draft applications, particularly in the software and business method space. Practitioners responded to Alice's tightened eligibility standards by loading their specifications with technical detail, implementation examples, and hardware-integration language designed to demonstrate that an invention is more than an "abstract idea." If Alice changed drafting behavior, I expected to see a structural break in patent document metrics around 2014-2015. I found something different. Patent specifications have indeed gotten dramatically longer over the past twenty years, but the growth curve is smooth and monotonic. It was well underway before Alice was decided. Using the population of 7.6 million published patent applications from 2005 through early 2025, this study finds specifications nearly doubled, from about 7,600 words to over 13,000. But the growth in document length was not matched by growth in claims. Average claim count actually fell, reversing the upward trend I had documented back in 2008.

In 2008, I reported that patent documents were getting bigger in every dimension: longer specifications and more claims. Both trends moved in the same direction. The story was straightforward: patents were growing. The new data is a bit more complicated.  Specifications continued their upward march, but claim counts peaked around 2005 and have been declining ever since.


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An Animated History of Patent Claim Counts

by Dennis Crouch

My recent post on the fee-driven collapse of claim count diversity compared 2005 and 2025 snapshots. But the transformation is better seen as a slow-motion process spanning decades. The animated chart below shows the distribution of claims per U.S. utility patent from 1976 through early 2026, quarter by quarter.


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Twenty and Done: The Fee-Driven Collapse of Claim Count Diversity

The chart below tells a twenty-year story about how fee structure shapes patent scope. In 2005, the distribution of claims per U.S. utility patent looked roughly like what you might expect: a broad spread, peaking somewhere around 8-14 claims, with a long tail extending past 50. The 20-claim mark was visible, but a bump. Only 6% of patents issued with exactly 20 claims that year. By 2025, the picture has changed beyond recognition. A full 28% of utility patents now issue with exactly 20 claims. That bar dominates the histogram (especially once I colored it red).

Distribution of Claims per U.S. Utility Patent: 2005 vs 2025. The 2005 histogram shows a broad distribution with 6% at 20 claims. The 2025 histogram shows 28% of patents at exactly 20 claims.

The cause is no mystery. Section 41(a)(1) of the Patent Act authorizes the USPTO to charge fees for each claim in excess of 20. Those fees have risen dramatically over the year and in January 2025 the USPTO doubled them from $100 to $200 per excess claim for large entities ($80 for small entities, $40 for micro entities). The fee for each independent claim beyond three also increased, from $480 to $600. The result is a system where the 20-claim threshold is beginning to function as a fairly hard wall. Patent applicants and their attorneys have responded rationally: they draft to the threshold and stop.


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Soak and Pounce: 1920’s Style Submarine Patents

by Dennis Crouch

Long before patent lawyers coined the term “submarine patent,” practitioners had a different name for the same mischief. I was reading through briefing in the old laches case of Chapman v. Wintroath, 252 U.S. 126 (1920) where respondent’s counsel Paul Synnestvedt described the practice of letting an application

Soak in the office for years until the trade had  independently developed the invention, when the applicant would come out with a divisional application and pounce upon the unfortunates who had proceeded to build up a business on the invention.

Soak and pounce.  It isn’t clear to me if Synnestvedt was intending “soak” to be in the same hidden-under-water sense as submarining, or if it was more of a marinade. Either way, the complaint is that applicants were using the Patent Office’s procedures to lie in wait while industry invests in technology, then emerging with claims calibrated to capture those investments by others. (more…)

Patently Unreasonable: Hyatt’s Return to the Supreme Court and the Fight Over Prosecution Laches

by Dennis Crouch

Gilbert P. Hyatt has been litigating with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for longer than many patent attorneys have been alive. In 1968, Hyatt quit his engineering job at Teledyne and retreated to the family room of his Northridge, California home to design a computer that could fit on a single silicon chip. He filed his first patent application in December 1970, and the Patent Office eventually granted him US Patent No. 4,942,516 for "Single Chip Integrated Circuit Computer Architecture." That was in 1990, twenty years after filing. The patent was later partially invalidated in an interference with Texas Instruments, but Hyatt had already collected millions in licensing fees from Sony, Nikon, Sharp, Toshiba, Philips, and Panasonic.

