LET’S DO THIS, AND DO IT RIGHT

Making the Most of Good Intentions and Energy

We all know there are abuses of power and of legal frameworks in the Cannabis industry.  Many good people want to know what they can do about such abuses.  Since I’m a patent attorney, I usually focus on people’s concerns about abuses within the patent system and how they affect the industry and the “Small Cannabis” community.

Patents can be focused, broad, or overbroad/abusive.  I see people discussing Cannabis patents that, with good intentions and abundant energy, misinterpret relatively focused patents as being overbroad.  These situations get earnest people upset and misdirect their energies and attention away from the real problem patents.  Related to this, I get frequent questions about what someone can do to attack an overbroad patent.  I have plenty to say about that, so hang with me.  I think this will be worth your time.

First, Some Definitions

Focused/narrow patent – covers subject matter that was clearly originated by the patent applicant, doesn’t make any real attempt to go beyond that.

Broad but legitimate patent – covers, at its core, something that was legitimately invented by the applicant.  Also covers some logical outgrowths of the core invention but doesn’t cover what is already in the public domain.

Overbroad patent – covers subject matter that was already in the public domain prior to the patent’s filing date.

Some people will want to debate whether all broad patents are abuses, and will argue that anything beyond a focused patent is worthy of attack.  Some of those people are even law professors.  So if you feel this way you’re in good company.  But that’s not today’s topic, so I’m going to direct this discussion to overbroad patents, how to recognize them, and what to do about them.

I also don’t want to get bogged down in, or have this blog dismissed as, an attack on any particular overbroad patent.  This blog may well give you some tools to do that, but I want to be more general and widely applicable.

It’s All About the Claims

The first thing you need to know, to understand a patent or patent application you’re looking at, is that the claims are where the action is.  If you scroll to the end of the part of the document that contains text, you will see one or more numbered, probably long, “sentences” that are usually written very oddly.  Those are the claims.  A patent claim is a verbal definition of the invention and, if you’re looking at an issued patent, the claims are a verbal description of the patent owner’s right to exclude.

Think of a claim as a word-fence around the invention.  If you’re inside the fenced area (i.e., if your product or method meets each and every feature recited in the claim), you infringe the claim.  You are trespassing on the property of the patent owner.  But if there is even one thing the claim recites that your product or method clearly doesn’t have, then you are outside the fence and you don’t infringe the claim.  You are not trespassing; good job!  To read more about patents as fences, click here.

One other thing about patent fences: if a patent fence encloses something that was previously in the public domain, the fence is in the wrong place and needs to come down.  In other words, if a patent claim “reads on” something that already existed before the inventor’s alleged invention, the claimed invention isn’t new and therefore isn’t valid.  Some patent fences, intentionally or accidentally, reach out to cover things that pre-existed the patent.  They are invalid, and the intentional ones are outright abuses of the system.

Knowing What You’re Looking At

So now you know where to find the claims and what they are.  Next let’s figure out whether you are looking at a published application or an issued patent.  And if it’s an issued patent, let’s determine whether it is a plant patent or a utility patent.  That is a very important difference.

Check the numbers on the first page of the document, near the top.  If the number starts with what looks like a four digit year, followed by some more digits, you are looking at a patent application.  If the number is four or five digits and is preceded by “PP” you are looking at a plant patent.  If the number is either 7 or 8 digits, you’re looking at an issued utility patent.  (This is all in reference to US patents and applications.  The numbering system can vary from country-to-country.)

Now that you know what you’re looking at, let’s discuss whether it is worth getting upset about it.

Patent Application – If you see a number like US 2019012345, you’re looking at a published patent application.  Almost all patent applications are published about 18 months after their earliest filing date or priority date.  Most patent applications contain claims that don’t end up getting allowed.

Think of the claims in a patent application as a letter to Santa.  They are a wish list, or the opening round in a negotiation with the patent examiner.  So if you’re looking at a patent application, just realize that the claims you see are not allowed, and don’t necessarily indicate what is really patentable.  They could all be allowed, but chances are fairly good that the final claims in the issued patent will be narrower than the wish list you see in the claims of the published application.

