Events

Events

The Anatomy of an IP Litigation
When: March 17, 2026
Conference: Thompson Rivers School of Law's Introduction to Intellectual Property (IP) course
People: Sarah Fink
Truth in Advertising Exposure
When: March 10, 2026 at 1:00pm – 2:00pm (ET)
Conference: Wilson Elser Forum: Online Business Exposure Summit
People: Sarah Fink and Dara S. Elpren
Copyright Infringement Exposure When Posting Content Online
When: March 5, 2026 at 1:00pm – 2:00pm (ET)
Conference: Wilson Elser Forum: Online Business Exposure Summit
People: Sarah Fink and John P. Cahill
Intellectual Property, Entertainment, Sports and Labor & Employment Law
When: September 12, 2025
Conference: Fifteenth Annual St. John’s Student-Alumni Conference
People: Sarah Fink
Intellectual Property, Entertainment, Sports and Labor & Employment Law
When: September 6, 2024
Conference: Fourteenth Annual St. John’s Student-Alumni Conference
People: Sarah Fink

Events

Fink and Jahangir Secure Favorable Settlement in Federal Copyright Infringement Case

​Sarah Fink (Of Counsel-Long Island, NY) and Wisaal Jahangir (Associate-New York, NY)​ secured a favorable resolution in the U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York, successfully settling a federal copyright infringement action against their high-end luxury hotel client that had gone bankrupt since the alleged violation. The plaintiff, a photographer, sought relief under the U.S. Copyright Act, including actual damages and disgorgement of profits (or, in the alternative, statutory damages per alleged infringement), injunctive relief, litigation costs and attorneys’ fees, and pre-judgment interest. Statutory damages under the Act can reach up to $30,000 per work for non-willful infringement and up to $150,000 per work for willful infringement. Sarah and Wisaal’s primary argument was that the plaintiff could not show any profits from the violation, given that the hotel went out of business, leveraging the fact that statutory damages generally approximate actual damages, and that damages in copyright cases include profits to the defendant. Arguing that the plaintiff’s initial demand of $40,000 was therefore unreasonable, Wilson Elser resolved the matter for $10,000, closing the case on terms advantageous to the client.

Sarah Fink and Wisaal Jahangir

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