Trademark scammer update

I finally tracked down contact information for the attorney the scammers claimed to have on their counsel, and sent him an email. He almost immediately got back to me:

Thank you for finding a way to alert me that someone is fraudulently using my name and California Bar number and claiming to be associated with me or that I work for them. I greatly appreciate it.

Unfortunately, whoever is behind this scam has used other trademark related entity names and contacted other members of the public like yourself claiming that this person works for me or that I work for him/her, which is false. I have previously notified the State Bar of California that someone is misusing my name and bar number.

I am in-house counsel for [redacted]. I have no clients other than [company]. I am not a trademark attorney, and I do not know what [scammer company] is. I am not, and I have never been, associated with [scammer].

Best regards,

[redacted]

Anyway, I’ve been in communication with this attorney and he seems to want to shut these fuckers down.

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Email sent to the trademark scammer

No idea if they’ll even respond to this. They probably won’t. But it’s more paper trail for me and the credit card company, at least.

Hi, I am still waiting for contact information for your attorney. I cannot find any public records that indicates that he works with your firm and I would greatly appreciate any evidence to the contrary. The public records indicate that he works with Skyworks Solutions, a semiconductor manufacturer in Irvine, California.

Additionally, in the USPTO filing it appears that a registration was only performed for class 41, when I was told that it would also be registered on additional classes (namely 9 and 35), which would justify the amount I was charged. Could I please get an itemized bill of what the $999 went to?

I also still am concerned about the need for this registration having been done in the first place. Looking at the USPTO database, the only recent/pending registrations I’ve found for “Sockpuppet” or “sock puppet” are for the baseball team as previously mentioned (and they are indeed in class 41), and also there is still the issue of common law trademark regarding band names; for example:

Furthermore, my records show that I requested a cancellation of this process early on Friday, and I was told that I would receive a call “as soon as possible.” I never received that call, and then on Monday I was told that it was too late for a refund as the paperwork had already been submitted.

In addition, both California and Washington are two-party consent states, and I’d like to note that I was only informed that the initial call was being recorded quite a ways into it (when I asked for more information about the competing mark), and was never asked for my consent to be recorded. However, the existence of the recording was later used to threaten me when I mentioned the possibility of issuing a chargeback.

Given that the paperwork does seem to have been filed as promised, I am willing to only take a partial refund based on the services actually rendered, but I am still not exactly thrilled with how this entire process has been handled, nor with the timbre of your communications to me.

I am sure that any disputes along these lines can be cleared up with a simple conversation with your attorney, so I would greatly appreciate being able to have such a converation.

Thank you.

Common law trademark and band names

So, I’m in a bit of a frustrating situation right now.

I’ve been releasing music as “Sockpuppet” since 2006, with my first album under that name released in 2009. From everything I can find online, this firmly establishes me as having “common law” trademark status; for example:

Anyway, back in 2021, I decided to try registering for a federal registered trademark on the name Sockpuppet, but it was denied because of an existing trademark on the band name “Sock Puppet Parody” which they considered to be too similar. So I decided to stick with my common-law trademark status for now and figured I’d only move forward until something came up.

And, well, something came up.

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