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		 Chief 
		Judge On U.S. Patent Court Steps Down From Lead Role 
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		[May 24, 2014] 
		By Lawrence Hurley
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The top U.S. patent 
		court's chief judge stepped down from his leadership role on Friday, 
		admitting he had raised questions about his judicial ethics by sending 
		an email praising a lawyer who appears before the court.
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			 Judge Randall Rader will remain on the U.S. Court of Appeals for 
			the Federal Circuit, but he will be replaced as chief judge by Judge 
			Sharon Prost at the end of May, the court said on its website. 
 Rader said in an open letter posted on the court website that he had 
			"engaged in conduct that crossed lines established for the purposes 
			of maintaining a judicial process whose integrity must remain beyond 
			question."
 
 On Thursday, The Wall Street Journal first reported on an email 
			Rader sent to Edward Reines, a lawyer at law firm Weil Gotshal & 
			Manges, praising his work. Reines represents software company 
			Microsoft Corp and medical technology group Medtronic Inc 
			respectively, in two cases before the court, according to the 
			court's docket.
 
 
			 
			Rader later recused himself from the two cases as a result of his 
			email, a move made public via court orders. His role as chief judge, 
			which is a mainly administrative role, was due to end in 2017.
 
 Although Rader did not mention Reines by name in Friday's letter, he 
			wrote that he regretted sending an email that praised an attorney 
			who had argued before the court. The email "constituted a breach of 
			the ethical obligations not to lend the prestige of the judicial 
			office to advance the private interests of others," Rader wrote.
 
 Reines could not be reached for comment.
 
 One of the cases was a patent appeal in which DataTern Inc accused 
			Microsoft and German rival SAP AG of patent infringement. The case 
			was decided by a three-judge panel including Rader on April 4, 
			partially in favor of Microsoft and SAP. Rader wrote a dissenting 
			opinion.
 
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			On May 5, the court reissued its decision, but excluded Rader's 
			dissent, noting he had been recused from the case.
 Rader also recused himself from a patent dispute between Medtronic 
			and rival Edwards Lifesciences Corp.
 
 The federal circuit, which has exclusive jurisdiction over patent 
			appeals, has become increasingly important in recent years due to 
			high-stakes litigation over technology patents.
 
 Rader was appointed to the court by President George H.W. Bush in 
			1990 and became chief judge in 2010.
 
 (Editing by Howard Goller, Kevin Drawbaugh and Grant McCool)
 
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