You might see some claims that would be a terrible encroachment on the public domain if they were ever allowed.  You can follow what happens with examination process on “Public PAIR.”  Click here for a blog post that tells you what you need to know to access Public PAIR and become a true patent geek.  And, in certain circumstances, you may even file a protest during the examination process.  This kind of protest requires evidence of unpatentability in the form of printed publications and/or prior patents.  Meanwhile, your best attack on these claims may not be in the form of published material that predates the application.  But if you do have some prior publications that would be on point, you can read about formally protesting pending claims by clicking here.

Plant Patent – If you see a number like US PP12,345, you’re looking at an issued plant patent.  Go to the last page of text and you’ll see there is only one claim, and the claim reads more or less “A new and distinct Cannabis sativa plant named XYZ as illustrated and described herein.”

Here is the most important thing about plant patents: they ONLY cover identical clones of the claimed plant, and you can only infringe a plant patent by asexually propagating (cloning) the patented plant without permission; or by using, selling, or importing parts of the plant (like the flower) without permission.  Therefore a plant patent is a lot like a copyright on a plant—if you aren’t directly copying it, you’re not infringing.  That also means that a plant patent can’t cover things like seeds, which aren’t exactly identical to the claimed cultivar.  Likewise, a plant patent cannot cover using the plant to breed other varieties.

One other important—and frequently misunderstood—thing about plant patents.  They are required by law to include a description of the plant in as much detail as is reasonably possible.  So you may see, in the body of the application, things about the plant’s chemotype or other descriptive information.  This description DOES NOT mean that the applicant is trying to—or ever could—cover all plants with those features.  That description is only there because the law requires it.  So take a deep breath and save your fierceness for certain utility patents, because a plant patent cannot really be overbroad according to our definition.  It’s not possible for a plant patent to cover someone else’s work–something the breeder didn’t invent.  Since a plant patent can only ever cover what the breeder actually originated—one single genotype—there’s nothing to get upset about.  You will do the most good for the most people by focusing on overbroad utility patents.

Utility Patent – you know how to recognize a utility patent and distinguish it from an early wish list (a published application) or a harmlessly narrow plant patent.  Don’t get stuck on the title or the abstract or even the description in the body of the application.  Those all carry information but they DO NOT tell you what the patent actually covers.  Instead go to Claim 1 and read it.  It might be a bit of a slog, but you’ll figure it out.  As you read it, ask yourself whether the claim describes something that you know from your own experience which:

– was sold, published, or otherwise known to the public;

before the earliest filing date or priority date listed on the first page of the document.

If Claim 1 (usually the broadest claim in the patent) really does describe something that existed and was known to the public before it was “invented” by this patent owner, then the claim was erroneously granted and won’t be valid.  For something to be validly patentable, it must be new.  If something was already known before, it was part of the public domain or the public knowledge and isn’t eligible for patent protection.  To read more about patenting and the public domain, click here.  To read more about the almost-always impossibly broad “chemotype patents,” click here.

You Found a “Bad” Patent, Now What?

So what can you do about an issued patent that you believe covers something that wasn’t new at the time of filing?  You have some options.  You could file an “Inter Partes Review” or an “Ex Parte Reexamination” at the USPTO.  These are limited in their potential because they will both require evidence in the form of prior patents or printed publications.  This is especially challenging in the Cannabis industry, in which most of the prior commercial activity was never published—it was intentionally hidden from the outside world even though well-known inside the community.  So if your evidence that the claimed invention was in the public domain exists in some other form—like witness testimony—then you have some other options that will work better.

Your least expensive and most proactive option is to publicize what you know about the claim’s lack of novelty.  Get on social media and publish blogs and articles to point out your evidence that a particular claim is overbroad because it covers things that aren’t new or original to the patent owner.  Be specific about what you know.  And if you’re worried about the noise you’re making constituting some kind of incriminating admission of prior illegal activity, check with a lawyer.  Chances are good that any such activity has a statute of limitations.  Remember, this blog is NOT legal advice–you really do need a live lawyer to learn and analyze your exact facts.

Making Noise for the Public Good

What is the benefit of this kind of publicity?  Well, it may make the patent owner think twice about ever suing anyone for infringing the overbroad claim.  This is because patent litigation is expensive and if you sue someone for patent infringement, one of their defenses can be that the patent is invalid and never should have been granted.  A defendant will have a full opportunity to bring forth a variety of evidence to demonstrate that the claimed invention wasn’t new.  And if the court agrees with this, it will rule that the claim is invalid.  A final judgement that a claim is invalid means it can never be asserted against anyone, ever again.

