Paul Alan Levy

3 proposed a four-prong test that was adopted by the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division and has become the model for other cases in which plaintiffs demand the unmasking of an anonymous Internet speaker.

[1] His Internet practice also includes the defense of trademark and copyright claims brought as a means of suppressing critical web sites.

[4] After working as a law clerk to Wade H. McCree at the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit and Special Assistant to McCree as Solicitor General, Levy joined Public Citizen Litigation Group in 1977 to represent workers in rank-and-file labor law cases,[1] largely representing dissident union members in cases involving union governance.

[4] Levy gives a continuing education course on Practical Considerations in Litigating Online Free Speech Cases,[1] and serves on the Legal Review Committee for the American Civil Liberties Union for the District of Columbia.

[8] In arguing against the issuance of prior restraint in Bank Julius Baer v. Wikileaks, he had the insight that the case had been filed without subject-matter jurisdiction.