Hon. Susan G. Braden Image

Hon. Susan G. Braden

Jurist-In-Residence

Center for Intellectual Property x Innovation Policy C-IP2

Chief Judge Susan G. Braden (Ret.) was appointed in 2003, by President George W. Bush, to the United States Court of Federal Claims, which has exclusive and national jurisdiction over cases against the federal government arising from, among other things, patent and copyright infringement. In March 2017, she was designated as Chief Judge. After her retirement from the federal bench in 2019, she was appointed to serve as a Public Member of the Administrative Conference of the United States and a Fellow of the American Bar Association. In 2020, she was appointed by the Secretary of Commerce to serve a three-year term on the United States Patent & Trademark Office’s Private Patent Advisory Committee.

In addition, Judge Braden serves on the Board of Directors of privately held companies in the software, artificial intelligence, and construction industries and is a member of the Board of Directors of the United Inventors Association. Judge Braden is also a member of the American Arbitration Association’s M&A, IP/Technology, and Large Complex Commercial Panels and was appointed in 2020 by the United States Trade Representative to serve a three-year term as an arbitrator representing the United States in disputes arising under the United States-Mexico-Canada trade agreement. She also serves as an Arbitrator/Mediator/Corporate Monitor for the American Arbitration Association and FEDARB and is a Jurist-In-Residence at the Antonin Scalia School of Law’s Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property.

During her tenure on the bench, Judge Braden issued 456 precedential opinions, affirmed by the Federal Circuit, awarding approximately $1 billion in damages to major companies in the aerospace, airline, banking, computer, defense, electric utility, financial services, nuclear, oil and gas, software, steel, and telecommunications industries.

Recent Articles by Hon. Susan G. Braden

Support the ‘Innovation Restoration Act of 2023’

On April 18, 2023, Senator Chris Coons (D-Del), Chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Intellectual Property, and Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC), Ranking Member of the Subcommittee, convened a substantive bipartisan hearing to discuss how to address “Foreign Competitive Threats to American Innovation and Economic Leadership.”  Significantly, Chairman Coons asked Mark Cohen, Director and Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology, the about the impact of the Supreme Court’s decision in eBay, Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388 (2006), which Chairman Coons observed, “made it difficult to get injunction relief in terms of strengthening the fundamental rights of patent holders.”

U.S. Taxpayers Should Not Be Paying for Private Patent Infringement

For well over a year, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and some members of Congress have engaged in a campaign to urge the Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra to break patents on pharmaceuticals to lower drug prices by invoking a century-old statute, Title 28 of the U.S. Code 1498. This is their “game plan”: HHS should contract with generic drug companies willfully to infringe pharmaceutical patents, thereby requiring any damages to be paid from public funds. This strategy took a new tack in early March 2023, when the Biden Administration’s Justice Department filed a surprise “Statement of Interest” in a private lawsuit on behalf  “the Government and its Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense.” The case, filed in Delaware federal court, was initiated by Arbutus Biopharma and Genevant Sciences, which allege that that patents they own were infringed by Moderna in producing its version of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Past Events with Hon. Susan G. Braden

IPWatchdog LIVE 2023

September 17-19, 2023

Life Sciences Masters™ 2022

October 25-26, 2022

IPWatchdog LIVE 2022

September 11-13, 2022