So if you make a lot of noise about an overbroad patent and why it is invalid, the patent owner may well decide that it is too risky to sue someone who could turn around and invalidate the patent claims.  If your evidence is clear and credible, it would be pretty foolish for the patent owner to sue anyway.  And one thing about big corporations is that they often have shareholders and board members who will be very upset if money is wasted in litigation where an invalid patent is the only outcome.  So the more noise you make (if it is credible), the more you raise the awareness among investors and board members of how risky it would be to ever sue someone.

Defending Your Community

This is related to another aspect of preventive noise-making.  It shows a cohesiveness in the community—that one person’s evidence can be everyone’s defense.  If you are standing up to a bad patent, others will be more likely to stand with you.  This should especially be the case if someone actually were to be sued for infringing an overbroad patent.  If everyone in the Small Cannabis community were willing to share their evidence of patent invalidity to help the defense of one member of the community, you can be sure that Big Cannabis or Big Ag would become aware of this and would be more hesitant to assert overbroad patents.  To read more about standing up to Big Ag, as a united Small Cannabis community, click here.

The Small Cannabis community is rightfully concerned about the threat of overbroad patents.  But Small Cannabis is not paralyzed by fear—it is instead energized by a righteous kind of anger and willingness to stand its ground.  The more effective the community is in pointing out overbroad patents with real, credible evidence, the less likely Big Cannabis will be to continue to try to enforce these patents or even pursue them in the first place.  At some point, the investors and board members of Big Cannabis will see overbroad patents for what they are: a colossal waste of money and political capital.

So go make some noise, after doing some homework to make sure you’re targeting the real abuses.  Your brothers and sisters in Small Cannabis will stand with you and thank you for your efforts.

*Photo — Propagating Purpose Presents: The Grassroots Roundtable Discussion; August 24, 2019; Ukiah, CA; “The Giant We All Face”

OPEN SOURCE WITHOUT ANY RECOURSE AGAINST VIOLATORS IS JUST AN HONOR SYSTEM

Don’t Kill the Messenger – But Please Read His Blog!

We have all heard of open source and are aware of how well it seems to work in the software industry.  And many of us have heard discussions of how desirable it would be to have a workable open-source system in Cannabis breeding.  I hate being the bearer of bad news, but a workable open-source system in Cannabis breeding (or any plant breeding), at least one that is in any meaningful way analogous to open-source software, isn’t possible under current laws in most places.

Before you decide to kill this messenger, I do have a proposal for a solution.  It’s not a particularly modest proposal but I think it’s an important one and should be pursued.  To state it differently, I am IN FAVOR of having open source as an option for Cannabis breeders, but we can’t get there from here unless some major changes in the intellectual property system happen first.  So let’s explore those changes, why they are necessary, and how to make them happen.

Open Source vs Public Domain – Not the Same Thing

Open-source systems were created in the software community in order to facilitate sharing, research, understanding and further development of software with fewer restrictions than those governing typical commercial software. However, it is important to understand the difference between an open-source system and an absolutely free-use or public-domain system. In open source the software source code is shared widely but with conditions. In contrast, in a free use or public domain approach the source code of the software would be dedicated to the public – expressly put into the public domain – such that the originator would retain no rights of any sort to control who used the source code, or for what purpose, or under what conditions. Even though open source is associated with broad access and sharing, it still carries conditions. Typically the condition is that software incorporating open source code must itself be made available under the same terms for others to use, study, and build upon.

The motivation behind an open source approach to Cannabis breeding (or any plant breeding) is that the rich genetic diversity available from different sources, different plant breeders, different collections of exotic or rare genetics, ideally would be shared with others. This would be so that they could use their access to this great source of genetic diversity in developing new cultivars as well as simply to preserve biodiversity and improve the overall gene pool of cannabis cultivars developed by plant breeders. So why not just create a free use/public domain system? Because, at least among some participants, there is a reluctance to hand over their special, rare genetic material in the form of seeds or clones for others to use if the recipient would not be willing to share with the community on similar terms. Typically, participants in an open source system are embracing a non-commercial or less commercial approach to breeding and do not want that “community value” to be siphoned off to parties with different values and different goals.  They want to restrict access to this precious genetic material only to those who are willing to respect the community and play by the same rules. Obviously, if someone is committed to a fully open sharing of genetic material, they are always free to do that by placing their material into the public domain and letting it scatter as it will. But I don’t think that’s usually what people mean when they talk about open source cannabis genetics.

