History
After my campaign for Vice President in 1992 on the Libertarian ticket, I opened an office in Atlanta Georgia. I represented a woman whose hydroponics store had been targeted by the feds, won a murder case, and represented my first FDA criminal clients - charged with sales of GHB and steroids. In 1994, I won the New Mexico case of US v. Sless, 16 counts of Food and Drug and related violations that came out of importing Gerovital, a popular tonic. Rodger was acquitted in early July, during the political struggle to prevent the FDA from regulating amino acids as drugs that culminated in the passage of DSHEA. While well professionally well timed in that, the specific day of the acquittal was not so well timed. It was the day of OJ Simpson's slow speed chase. The rest is history.
Specialties
My practice focuses on assisting innovative medical companies with negotiating the intricate regulations of the Food and Drug Administration in their site and label design, patents, trademarks, and criminal charges. I also represent a wide variety of clients on criminal and civil cases, and contract and transactional work.