Region Area

Lawyers

Matthew J. Moore

Matthew J. Moore

Latham & Watkins LLP, United States

Position

Matthew Moore, one of the nation’s top patent trial attorneys and former Global Chair of the Intellectual Property Litigation Practice and Technology Industry Group, represents leading companies in existential litigation and other high stakes patent disputes.

Recognized as one of the country’s Top 10 Influential Intellectual Property Lawyers, Matthew represents Fortune 100 enterprises and tech-forward companies in their most complex IP litigation matters involving:

    • Patents
    • Trade secrets
    • Antitrust and competition
    • False advertising

He combines extensive trial and appellate experience with his sophisticated technical background to distill complex science and law into actionable advice. Matthew has litigated over 200 cases in venues across the US, including the International Trade Commission (ITC). He has also managed many global patent disputes involving cases around the world, including in Germany, the Netherlands, the UK, Brazil, China, and Japan.

Matthew guides clients across a broad range of sectors, including semiconductors, electrical circuits, telecommunications, medical devices, software, optics, automotive technologies, materials, and chemicals.

Industry publications often report on Matthew's litigation prowess, including The American Lawyer, which highlighted the five wins he achieved in one single day and Matthew's “knack for invalidating patents.” The Recorder profiled Matthew for his “patent hat trick” after winning three cases at the Federal Circuit in just one week for Capital One, Freddie Mac, and Volvo. The American Lawyer further praised his IP/antitrust litigation work, noting that his “interesting and aggressive” trial strategy could “reset the playing field on patent litigation.”

Before joining Latham, Matthew played professional lacrosse for the Philadelphia Wings and won three NCAA Lacrosse Championships at Syracuse University.

Matthew is admitted to practice before the US Supreme Court; the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit; and the US District Courts for the Eastern District of Texas, the Western District of Wisconsin, and the Eastern District of Michigan.