Software is Different – It Has Automatic Copyright Protection

But first some background so we can fully appreciate the problem:  when someone writes code for software, that code is automatically protected by copyright the moment it is written.  There is nothing the writer needs to do for that copyright protection to exist other than to write the code.  It’s the same for this blog post.  As soon as I write it, it has copyright protection.  Done.  Easy.  Automatic.

Of course, if I want to have full leverage to enforce my rights as a copyright owner or be in the best position to get revenue from giving someone a license under my rights as a copyright owner, there are some additional steps I need to take.  So there still exists a formal, government-based system to “perfecting” or documenting copyrights, but the law of copyrights in most of the world is that they exist upon creation of any written work having a modicum of creativity and skill.

This makes an open-source system for software easy to create and enforce.  Simplifying (because this IS a blog and because open-source software systems are not my area of expertise), an open-source system is an agreement among participants who are willing to abide by the agreement.  In simplest terms, it’s a group deal that says “anyone who promises to only use this code in an approved way, and not to use it in a disapproved way, is free to use the code in developing their own software.”  Users who abide by those conditions are in compliance and all is well.  Those who go outside those conditions and use the code in ways that are not licensed under the open-source agreement are committing copyright infringement and are at risk of being sued, shut down, and liable for money damages.

Legal Recourse is the Essential Stick to Accompany the Open-Source Carrot

Why is this so easy and why does it work so well?  Precisely because the code is already (automatically) covered by copyright.  So going outside the agreement is plain and simple copyright infringement.  The point is that the copyright protection provides recourse against those who don’t play by the rules.

The contrast with plant genetics is clear: there is no automatic protection for plant breeders that would cover their rights in a clone or a seed they originated.  The only way to get that kind of protection is to apply for IP rights in the form of a plant patent, a utility patent, a USDA PVP certificate, or analogous rights Plant Breeder’s Rights (PBR) in other countries, almost all of which arise from the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV).*

*In case you are curious about the acronym UPOV, it’s based on the name of the convention in French.  For more on the UPOV system, click here or here.

Alternatives to an Honor System

In the absence of any enforceable rights against people who don’t play by the rules, an open-source system for Cannabis genetics is nothing more than an honor system.  There is a lot to like about honor systems but we all see the problem—the dishonorable who refuse to play by the rules.  In open-source software they are called copyright infringers and can be sued.  In open-source Cannabis genetics, they are called sunzabitches and can only be disliked.  Do you see the contrast between the two systems, and the inherent problem?

I can only think of three solutions to this.  Unfortunately, they are all hard.

  1. Obtain IP protection for everything that is going to be part of the open-source system.
  2. Very strictly control access to the Cannabis genetics only to those who agree to the rules of the system.
  3. Change the law of plant breeding so that any unique genetic selection has some level of automatic protection upon creation.

Let’s analyze the pros and cons of each option:

  1. Obtain IP protection for everything that is going to be part of the open-source system.

One major problem with this is that is seems to run counter to the reason many people want open-source in the first place.  They want to keep things simple and many of them are not big fans of IP protection, at least as they think of it.  Typically they don’t have any major objections to IP in the form of copyrights, but they see plant IP as something different.

Also, there’s no avoiding the fact it’s quite a process to jump through all the hoops of obtaining IP protection for plant genetics.  That’s true even if you are working with someone (like me) who does this all the time and has for decades.  It’s still necessary to prepare an application, file it, pay a filing fee, wait a while, maybe do some more work to get it allowed, maybe also make a deposit of seeds or tissue, and pay an issue fee.**  So it’s complicated—vastly more complicated than it is with software.

**This is a simplified summary of the various hoops.  They don’t all apply in every system.  But at least three from the list are unavoidable in any system.

Why would it be necessary to get IP protection for everything in the system?  Because you need some kind of legal recourse against those who refuse to play by the rules.  In software it’s straight-up copyright infringement.  In this scenario it would be straight-up infringement of a patent or a PVP or PBR certificate.  Otherwise, again, you’re just using an honor system, when the problem is the behavior of the dishonorable.

