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"Gone in 60 Seconds" Star - "Eleanor" - Drives Her Case against Carroll Shelby to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal, Announces Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland.


- "Eleanor" Copyright and Trademark Owner, Denice Halicki, Set to Prove Shelby Violated Her Rights in Replicating, Marketing and Selling the Legendary Movie Star Fastback fast·back  
n.
An automobile designed with a curving downward slope from roof to rear.
 Mustang -

SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden  -- Denice Halicki, owner of copyright and trademark rights to the classic 1974 movie, the original "Gone in 60 Seconds" and its star car character, "Eleanor," is setting the record straight about Carroll Shelby's alleged brazen infringement of Halicki's rights to "Eleanor." In the opening brief to the Ninth Circuit, Halicki's appellate experts, Tim Coates and Jens Koepke of Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland, show that her rights extend to "Eleanor's" reprise re·prise  
n.
1. Music
a. A repetition of a phrase or verse.

b. A return to an original theme.

2. A recurrence or resumption of an action.

tr.v.
 performance in Disney's 2000 remake of "Gone in 60 Seconds."

Halicki spells out in her appeal that after watching the 2000 remake movie and recognizing the extraordinary cachet cachet /ca·chet/ (ka-sha´) a disk-shaped wafer or capsule enclosing a dose of medicine.

ca·chet
n.
An edible wafer capsule used for enclosing an unpleasant-tasting drug.
 and appeal of "Eleanor," Shelby teamed up with Unique Performance to manufacture and sell high-priced knock-off cars that look like one version of "Eleanor," openly trading on the popularity of "Gone in 60 Seconds." Despite the fact that Halicki and (her late husband) H.B. "Toby" Halicki have been using those marks worldwide for 33 years, (www.gonein60seconds.com) and thus own the common-law "Eleanor" mark, Shelby went as far as to register a trademark on the character's name "Eleanor" without contacting Disney or Halicki.

"Using his fame as a legendary car designer, Shelby has convinced consumers and the automotive press that he has the right to produce a new 'Eleanor' for the masses," Halicki points out in her brief prepared by Koepke, an experienced appellate advocate and intellectual property expert. "His bootstrapping Bootstrapping

A procedure used to calculate the zero coupon yield curve from market figures.

Notes:
Since the T-bills offered by the government are not available for every time period, the bootstrapping method is used to fill in the missing figures in order to derive the
 scheme with Unique has racked up millions of dollars in profits and confused consumers as to who created 'Eleanor,'" asserts Koepke in the brief.

Shelby and Unique's chief defense was not that they didn't infringe, but that Halicki had no standing to bring suit against them. Instead, they argued, it was Disney that owned the "Eleanor" merchandising rights from the 2000 remake "Gone in 60 Seconds." The District Court adopted this crabbed crab·bed  
adj.
1. Irritable and perverse in disposition; ill-tempered.

2. Difficult to understand; complicated.

3. Difficult to read; cramped: crabbed handwriting.
 reading of the agreement between Halicki and Disney despite the fact that Disney signed a separate acknowledgment that it was Halicki who retained the merchandising rights to the remake "Eleanor," not Disney.

"When faced with both parties to the agreement unequivocally saying that Halicki, not Disney, owns the merchandising rights to 'Eleanor' from the original and the remake, it was error under California law for the District Court to construe construe v. to determine the meaning of the words of a written document, statute or legal decision, based upon rules of legal interpretation as well as normal meanings.  the agreement otherwise, much less grant summary judgment to defendants," Koepke explained to the federal appellate court A court having jurisdiction to review decisions of a trial-level or other lower court.

An unsuccessful party in a lawsuit must file an appeal with an appellate court in order to have the decision reviewed.
.

Halicki's brief describes how Shelby had nothing to do with the creation of either the original or the remake "Eleanor," yet the defendants printed the character's name on the VIN VIN Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasm, see there  tag and added the letter "E" to the name of their knock-off car, calling it the "Shelby G.T. 500E." Moreover, the brief details how defendants promote the replicas as "Eleanor" of the "recent action-packed blockbuster movie 'Gone in 60 Seconds,'" promising the car would come with a certificate of authenticity A Certificate of Authenticity (COA) is a seal or small sticker on a proprietary computer program, t-shirt, jersey, or any other memorabilia item, especially in the world of computers and sports, which is designed to demonstrate that the item is authentic.  from the "originator of the 'Eleanor' movie car (Shelby)."

"We believe that the issues in this case are very clear and Halicki will be granted an opportunity to bring her claims of defendants' pirating her intellectual property rights to a jury," concluded Koepke.
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Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:May 15, 2007
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