USPTO names Drew Hirshfeld as commissioner for patents

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

USPTO names Drew Hirshfeld as commissioner for patents

Hirshfeld signing

Drew Hirshfeld, the USPTO’s deputy commissioner for patent examination policy, has been appointed the new commissioner for patents, effective immediately

Hirshfeld signing

He succeeds Margaret Focarino, who retired earlier in July after 38 years at the USPTO. Andrew Faile, deputy commissioner for patent operations, has served as acting commissioner since Focarino’s departure.

Hirshfeld has been deputy commissioner for patent examination policy since November 2011. Before that, he was for two years the USPTO chief of staff, managing operations and intergovernmental communications for then-director of the USPTO David Kappos.

He has also worked as a supervisory patent examiner and a group director of Technology Center 2100, overseeing Computer Networking and Database workgroups.

Hirshfeld began his career at the USPTO in 1994 as a patent examiner.

Pictured: Hirshfeld (left) being sworn in by Deputy Director Russ Slifer.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

A co-partner in charge says the UK prosecution teams are a ‘vital’ part of the firm’s offering, while praising a key injunction win
A team from White & Case has checked in on behalf of Premier Inn Hotels in a UK trademark and passing off case against a cookie brand
Litigation team says pre-trial work and a Section 101 defence helped significantly limit damages payable by ride-sharing firm Lyft in patent case
News of Avanci hiring a senior vice president and the EPO teaming up with a French AI startup were also among the top talking points
Explosm, the independent Texas studio behind the hit webcomic Cyanide & Happiness, partnered with Temu’s IP protection team to combat counterfeiters infringing on its brand
The latest in a dispute over juicing machines, and a shakeup in judicial compositions were also among the top developments
Patent partner Robert Hollingshead explains why the firm remains committed to Japan despite several US firms exiting the Japanese and greater Asia market
Emma Green, partner at Bird & Bird, shares why the Iceland v Iceland dispute could prompt businesses and lawyers to think differently about brand enforcement
Attain IP, developed by two UK patent lawyers, will meet ‘forensic’ needs of patent attorneys by showing a verifiable reasoning chain, according to its co-founders
The High Court of Australia has allowed a fashion designer to retain her registered ‘Katie Perry’ trademark for clothing
Gift this article