  1. Very strictly control access to the Cannabis genetics only to those who agree to the rules of the system.

In this approach, the only people who ever could get their hands on a clone or a seed in an open-source system would be people who had already agreed, in a legally-binding way, to abide by those rules.  To be very clear, that legally-binding agreement would be some form of a group contract.  So anyone who made such a legally-binding commitment and then didn’t end up abiding by the rules would be in breach of contract.  There would be legal recourse against them.

The problem with this approach is security.  You’re really just creating a different kind of honor system, one that would be nearly impossible to trace, govern, or enforce if it grew beyond two or three members.  In this case the honor system is what people do with the genetic material they get access to.  What if they are careless with it and it gets out to a third party who never agreed to abide by the group contract?  You can’t be in breach of a contract to which you’re not a party.  So there may be some recourse against the careless member of the group, but there’s zero recourse against anyone who didn’t sign that contract.

This means that the system is only as good as the carefulness and security of the system.  Imagine how hard that would be to control.  It seems pretty much impossible.  And this is exactly why people end up seeking IP protection.  It gives you recourse against people with whom you never made an agreement – even against people you never heard of until you learned they were infringing your IP rights.  That’s usually the exact kind of recourse you need and can’t otherwise get.

  1. Change the law of plant breeding so that any unique genetic selection has some level of automatic protection upon creation.

OK, so we don’t like the problems with the first two options.  Let’s just change the law worldwide!

Notwithstanding how hard it would be to change the law in the US and across the world, this approach would make everything after that directly analogous to the open-source software system.  So there’s something to like about this.  The hardest work is done up-front and once per country, instead of once per plant variety (under approach #1) or instead of constantly (constant perfect security under approach #2).

My Dad is Such a Pain, LOL

I hear the murmurs—every single seed is, technically, a unique genetic combination.  It makes no sense to protect every single seed ever created.  Here’s my answer: you’re overthinking it.  Just because there is automatic protection for every single seed, that doesn’t mean you’re going to do anything with or about that protection for all of them.  It’s just a starting point that enables you to do what you want with the ones you care about.

To illustrate, I would guess that almost every text message my teenagers send has copyright protection.  OK, not texts that lack any originality, so we can exclude “lol” “wyd?” or “my dad is such a pain” (I’m guessing that’s not ORIGINAL to my kids).  But everything anyone writes that has any originality to it is technically protected by copyright.  Does anyone choose to do anything with or about all those copyrights? Of course not.  That’s not the point.  The point is that the valuable ones (like this blog!) have automatic protection without jumping through hoops, paying fees, and waiting for the protection to be granted.  So anything WORTH putting into an open-source system brings with it the recourse against those who won’t play by the rules of the system.  And recourse is essential to a meaningful, workable open-source system.

International Conventions Work

So all we need to do is change the law worldwide.  Don’t be discouraged—it happened with copyrights.  For a long time there was no copyright protection without registration.  That eventually became a problem—an international wrong that needed to be righted—and something called the Berne Convention was established.  177 of the world’s 195 countries are currently members.  The US finally joined the Berne Convention in 1988, only 102 years after its original establishment in 1886.  But better late than never, right?

How does an international convention get established?  By identifying a problem, promoting a conversation, and taking action.  This can happen with government action or with enough attention from non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that are sufficiently committed to change.  So consider this one of the first steps in a journey of a thousand miles.  But, with enough people understanding the problem and motivated to find a solution, that journey need not be a slow one.

Meaningful Next Steps

  1. If you can think of an alternative to the three hard solutions I have discussed here, please bring it to my attention in the comments or email me at DHunt@PlantAndPlanet.com. I don’t pretend to have all the answers.  I’m just a lawyer with some experience who writes a blog.  So please suggest some alternatives if you can think of some.  (Respectful dialogue is always preferable but if this blog made you upset and that motivates you, bring your passion and I’ll do my best to take the arrows.)
  2. If you think a change to the system of plant IP is worth some of your effort and energy, let’s translate this into more than just a blog. Make a comment or send an email indicating your interest and we will start with a group call and identify some genuine next steps.
  3. If you feel strongly enough about this, you can certainly forward this post to others and ask them to join the movement. I’m pretty sure the Berne Convention in 1886 started with a blog post and some texts and emails—maybe an Instagram rant.  If it worked for them, it can work for us.
  4. Maybe you’re aware of another group that is already on this. Please make me/us aware and we can join forces.

