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On April 27, 2021, United States District Judge Brian M. Cogan (E.D.N.Y.) granted Plaintiff Leviton Manufacturing Co., Inc. ( Leviton ) motion for a new trial based on the Court s exclusion of secondary indicia of nonobviousness.
In a prior patent lawsuit, Defendant Pass & Seymour, Inc. ( P&S ) and Leviton entered into a Settlement and Licensing Agreement that required P&S to pay Leviton royalties on any products that infringe U.S. Patent No. 7,463,124 ( the 124 patent ), which is directed to an improved ground-fault circuit interrupt circuit breaker. Leviton sued for breach of that agreement and sought unpaid royalties. P&S counterclaimed that the 124 patent was invalid as being obvious. The jury agreed. However, during trial, Leviton was precluded from presenting evidence of secondary indicia of nonobviousness even though the Court allowed the jury to consider testimony supporting P&S s arguments regarding obviousne
Photo: Wesley Gullett. Undated booking photo provided by the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office.
LITTLE ROCK – A Russellville man pleaded guilty Wednesday to his involvement in a racketeering and narcotics conspiracy based on his role as president of a white supremacist organization. Wesley Gullett, 31, was president of New Aryan Empire (NAE), a white supremacist group founded by inmates in the Arkansas Department of Corrections. Gullett entered a guilty plea today before United States District Judge Brian S. Miller.
Prosecutors alleged that from 2014 to 2016, Gullett and NAE associate Marcus Millsap repeatedly offered money to other NAE associates to kill Bruce Wayne Hurley, an individual who had purchased methamphetamine from Millsap. According to the charging document, NAE members believed Hurley had provided information about Millsap to law enforcement, and NAE members allegedly carried out other retaliatory acts against those who they believed had provided information to la
Times Record Staff
A Russellville man pleaded guilty Wednesday to his involvement in a racketeering and narcotics conspiracy based on his role as president of a white supremacist organization.
Wesley Gullett, 31, was president of New Aryan Empire (NAE), a white supremacist group founded by inmates in the Arkansas Department of Corrections. Gullett entered a guilty plea before United States District Judge Brian S. Miller, according to the Eastern District of Arkansas.
After Gullett’s plea, six remaining defendants are awaiting trial, which is currently set for Sept. 7, 2021. All other defendants have pleaded guilty. As part of Gullett’s plea, he and prosecutors agree to jointly request a sentence of 35 years in the Bureau of Prisons. Judge Miller will determine whether to accept the plea agreement and sentence Gullett at a later date. There is no parole in the federal system.
By Jeff Turner
Jan 7, 2021
United States Attorney Joe Kelly announced that Darrell L. Manley, 19, of Omaha, Nebraska, was sentenced today in federal court in Omaha for his involvement in numerous robberies, some involving firearms, occurring between July and September 2019. United States District Judge Brian C. Buescher sentenced Manley to 18 years in the Bureau of Prisons. There is no parole in the federal system. Upon his release from prison, Manley will begin a 5-year term of supervised release. He was also ordered to pay $1,690.45 in restitution
On July 22, 2019, Manley entered the KwikShop at 3222 Q Street in Omaha with a long gun and forced everyone to the ground. He took money from the register and a pack of cigarettes. During the robbery, he threatened the clerk.
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