Russell Slifer revealed as USPTO deputy director

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Russell Slifer revealed as USPTO deputy director

Russell Slifer has been appointed deputy under secretary of commerce for intellectual property and deputy director of the USPTO

russell-slifer-uspto-250.jpg

Slifer was previously director of the USPTO's Rocky Mountain regional office in Denver, Colorado. The office opened in June last year.

He began his new role at USPTO headquarters in Alexandria, Virginia on March 25.

Slifer has practiced intellectual property law for 20 years. He spent eight years as chief patent counsel for Micron Technology in Boise, Idaho. He also was a design engineer for Honeywell and spent more than nine years in private practice in Minnesota.

The USPTO plans to name an interim director for the Denver office soon, and said it “will work swiftly to appoint a new director”.

The appointment marks the first time that the USPTO has had a director and deputy director in place for more than two years.

After David Kappos left the USPTO in January 2013, deputy director Teresa Rea also acted as director. When Rea left the Office in November 2013, Michelle Lee was appointed deputy director. Lee was nominated for director in October last year, and was eventually confirmed earlier this month (she gave her first speech as sworn-in director at Managing IP’s US Patent Forum on March 18).

The American Intellectual Property Law Association noted that Slifer’s appointment meant the USPTO continues its progress in finalising the leadership team. "With a full complement of leaders in place, we are encouraged that the office will have the resources and leadership required to find the right balance of interests for the public and the agency's diverse array of stakeholders,” commented AIPLA Executive Director Lisa Jorgenson.



 

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

A multijurisdictional claim filed by InterDigital and a new spin-off firm in Germany were also among the top talking points
Duarte Lima, MD of Spruson & Ferguson’s Asia practice, says practitioners must adapt to process changes within IP systems, as well as be mindful of the implications of tech on their practices
Practitioners say the UK Supreme Court’s decision could boost the attractiveness of the UK for AI companies
New awards, including US ‘Firm of the Year’ and Latin America ‘Firm to Watch’, are among more than 90 prizes that will recognise firms and practitioners
DWF helped client Dairy UK secure a major victory at the UK Supreme Court
Hepworth Browne led Emotional Perception AI to victory at the UK Supreme Court, which rejected a previous appellate decision that said an AI network was not patentable
James Hill, general counsel at Norwich City FC, reveals how he balances fan engagement with brand enforcement, and when he calls on IP firms for advice
In the second of a two-part article, Gabrielle Faure-André and Stéphanie Garçon at Santarelli unpick EPO, UPC and French case law to assess the importance of clinical development timelines in inventive step analyses
Public figures are turning to trademark protection to combat the threat of AI deepfakes and are monetising their brand through licensing deals, a trend that law firms are keen to capitalise on
News of Avanci Video signing its first video licence and a win for patent innovators in Australia were also among the top talking points
Gift this article