Let’s start something.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND “REAL” PROPERTY HAVE IMPORTANT THINGS IN COMMON

Learning from Cannabis Pros and a Football Pro

I was part of a panel discussion recently in a redwood campground in the hills of Mendocino County, California.  That area has become one of my favorite places — partly because of the beauty of the natural setting, one of the few locations where the truly awesome Giant Redwoods can be found.  Another reason I love that area so much is that it is one of the places that old-school Cannabis people have made their living and continue to do so.  The panel included some industry veterans who have been through many more battles than I will probably ever face.  It was educational and exciting to be on this outdoor stage with them, and I learned some new things.  That was enough to make any day a good day.  But there was one topic we touched on, in this panel discussion, that still stuck with me as I was driving away from that beautiful retreat.

I have several vices, but maybe only one outright addiction: NFL football.  I listen to NFL talk on satellite radio year-round.  It’s something most of my friends and family seem to think is a combination of obsessive and tedious, but I don’t mind being a minority of one among my dear ones when it comes to this addiction.  So why am I confessing my maybe-tedious NFL-radio addiction after leading this blog with the grandeur of the redwoods and weed people?

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By Dale Hunt – The opinions expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of his professional colleagues or his clients.  Nothing in this post should be construed as legal advice.  Meaningful legal advice can only be provided by taking into consideration specific facts in view of the relevant law.

ANOTHER GREAT QUESTION FROM PEOPLE IN THE BIZ

Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?

I have been asked many times, in one form or another, the question in the title of this post.  More often than not, it uses different pronouns and is phrased a little more emphatically — like “Can they really do this?” or “How is it possible that someone could patent a chemotype?!” or “What the $&#*!?!?” (in this latter phrasing, the question is implicit in the context of the patent(s) the questioner is referring to at that moment).

Like most good questions people ask of lawyers, there’s a technically correct answer and a more informative explanation of the practicalities.  So let’s unpack this as efficiently as possible, with the usual caveat that this is simplified around the edges to make it more suitable as a blog post than a week or two of a law school course.

Everyone Loves Etymology, Right?

First we can define some terms: genotype, phenotype, chemotype.  The common denominator in these terms is type — as in something that is typical or representative.  The variables in these terms are:

  • geno — referring to the genes associated with or causing the plant’s ‘type’;
  • pheno — referring to the observable characteristics of the plant (the various phenomena, more or less); and
  • chemo — referring to the chemistry of the plant.

Chemotype is a subset of phenotype; it is focused on the chemical aspects of the phenotype, whereas the entire phenotype would be any and all outwardly observable characteristics.  The characteristics of the phenotype are dictated by the way the genotype interacts with the environment over time, as well as by variations in which parts of the genotype are expressed at different stages in the life cycle, growing season, etc.

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By Dale Hunt – The opinions expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of his professional colleagues or his clients.  Nothing in this post should be construed as legal advice.  Meaningful legal advice can only be provided by taking into consideration specific facts in view of the relevant law.

–image credit: Leafly

AN ALTERNATIVE OR ENHANCEMENT TO YOUR PATENT STRATEGY

Ask A Lawyer a Question and This is What You Get

I was asked recently about whether it is true that, if you never sell your plants, you can renew your patent or your patent never expires.  My answer was that like a lot of things people ask lawyers — there is a short answer and a longer, more detailed explanation and, of course, I’ll give both.

Short answer:  No, it’s not literally true but, in practical terms, it could seem like it is.

Whaaaat???

That is what long answers are for.

Long answer:  Patents always expire, and courts and policymakers really hate it when patent owners try to get tricky and get around patent expiration.  So don’t go there.  HOWEVER, your right to ownership and control of what is rightfully yours without having it stolen from you doesn’t expire, and that is where the answer circles back to the way the question was asked.  So I’ll paraphrase it now to put the concept into the right context.

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By Dale Hunt – The opinions expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of his professional colleagues or his clients.  Nothing in this post should be construed as legal advice.  Meaningful legal advice can only be provided by taking into consideration specific facts in view of the relevant law.