Morgan Lewis (Philadelphia)

Mark J. Fanelli

Morgan Lewis (Philadelphia)
Associate

Mark Fanelli is an associate at Morgan Lewis, based in the firm’s Philadelphia office. He joined the firm in 2019. Prior to that, Mark Fanelli was an associate in the Philadelphia office of a national law firm and focused his practice on white collar criminal defense and regulatory compliance, complex business litigation, and environmental law. During law school, Mark Fanelli served as a judicial extern to Judge Noel L. Hillman of the US District Court for the District of New Jersey and the associate managing editor of the Rutgers University Law Review. He also led the Rutgers 501(c)(3) Pro Bono Project, an organization comprised of law students and practicing attorneys that provides legal guidance to non-profit entities operating in underserved communities in New Jersey. Immediately after law school, Mark Fanelli served as a law clerk to Justice Faustino J. