Ted Tatos specializes in economic and statistical analysis, particularly in antitrust, higher education, intellectual property, employment, property value diminution, and healthcare matters. Mr. Tatos was previously an Adjunct Professor of economics at the University of Utah, where he has taught both graduate and undergraduate economics and statistics classes. He is also the Associate Economics Editor of the Antitrust Bulletin journal. He regularly publishes in economic and law journals on antitrust, labor, statistics, higher education, and intellectual property issues. His work has appeared in the Antitrust Bulletin, the Harvard Journal of Sports & Entertainment Law, the Federal Circuit Bar Journal, the Appraisal Journal, and others.
Mr. Tatos has testified in both federal and state court as well as before administrative law judges. He has also co-presented findings regarding lock-in in the mainframe industry before the European Commission, Director General of Competition, Chief Economist’s team. In the public sector, he has been engaged as an expert witness by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and has performed sampling and statistical analysis for the Department of Defense.
Ted has worked on and been engaged as an expert in multiple antitrust cases, including Robinson-Patman Act matters, on which he has also published. He has also been an expert in various intellectual property matters, including trademark infringement cases where issues such as the likelihood of consumer confusion and secondary meaning are involved. He has also been engaged as a damages expert in multiple breach of contract and breach of non-solicitation provision matters, particularly in the direct selling industry.