TRADE DRESS SPECIALISTS, EXPERTS, WITNESSES & FORENSIC CONSULTANTS.



Trade dress refers to characteristics of the visual appearance of a product or its packaging (or even the facade of a building such as a restaurant) that may be registered and protected from being used by competitors in the manner of a trademark. These characteristics can include the three-dimensional shape, graphic design, color, or even smell of a product and/or its packaging.


Executive Expert Witnesses:

Rolling Hills Estates, CA, US

Mr. Sarabia has been deposed dozens of times and has testified in jury and bench trials, in federal and state court, in civil and criminal matters. Twenty years of experience in consumer licensing (revenue, standards, performance and breaches), trademarks, copyrights and the apparel business.




Professional Expert Witnesses:

Centerville, UT, US

Campos & Stratis, LLC

Campos & Stratis is an innovative leader in the field of forensic accounting, economic damage analyses, intellectual property valuation, financial impact analyses and litigation services. We assist our clients in many aspects of intellectual property management - from the initial strategy development to expert witness testimony. Our background, knowledge and experience of the litigation process, will aid the court’s clear understanding of complex events and concepts.



Studio City, CA, US

SILVERMAN CONSULTING LLC

Bruce Silverman is one of America’s best known and well respected marketing-communication and branding experts. He served as EVP/Executive Creative Director at three of America’s largest advertising agencies, as President of two of the nation’s best independently-owned agencies, and as President/CEO of the principal U.S. unit of the world’s largest media planning and buying shop. A long-time member of the Board of Directors of the American Association of Advertising Agencies, Bruce also served as Vice Chairman of the Western Region of the AAAA and Vice President of the Los Angeles Advertising Agency Association.  He is frequently called upon by law firms to serve as an expert witness on cases relating to Lanham Act violations, branding, advertising agency custom and practice and media. Bruce has testified in state and federal courts as well as before the Copyright Royalty Judges of the Library of Congress.




Associate Expert Witnesses:

Teddington, MD, US

Experience encompasses all aspects of trading from buying and selling, dealing with banking lines and documentary credit problems, to insurance and shipping.



Saratoga, CA, US

Cleary And Partners

One of the most respected marketing experts in Silicon Valley. The guy who built one of the most celebrated integrated marketing firms of the 90's.



Saratoga, CA, US

Cleary And Partners

One of the most respected marketing experts in Silicon Valley. The guy who built one of the most celebrated integrated marketing firms of the 90's. He is responsible for the branding of Yahoo, Amazon, Excite, Ebay, etc.



Dallas, TEXAS, US

Rhonda Harper LLC

Ms. Rhonda Harper is a court-qualifited expert witness with seven years of experience. She has provided courtroom testimony, delivered expert reports, conducted and reported on consumer and customer surveys, and consulted on strategy and jury selection.  With more than 25 years of Fortune 500 business experience with companies including Walmart, UPS, and Kraft, Ms. Harper has held full accountability for brand and branding, marketing, trade marketing, research and insights, advertising, promotion, public relations, social marketing, interactive, in-store merchandising, creative services, print production, strategic planning, licensing, sales, innovation and product development, trending, trademarks, valuation, and measurement.  



Marina Del Rey, CA, US

GabrieleGoldaper.com

More than 45 years experience in the Fashion/Garment Industry, as a retailer, manufacturer, consultant & college instructor. A perceptive & articulate expert witness who has been involved in more than 75 apparel industry legal disputes during the past several years. Ms. Goldaper has been deposed and testified for both defendants and plaintiffs. She has owned her own clothing manufacturing company & held key executive positions in major public and private apparel companies. Ms. Goldaper has been a management consultant to over 180 new, failing or growing apparel companies, and completed assignments for the US Agency for International Development (USAID) in Romania, Egypt, El Salvador, Moscow, Thailand & Bulgaria as an apparel expert. She is a 28-year member of the faculty at Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising.




More Details:

Trade dress refers to characteristics of the visual appearance of a product or its packaging (or even the facade of a building such as a restaurant) that may be registered and protected from being used by competitors in the manner of a trademark. These characteristics can include the three-dimensional shape, graphic design, color, or even smell of a product and/or its packaging. There are two basic requirements that must be met for trade dress protection. The first is that those features must be capable of functioning as a source indicator?identifying a particular product and its maker to consumers. In the United States, package design and building facades can be considered inherently distinctive?inherently capable of identifying a product. However, product design can never be inherently distinctive, and so such trade dress or other designs that cannot satisfy the inherent distinctivness requirement may only become protectable by acquiring secondary mean In other words, the mark may be protected if it acquires an association in the public mind with the producer of the goods. Trade dress must also be nonfunctional in order to be legally protected; otherwise it is the subject matter of patent law, if anything. What is functional depends strongly on the particular product. To be nonfunctional, it cannot affect a product's cost, quality, or a manufacturer's ability to effectively compete in a nonreputational way. For example, color is functional in regard to clothing because that product is purchased substantially because of its color and appearance, but color is not functional on household insulation, which is purchased purely to be installed in a wall and is never seen.