USPTO Suspends Patent Attorney Jerry D. Haynes for Ethical Violations

Trust is the bedrock of the legal profession especially when it comes to patent practice, where clients rely heavily on attorneys to guide complex legal processes. In the case of Jerry D. Haynes, a North Miami patent attorney, ethical trust faltered. The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) imposed serious disciplinary sanctions after finding that Haynes failed to keep clients adequately informed, ignored crucial deadlines, and accepted payments from third parties without securing client consent. Here’s a straightforward recounting of what went wrong and the consequences that followed.
In the Matter of Jerry D. Haynes, Proceeding Nos. D2017-11 & D2019-47, USPTO Final Order (Oct. 2, 2020)
What Happened?
Haynes, registered as a patent attorney, was embroiled in two related disciplinary proceedings (D2017-11 and D2019-47), resulting in the following findings:
•Failure to act diligently:
Haynes handled multiple patent applications (including those for inventors Dashawn Johnson, Sharon Vincent, and John Audenby) without taking timely action. For example, a patent application was abandoned after a final rejection because he neither followed up with the client nor filed a response.
•Lack of client communication:
Clients were not informed when applications were abandoned or when required fees were missing, depriving them of the chance to act or decide next steps. 
•Accepting third-party payment without consent:
Haynes was compensated by companies like PSUS and PAW for services provided to their clients but never disclosed the arrangement to those clients or obtained their informed consent.
The Disciplinary Outcome
After reviewing the misconduct, the USPTO and Haynes agreed on sanctions stipulating:
1.A public reprimand for the violations outlined in D2019-47.
2.A 30-month suspension from practicing before the USPTO.
3.A requirement that Haynes take and pass the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE) before any reinstatement.
Why This Case Matters
Clients depend on attorneys for accurate guidance and timely action especially in patent matters where stakes and deadlines are high. Haynes’s failure to communicate, missed deadlines, and undisclosed financial relationships undermined that trust. The imposed sanctions long suspension, public reprimand, and ethics exam requirement underscore the attorney’s duty to act transparently and diligently in service of client interests.
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