ABOUT ROYAL CRAIG

Baltimore's Hometown Intellectual Property Boutique Law Firm

Intellectual property encourages innovation by protecting the work product of inventors, entrepreneurs, authors, and artists. This is a time-tested and cost-effective way toward maximum market share.

Historic inventors like Edison, Ford and Bell relied on our intellectual property laws to launch companies that are now household names. However, those IP laws are complex and ever-changing, even more so on an international scale. We know them cold. We want to make them work for you. Put our 30+ years of experience in all aspects of intellectual property law to work.

We have a unique background that combines legal, business and technology education and work experience. We’ll gain an understanding of your industry and technology, give you an overview of our world, listen to your goals and be your sounding board, and then get to work. Whether you seek an issued patent or an overarching market-driven intellectual property strategy, we will work with you to acquire, commercialize and enforce your intellectual property, as well as to avoid infringing the intellectual property of others. We never forget that our success depends on yours, and we honor your trust with excellence.

Think and Grow Rich, the mantra that explains this country’s entrepreneurial spark for the last two centuries, holds true only if we can own what we think up. Otherwise, why waste the time? That is why we have intellectual property. However, there are many different types of intellectual property and many complex laws for each. To coin another well-known mantra: “if you snooze you lose.” Throughout this website, you can get it all in a nutshell, hopefully in a way you can remember. To best do that, look at IP as a toolbox with four different tools to maximize success of each project: patenttrademarkcopyrighttrade secret.

Better, Faster, Cheaper

What makes an effective law firm? Passion for the work, a knack for results, and a fee structure that doesn’t break the bank. We absolutely love what we do because we get to spend time with bright, entrepreneurial, innovative, creative clients like you. Our knack for best-case results comes from our passion and more than thirty years of experience. That experience also allows us to predict those results, timing and cost. We will provide a budget and adapt your preferred fee structure, be it hourly, fixed fee, or capped fee.

Our Team

Royal Craig

Attorney Royal Craig has a wealth of experience he brings to the practice of intellectual law. He was admitted in 1989 (Maryland) and to U.S. District Court, District of Maryland.…
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Intellectual Property Law Stories

  • Paul Reed Smith made his first guitar while a student at St. Mary's College of Maryland, and continued to build guitars after he finished college. He eventually founded PRS Guitars in Stevensville, Maryland, and is still considered one of the top high-end guitar makers in the United States.
  • Born in Hagerstown, Maryland in 1815, Edmund McIlhenny moved to New Orleans in 1840 and started experimenting with pepper sauces. He patented his sauce in 1870 and started selling it in little two-ounce cologne bottles, which you can still buy today.
  • After graduating from Harvard in 1936, Howard Head moved to Baltimore and went to work as an aircraft engineer for the Glenn L. Martin Company. He loved skiing but was frustrated by the heavy wooden skis of the day. He became convinced that he could build a better ski out of lightweight aircraft aluminum. He started a company and eventually changed the ski industry. After he sold it in 1971, he took up tennis and did the same thing again for tennis rackets.
  • In May 1956, Blossom Point Maryland (35 miles south of DC) was put into use as the first communications tracking station for satellites. The tracking system, called “Minitrack”, was an early version of GPS by its inventor Roger Easton. The Blossom Point facility is still operated today by the Naval Research Lab (NRL).
  • Born in 1907, Rachel Carson was a marine biologist, author, and conservationist. She became a full-time nature writer in the 1950s, writing Silent Spring, The Sea Around Us and The Edge of the Sea. Rachel was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Jimmy Carter, and her ashes lie beside her mother’s at Parklawn Memorial Gardens, Rockville, Maryland.
  • An English Royal Air Force engineer, Sir Frank Whittle invented the turbojet engine, patenting his design in 1930. He was knighted, later emigrating to the U.S. in 1976 to serve the remainder of his career as a Professor at the United States Naval Academy. He died in 1996 at his home in Columbia, Maryland.
  • Glen L. Martin was an American aviation pioneer who designed and built his own aircraft. He was an active pilot and founded his own aircraft company in Baltimore in 1912. After several mergers, the company still thrives and bears his name. Glen had several patents including US 1,165,891 for the automatic parachute.
  • Harry B. Smith was the iconic inventor of Pulse Doppler Radar for Westinghouse. Harry lived in Baltimore and held twenty patents in radar technology.
  • The most famous trade secret is the formula for Coca Cola® which is code named "Merchandise 7X." It’s known to only a few people and kept in the vault of a bank in Atlanta, Georgia. Everyone who knows the formula has signed a non-disclosure agreement, and it is rumored that they are not allowed to travel together. Coke is famous for some of the most aggressive employee, vendor, and distributor NDAs in the world, and has filed many trade secret lawsuits over the years. One employee was convicted in 2007 of offering samples of a new Coca-Cola product to Pepsi for $1.5 million. A good trade secret can last forever as long as it is possible to keep it a secret. You can lose it in a heartbeat if you can’t keep it secret. Make it a conscious business decision, and think of Wally Amos who made the wrong decision with his Famous Amos® chocolate chip cookie recipe.
  • The first trade secret laws existed in ancient Roman times to prevent bribing of slaves to get their master’s secrets. The first civil lawsuits are reported in England in the 1800s, first US case was Vickery v. Welch, 36 Mass. 523 (1837). Welch bought a chocolate factory from Vickery, together with his secret chocolate formula, and soon after Welch began operations Vickery started up business again with the same formula. Welch sued and won. Vickery has evolved into various federal statutes, state statutes and common laws, both civil and criminal, which generally prevent the "misappropriation" of "trade secrets."

TAKE YOUR IDEAS SERIOUSLY

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Royal Craig LLC is a Maryland Intellectual Property Law Firm with experience in patents, copyright, trademarks, and trade secrets. We also successfully litigate cases for our clients. Contact our firm today to turn your great ideas into profits.

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