Insights: News Releases Calla Yee Joins Kilpatrick Townsend in San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO (October 13) – Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton announced today the addition of Calla Yee to the firm’s San Francisco office as an associate in the Trademark and Copyright Team in the firm’s internationally recognized Intellectual Property Department.
Ms. Yee focuses her practice on trademark and copyright law. She earned her J.D. from the University of San Francisco School of Law where she obtained an Intellectual Property & Technology Law Certificate with Honors. While attending law school, Ms. Yee served as a Literary Editor of the Maritime Law Journal, as a member of the University of San Francisco Law Review, and as an advocate and Board Member of the University of San Francisco Moot Court program. As an advocate, she was a member of the first place team at the 2015 Western Regional Saul Lefkowitz Moot Court Competition. Ms. Yee received her B.A. in Political Science, Minor in Economics, from Colgate University.
Follow the firm on Twitter: @KTS_Law.
###
Disclaimer
While we are pleased to have you contact us by telephone, surface mail, electronic mail, or by facsimile transmission, contacting Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP or any of its attorneys does not create an attorney-client relationship. The formation of an attorney-client relationship requires consideration of multiple factors, including possible conflicts of interest. An attorney-client relationship is formed only when both you and the Firm have agreed to proceed with a defined engagement.
DO NOT CONVEY TO US ANY INFORMATION YOU REGARD AS CONFIDENTIAL UNTIL A FORMAL CLIENT-ATTORNEY RELATIONSHIP HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED.
If you do convey information, you recognize that we may review and disclose the information, and you agree that even if you regard the information as highly confidential and even if it is transmitted in a good faith effort to retain us, such a review does not preclude us from representing another client directly adverse to you, even in a matter where that information could be used against you.
