... from a lawyer with Integrity
Primary Practice Areas:
* Civil Rights (42 U.S.C. § 1983, Government Tort Claims, Due Process)
* Appellate (Federal and State Courts, Civil and Criminal)
* Civil litigation (Federal and State courts)
* General corporate and partnership (corporations, LLCs, partnerships)
* Intellectual Property (technology licensing, copyrights, trademarks, patents)
* Business negotiations and contracts of all types (domestic or international)
* Computer Forensics for civil litigation and criminal defense
With additional experience in:
* Real estate
* Criminal defense
* Employment
* Constitutional law
530-432-5407
EMAIL to pdwyer@pdwyerlaw.com
LAW OFFICES OF PATRICK H. DWYER
Law is the Foundation of a Free and Humane Society
Thoughtful Advice
530-432-5407
pdwyer@pdwyerlaw.com
Mr. Dwyer has extensive appellate expertise with an outstanding record
of success in both civil and criminal matters. See Appellate Decisions.
A successful appeal begins with a complete record in the trial court. If
a court issues a tentative ruling that is not well founded, make sure to
have a court reporter there for any oral argument before final decision.
Spend the time to get every issue into the trial court record. If it is not
there, it may be waived.
Appellate briefing is largely about presentation of the legal issues from
an equity and/or policy persepctive. The statement of the issues and
the summary of background facts are critical. Ask yourself why should
relief be granted.
Appellate courts are busy. A brief that set outs the issues clearly and
succinctly is the best approach.
Explaining the conceptual differences between copyrights, patents,
and trademarks is the starting point. There is often confusion between
what can be copyrighted and patented and what protection is offered by
each form of intellectual property. Businesses often do not understand the
importance of “branding” and how that is accomplished with the right trade
or service mark.
Mr. Dwyer has extensive engineering experience in digital and analog
electronics, software, mechanical design, fabrication, and manufacturing.
See his Patents and Publications page.
Mr. Dwyer has both domestic and international experience with intellectual
property and is especially focused on helping clients integrate their “IP”
into their everyday business agreements. This is often overlooked
and later comes back to “haunt” a business when it tries to expand, merge
or be sold. Distribution, marketing, and agency agreements need
provisions that protect a company’s IP from being misappropriated or lost.
Often someone will have a new “idea” and wants to share the idea with a
possible investor. If disclosed without proper protection, the idea can be
lost. Mr. Dwyer helps individuals and businesses protect their IP with non-
dislcosure agrements. Once the new idea is secured, then Mr. Dwyer can
provide extensive licensing and transactional expertise.
Selecting the right legal structure for your business is very important.
There are many factors that need to be considered, especially ownership,
intellectual property, and tax questions.
In small or family owned businesses, the primary issues often revolve
around the management of the company, dispute resolution, rights
to buy out other owners, and how the business will be terminated or
inherited. These issues are frequently not given the attention
deserved. The common result is expensive litigation when the business
partners or family members want to go in different directions. Careful
legal planning should include provisions that deal directly with these
matters.
Mr. Dwyer is experienced with the formation and organization of C corps,
S corps, close corps, LLCs, general and limited partnerships, and
charitable corps.
Mr. Dwyer is also an electronics engineer (see Patents and
Publications) with considerable software and digital design
experience. He has used this expertise in several cases with
key evidence located on digital devices. In one case,
People v. Pellerin, he was able to track down evidence
tampering by a sheriff’s department that had modified
video files on a hand held video camera for the purpose of
falsely incriminating his client.
In another case, Mr. Dwyer was responsible for making a
forensic copy of a computer server and then running that
copy “inside” of a lap top computer in court to prove that
a certain software program on the original server was
present, complete, and operable as required by the contract.
In another case, he examined text messages sent by a
GPS tracking device to disprove the report of an expert
for the prosecution that the GPS device had been used for
illegal survielance.
Mr. Dwyer has been directing the focus of his practice into the
field of civil rights since 2010.
I sometimes get calls from potential clients, but
they are too late. It is crucial that your claims against
the State of California be preserved with a timely filing of a
government tort claim as required by California Government
Code 915. YOU MUST FILE A CLAIM WITHIN SIX MONTHS
OF THE INJURY OR THE DATE YOU BECAME AWARE OF
THE INJURY. GC 911.2
Many claims that are actionable under state law are also
actionable under federal law. This field of law is complex and
I recommend consultation with a lawyer. Federal claims for
constitutional violation of civil rights typically have a two year
statute of limitations. But again, check with a lawyer!
To file a claim against a county or local government
entity you must complete a claim form and deliver the form to
the County Board of Supervisors office. I recommend personal
delivery or certified mail. GC 915(a).
The claim must include the information set out at GC 910.
How you state your claim can be crucial to its success. I
recommend that a lawyer help you with this process.
You can file a claim against the state or a state agency or
employee with the State Board of Control (SBC), by delivering
the claim to any local SBC office or by mailing it to:
State Board of Control Government Claims Branch
P.O. Box 3035, Sacramento, CA 95812.
The State Board of Control’s contact info is:
(916) 323-3564 (voice); (916) 323-5768 (fax);
800-955-0045, or you can download a form from:
http://www.vcgcb.ca.gov/publications/claims.aspx
http://www.governmentclaims.ca.gov/claims/howtofile.aspx