Hyatt holds 75 issued patents. And, he is also no stranger to the Supreme Court. In Kappos v. Hyatt, 566 U.S. 431 (2012), a unanimous Court sided with him on the scope of de novo review in § 145 civil actions against the PTO. And the Justices heard Franchise Tax Board of California v. Hyatt three separate times, in 2003, 2016, and 2019, in a sprawling tax dispute that ultimately led the Court to overrule Nevada v. Hall and hold that states have sovereign immunity from private suits in sister-state courts. 587 U.S. 230 (2019). Now, at 87, Hyatt is petitioning the Supreme Court once again, this time asking the Justices to take up a question that has been brewing for more than two decades: whether the judicially created doctrine of "prosecution laches" can override the Patent Act's statutory timing provisions to deny a patent to an applicant who met every deadline Congress set. Hyatt v. Squires, No. 25-1049 (cert. petition filed Mar. 2, 2026).

The petition presents a clean and focused question of law with potentially major consequences. Hyatt argues that the Federal Circuit's prosecution laches doctrine directly conflicts with the Supreme Court's holdings in SCA Hygiene Products Aktiebolag v. First Quality Baby Products, LLC, 580 U.S. 328 (2017), and Petrella v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc., 572 U.S. 663 (2014), both of which held that laches is a "gap-filling doctrine" that cannot apply when Congress has enacted statutory timing rules. The Patent Act, Hyatt argues, contains comprehensive timing provisions governing every step of prosecution, from initial filing through continuation practice, office action responses, PTAB appeals, and judicial review. With no gap to fill, there is no room for the courts or the PTO to invent their own timeliness rules.

Although Hyatt's case involve extreme timelines, there are many who would like to expand the laches doctrine to encompass a much wider swath of cases. According to PTO data cited in the petition, nearly 20% of all continuation patent applications are filed more than six years after earliest US filing date, and over a third of the patents protecting the most successful pharmaceutical products exceed that threshold. Under the Federal Circuit's six-year delay presumption used in other contexts, all of these patents are potentially vulnerable.


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Two Rejections Per Allowance

by Dennis Crouch

Over the past several weeks, I published a trilogy of posts examining USPTO allowance rates from three different temporal vantage points: filing cohort dates, applicant disposal dates, and examiner action dates.

Each approach answers a slightly different question about when and how examination policy produces outcomes. This post adds a complementary dataset: instead of looking at final outcomes (allowance or abandonment), it looks at the office actions themselves.

Three charts below are all built from a dataset of published utility patent applications and plotted as three-month moving averages that smooths the data a bit.


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Forthwith, Part II: CIT Orders Refunds for All Importers, Not Just Litigants

by Dennis Crouch

Two weeks after the Supreme Court declared the IEEPA tariffs illegal, and two days after the Federal Circuit issued its mandates returning the case to the trial court, U.S. Customs and Border Protection was still liquidating import entries with the unlawful duties baked in. No refunds had been issued. White House controlled CBP Automated Commercial Environment system kept churning through previously filed entries as if Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, 607 U.S. ___ (2026), had never happened.

In Atmus Filtration, Inc. v. United States (Ct. Int’l Trade Mar. 4, 2026), Judge Richard Eaton issued an order that goes well beyond the individual case before him. Eaton declared that “all importers of record whose entries were subject to IEEPA duties are entitled to the benefit of the Learning Resources decision” and directed CBP to liquidate all unliquidated entries “without regard to the IEEPA duties.” For entries already liquidated but not yet final, CBP must reliquidate on the same terms. The order applies regardless of whether an importer has filed its own complaint. To hold otherwise, Judge Eaton wrote, “would be to thwart the efficient administration of justice and to deny those importers who have filed suit the efficient resolution of their claims, and to deny entirely importers who have not filed suit the benefit of the Learning Resources decision.” The CIT’s Chief Judge has designated Eaton as the sole judge for all IEEPA refund cases, and Eaton has scheduled a closed conference for March 6 at which the government must present a plan for administering refunds without requiring each of the thousands of affected importers to file individual complaints. (more…)

The Law/Fact Lever: How the Federal Circuit Can Control Obviousness Outcomes

by Dennis Crouch

Obviousness occupies an unusual place in patent law's procedural architecture. The Supreme Court in Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1 (1966), declared it "a question of law" while simultaneously identifying four "underlying factual inquiries" that must be resolved: the scope and content of the prior art, differences between the prior art and the claims, the level of ordinary skill, and any objective indicia of nonobviousness.  The Graham test does not explain where we fit in additional inquiries of motivation-to-combine and reasonable-expectation-of-success, but we do know that these are also factual questions.  What that means procedurally is that the judgment of the fact finder (often a jury or PTAB panel) is given deference on appeal.

