Biography
Some of her recent experience includes serving on Weil teams representing the North American Concert Promoters Association in rate-court proceedings to determine live performance royalty rates; GlobalFoundries in a multibillion-dollar breach of contract dispute with IBM arising from GlobalFoundries’s acquisition of IBM’s chip manufacturing business; a leading toy manufacturer in a copyright infringement dispute involving a popular doll line; and a global food and beverage company in a dispute with a supplier regarding exclusive distribution rights to certain beverage products.
Camilla maintains an active pro bono practice, including work with the Innocence Project, Advocates for Children of New York, and the ACLU against the state of New Hampshire for involuntary detention of people experiencing mental health crises in hospital emergency rooms without providing due process hearings.
Camilla received her J.D., cum laude, from Georgetown University Law Center, where she served as Managing Editor of the Georgetown Environmental Law Review and as Co-Vice President and Co-Chair of Professional Development of Georgetown’s Women’s Legal Alliance. While in law school, she externed with the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice, and received special pro bono pledge recognition for her hours worked with these agencies. Camilla graduated from Brown University with a B.A. in English.
Latest Thinking, Firm News & Announcements
Latest Thinking
- Fencing in Fair Use, the Tenth Circuit Partially Revives Tiger King Copyright Claims Alert — Intellectual Property & Media — By Benjamin E. Marks and Camilla Brandfield-Harvey — PDF — April 08, 2024
- Circuits Now Split on Whether ‘Discovery Rule’ Allows Plaintiffs to Recover Damages for Copyright Infringement That Occurred More Than Three Years Prior to Suit Publication — Intellectual Property & Technology Law Journal — By Benjamin E. Marks and Camilla Brandfield-Harvey — PDF — October 2022
- Creating a Split With the Second Circuit, the Ninth Circuit Holds That the “Discovery Rule” Allows Plaintiffs to Recover Damages for Copyright Infringements That Occurred More Than Three Years Prior to Filing of Complaint Alert — Intellectual Property & Media — By Benjamin E. Marks and Camilla Brandfield-Harvey — PDF — July 21, 2022
Firm News & Announcements
- Weil Secures Three Decisive Wins in Two Business Days for United Therapeutics in RICO Actions Litigation Win — March 27, 2024