On July 7, William H. Orrick, judge of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, is due to hear a lawsuit in which an eVTOL aircraft developer is accusing a rival of stealing its design. While it might not be the first lawsuit of its kind in the emerging advanced air mobility (AAM) sector, the one brought by Wisk Aero against Archer Aviation stands to be the highest-profile case so far in the gold rush subculture of start-ups racing to be the first to market.
Wisk’s legal team this week filed for a preliminary injunction to compel Archer to stop using the intellectual property and trade secrets that it alleges have been unlawfully taken from it. In the filing on May 19, the attorneys asked the court to compel the plaintiff to give full access to all evidence relating to the case, in which Wisk alleges Archer stole trade secrets and intellectual property.
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