But the mixed character of obviousness gives the Federal Circuit a powerful tool. By recharacterizing a fact-finder's assessment of the evidence as reflecting error of a "legal standard," the court can sidestep deferential review entirely.  Questions of law are reviewed afresh - de novo - on appeal without any deference given to the lower court's judgment or reasoning.  A new nonprecedential decision illustrates how this works in practice. Medivis, Inc. v. Novarad Corp., No. 2024-1794 (Fed. Cir. Mar. 3, 2026).

The patent at issue, US11004271, covers methods of augmenting a surgeon's real-time view of a patient through an augmented reality headset.


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Federal Circuit Dissent Rates Collapse After Newman’s Removal

by Dennis Crouch

[PDF Version of this Essay]

Justice John Marshall Harlan earned the title "The Great Dissenter" of the 1800s. Judge Pauline Newman holds that title for the millennium era - with over 300 dissents in precedential cases in just the final two decades of her tenure alone. To an extent that existing scholarship has only begun to capture, Newman's voice of disagreement defined the Federal Circuit's internal dialogue on patent law. An empirical analysis of almost 5,000 precedential Federal Circuit opinions issued between 2004 and early 2026 reveals just how dramatically this one judge shaped the court's culture. We now have two full calendar years of post-Newman data, and the results are striking: in 2024 and 2025, the court's dissent rate fell dramatically.  The Federal Circuit has become, in the space of two years, one of the most consensus-oriented appellate courts in the federal system.

The data tell a straightforward story. From 2005 through 2022, the Federal Circuit's dissent rate in precedential opinions averaged about 19%. In some years it ran higher: the 2011-2013 period saw rates of >25%, the highest sustained period of disagreement in the dataset, driven by the doctrinal upheaval surrounding both Alice and the America Invents Act. In other years the rate dipped to around 13-14%. But it never once fell below double digits. In 2023, the year Newman was suspended from the bench, the rate dropped to 10%. In 2024, it fell to 6%,; and in 2025 the rate was even lower. The Federal Circuit's dissent rate is settling into a new equilibrium roughly one-third of what it was for the prior two decades.

Federal Circuit Dissent Rate in Precedential Opinions, 2005-2026

The structural explanation for this decline is not complicated: Judge Newman dissented far more frequently than any of her colleagues, and when she was removed, the dissents left with her. But the magnitude of the effect is actually much greater than what can be accounted for from Newman's direct impact on panel opinions. As discussed below, the court's dissent rate has fallen not just by the amount attributable to Newman's own dissents, but to roughly half the historical baseline of even non-Newman panels—suggesting her departure transformed the court's broader culture of disagreement.


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Guest Post: Design Patents at the ITC

By Sarah Fackrell, Professor of Law at Chicago-Kent College of Law

In the Matter of Certain Cameras, Camera Systems, and Accessories Used Therewith, No. 337-TA-1400 (ITC 2026).

Last week, the ITC issued a limited exclusion order in a dispute between GoPro, Inc. and Arashi Vision, Inc. (d/b/a Insta360). The order covered “certain cameras and camera systems” which, in the Commission’s view, infringed U.S. Patent No. D789,435.  In reaching this conclusion, the ITC appears to be requiring a much lower standard of visual similarity than the Federal Circuit does.

In deciding that the D’435 patent was infringed, the Commission affirmed—without  further discussion—the finding of infringement in the Initial Determination that was issued by ALJ Doris Johnson Hines on July 10, 2025. In that decision, Judge Hines seems to have been persuaded to not only require a lower overall level of similarity than the Federal Circuit currently requires, but to also effectively ignore several claimed design elements, disregarding them as visually “minor,” “trivial,” or otherwise unimportant.

It is true that there is a longstanding line of Federal Circuit cases saying that “minor differences between a patented design and an accused article’s design cannot, and shall not, prevent a finding of infringement.” See Litton Sys., Inc. v. Whirlpool Corp., 728 F.2d 1423, 1444 (Fed. Cir. 1984). But that doesn’t—and shouldn’t—mean that a judge (or a jury) can completely read claimed visual elements out of a design patent claim. (For more on how I’m using the word “element” here, see Intelligent Design & Egyptian Goddess, 68 Duke L.J. Online 94, 109 (2019)).

For example, consider this image (from GoPro’s expert report) that Judge Hines included in her decision:

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Cleaning House: Director Squires Responds to Examiner Conflict-of-Interest Scandal

by Dennis Crouch

Last week I reported on the $500,000 settlement between the Department of Justice and patent examiner Daxin Wu, who allegedly examined at least nine patent applications from companies in which she held substantial stock positions—including holdings exceeding $300,000 in one company—and reviewed applications from competitors of a company in which she held more than $900,000 in stock. Dennis Crouch, Patent Examiner Pays $500K for Financial Conflicts — But the Real Story may be Systemic, Patently-O (Feb. 26, 2026). That post traced the enforcement action back to a damning 2024 Inspector General report estimating that roughly 2,100 patent examiners—about 30% of those required to file financial disclosures—had potential financial conflicts that went undetected. U.S. Dep't of Commerce, Office of Inspector General, The Department Needs to Strengthen Its Ethics Oversight for USPTO Patent Examiners, Final Report No. OIG-24-013-I (Feb. 14, 2024). Today, Director John Squires has responded. In a memorandum dated March 2, 2026 and addressed to all employees in the Office of the Commissioner for Patents, Director Squires directs that any Patents employee who participates in deciding the scope of patent rights must affirmatively recuse from examining any application where they hold stock or bonds—publicly traded or privately held—in any listed applicant, regardless of the dollar value of those holdings. Director Squires' memo on examiner stock ownership.


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Forthwith: Federal Circuit Issues Mandates in V.O.S. Selections, Clearing the Way for $175 Billion Refund Reckoning

by Dennis Crouch

The Federal Circuit’s role as the appellate court for international trade disputes has thrust it into the center of the most consequential separation-of-powers case in a generation. On February 20, 2026, the Supreme Court affirmed the Federal Circuit’s en banc ruling that the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) does not authorize the President to impose tariffs. Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, 607 U.S. ___ (2026); Trump v. V.O.S. Selections, Inc., 607 U.S. ___ (2026). And today, the Federal Circuit dissolved the stay that had held its mandate in abeyance since August 2025, ordering its mandates to “issue forthwith.” V.O.S. Selections, Inc. v. Trump, Nos. 2025-1812, -1813 (Fed. Cir. Mar. 2, 2026) (en banc per curiam). The case now returns to the Court of International Trade (CIT), which faces the formidable task of overseeing what could be the largest government refund obligation in American history: an estimated $175 billion in IEEPA tariff collections that the nation’s highest court has declared unlawful.

The briefing on the mandate motion offers a window into the pace of potential refunds. Former US Solicitor Neal Katyal (now with Milbank), representing the V.O.S. plaintiffs, filed the motion on February 24, arguing that the Supreme Court’s judgment satisfied the express condition this Court had set for releasing the mandate and that every day of delay inflicted real harm on the small businesses awaiting refunds. The motion quoted Treasury Secretary Bessent’s public statement that refunds would not issue until the CIT ordered them, and President Trump’s suggestion that the question would “get litigated for the next two years.” The government’s opposition, filed by the DOJ Appellate Staff, urged the court to wait at least until the Supreme Court formally sends down its certified judgment (32 days after entry under Supreme Court Rule 45.3), and cross-moved for a 90-day stay to “allow the political branches an opportunity to consider options.” The government invoked Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co., 458 U.S. 50 (1982), where the Supreme Court stayed its own judgment to give Congress time to respond. DOJ also characterized the plaintiffs’ monetary harm as compensable rather than irreparable, and warned that the refund process would be protracted regardless.  Katyal’s reply, filed over this past weekend was pointed: the government “cites nothing” for the proposition that this Court must wait for the Supreme Court’s certified judgment and the government notably did not deny the force of its own stipulations guaranteeing refunds to all similarly situated plaintiffs. (more…)