ProfessionalsCrystal L. Parker
Tel: +1-212-373-3069
Fax: +1-212-492-0069
cparker@paulweiss.com
cparker@paulweiss.com
1285 Avenue of the Americas
New York,
NY
10019-6064
Fax: +1-212-492-0069
A partner in the Litigation Department and deputy chair of the Product Liability & Mass Torts practice group, Crystal Parker focuses her practice on litigation matters involving a wide range of technology sectors, with a particular emphasis on products liability litigation, trade secret litigation, environmental litigation, and patent litigation (including Hatch-Waxman litigation, biologics and medical devices). Crystal has also represented clients in breach of contract, false advertising, and trademark litigation, as well as in arbitration proceedings and in International Trade Commission proceedings. Crystal is also the co-author of a column on Intellectual Property that appears in The New York Law Journal.
Crystal has extensive experience in all phases of litigation, from pre-suit investigations through fact and expert discovery, dispositive motions, trial and appeal.
EXPERIENCE
Her representative cases include:
- AbbVie in multiple bellwether trials in federal and state court related to the company’s testosterone replacement therapy product, including securing a complete defense verdict at trial in Illinois state court;
- Atos SE in connection with multiple trade secret misappropriation litigations involving both federal (Defend Trade Secrets Act) and state law claims;
- Solvay Specialty Polymers USA LLC in a wide range of state and federal court litigation involving claims for personal injury, medical monitoring, biomonitoring, and natural resource damages related to PFAS chemicals;
- Genentech Inc. in litigations involving the anti-PD-L1 antibody TECENTRIQ® (atezolizumab), and Hatch-Waxman litigation regarding the cancer treatment ALECENSA® (alectinib);
- Chugai Pharmaceutical in a pair of inter partes review (IPR) victories against a major pharmaceutical company, defending two of Chugai’s patents for a new, simpler and less costly method of removing DNA contaminants from proteins, a key step in the production of genetically engineered and biologic drugs;
- IBM in connection with several actual and threatened trade secrets litigations concerning the enforcement of employee-restrictive covenants and non-competition agreements; and
- A major biotechnology company in a significant IPR win at the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB). The proceeding sought to invalidate a patent for a rheumatoid arthritis treatment, but in a final written decision, the Board found that the challenger, a major pharmaceutical company with a proposed biosimilar product, had failed to show any of the challenged claims to be unpatentable.