Jones Day Afraid Of Letting Judge See Public Citizen, EFF Briefs In Its Bogus Trademark Lawsuit
from the fascinating-legal-reasoning dept
Remember last week when the huge law firm Jones Day was called out for abusing trademark law by suing a small site for reporting public information about some associates at the law firm? Jones Day was basically claiming that using their name and linking to their site, even in reporting factual information, was trademark infringement. That is, of course, ridiculous. A few public interest groups, such as Public Citizen (who first alerted us to this case) and the EFF filed an amicus brief with the court in support of the bullied website, Blockshopper.Stunningly, Jones Day's response is to file a brief telling the judge he shouldn't even accept the amicus brief. Yes, they're filing a legal brief to tell the judge that these groups should not be allowed to provide their thoughts on the case. The reasoning is the sort that only a true lawyer would appreciate. First, these groups shouldn't be allowed to file a brief because they're "partisan." Of course, a large number of amici briefs are "partisan" in that they support one side or the other (there are some that are neutral). Then, it claims they should not be able to file the amicus brief because it doesn't add anything beyond what the defendant has already filed. And then, in the same sentence where Jones Day complains that the amicus brief doesn't add anything new, it also says the brief shouldn't be allowed because it adds a new argument that the defendant, Blockshopper, didn't think was worth raising.
Yes, you read that correctly. Jones Day is claiming that no amici briefs should be allowed if it favors one party of the other (partisan!). Also, that no amici briefs should be allowed if they don't raise any new issues... and at the same time that raising new issues is a reason not to allow the amici briefs. Is it any wonder that this law firm believes that mentioning its name is a trademark violation? All of this leads you to wonder, what is Jones Day so afraid of in the amicus brief that it wants to prevent the judge from viewing it?
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Filed Under: amicus brief, trademark
Companies: eff, jones day, public citizen
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Huh?
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Re: Huh?
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Re: Huh?
Taking a position is precisely the point of filing an amicus curiae brief.
It's a pity lawyers can't be summarily disbarred for "bad faith and demonstrable incompetence." Jones Day as a firm would be out on the streets inside an hour.
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Tarnishing their own name
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Re: Tarnishing their own name
Not really thier reputation now is "big", not "good", the ugly truth is though, "big" has more advantages anyway.
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Re: Re: Huh?
But that would not be allowed because a third party would never be privy to the facts of the case. The facts of the case would come from the parties.
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Its a question of "reason"
VOTE McCain 2008 - CLOSED UNTIL CRISIS SOLVED AND WORLD SAVED
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EFF is hardly
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EFF is hardly "partisan"
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Re: Its a question of "reason"
Spoken like a true yellow dog democrat. Steeped in hate
and fermenting in his own liberal juices with just a
hint of rotten eggplant.
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Re: Re: Its a question of "reason"
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love the call to arms over intangible value!!!
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Whether or not one agrees with the underlying basis for the lawsuit, Jones Day has every right under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and relevant caselaw to challenge third parties trying to interject themselves into a lawsuit between a plaintiff(s) and a defendant(s).
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