Godici Tapped For Special PTO Post
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke has named a high-ranking Clinton administration patent official to serve as an expert appointee whose job will be to assist the new Patent and Trademark Office director and act as a liaison between the office and the Commerce Department, which houses the PTO. Nicholas Godici served for five years as commissioner for patents, acting under secretary of commerce for intellectual property and director of the PTO and got his start as at the agency as an examiner 30 years earlier. His term in the Obama administration is limited to 180 days. IBM executive David Kappos was tapped to become head of the PTO last month but must be confirmed by the Senate. He is in line behind Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor whose Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing begins Monday.
Godici, who has been a top advisor to Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, LLP since 2005, could be a valuable asset at PTO as the agency struggles to avoid budget cuts and furloughs. The office, which is funded through fees collected from its users, recently suspended overtime pay for patent examiners and earlier this year instituted a hiring freeze. Lawmakers have introduced legislation that would let the PTO's patent division borrow money from its trademark portfolio, which has a multi-million dollar surplus. A House bill sponsored by Judiciary Chairman John Conyers is scheduled for a floor vote under suspension of the rules late Tuesday. Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy has introduced a companion measure in his chamber.
Godici was on Capitol Hill in December where he spoke at a Computing Technology Industry Association event that focused on the future of the PTO. Watch a video of that briefing here. Other panelists included Gerald Mossinghoff, Bruce Lehman, and Q. Todd Dickinson, all former leaders at the PTO.


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