Bernard H. Chao
Professor
303-871-6110 (Office)
Frank H. Ricketson Law Bldg., 2255 East Evans Ave. Denver, CO 80208
Professional Biography
Bernard Chao is a professor of law, director of the law school's intellectual property certificate program, co-director of its Empirical Justice Institute, and chair of the law school's Hughes Committee, which helps faculty engage in empirical research. Professor Chao works at the interface of law and technology. As a teacher, his classes involve both live and remote asynchronous components engaging students with videos, role-playing and frequent assessments. As a researcher, Professor Chao has regularly written about patent issues important to the technology sector. His patent writings have been recognized with a Samsung-Stanford Patent Prize and included in West/Thomson's annual Intellectual Property Law and Patent Law Reviews. Professor Chao also regularly conducts experiments on cognitive biases in legal decision-making, particularly in the context of civil juries. His studies have looked at issues in a number of different substantive areas including: tort damages, patent law, the 4th Amendment, evidentiary rules, and jury instructions. Professor Chao's papers have appeared in a number of leading publications including the California Law Review, Boston College Law Review and Northwestern University Law Review. Working with different groups like the the Harvard Cyberlaw Clinic and Electronic Frontier Foundation, Professor Chao has also authored several amicus briefs to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Prior to joining the University of Denver, Professor Chao practiced law in Silicon Valley for almost twenty years in variety of different roles. At Wilson, Sonsini and Pennie & Edmonds, Professor Chao litigated high stakes patent cases. At Covad Communications, he served as Vice President of Legal Strategy as the company grew from a small broadband startup to a public company. Later Professor Chao co-founded his own boutique firm, Chao Hadidi Stark & Barker LLP. Professor Chao has also had the privilege of advising federal judges as a court appointed Special Master, most notably, in the largest patent multidistrict litigation in U.S. history, In Re Katz Interactive Call Processing Patent Litigation. He continues to work with practicing attorneys around the country conducting experiments on the effect of different tactics on juries. He also currently serves as an Academic Advisor for the NYU Civil Jury Project.
Degree(s)
- JD, Law, Duke University School of Law, 1990
- BS, Electrical Engineering, Purdue University, 1987
Licensure / Accreditations
- Registered with the Patent and Trademark Office
- Active Member of California Bar
Featured Publications
- Lost Profits in a Multicomponent World
- “Why Courts Fail to Protect Privacy: Race, Age, Bias, and Technology”
- Time is Money: An Empirical Measure of Non-Economic Damages
- Horizontal Innovation and Interface Patents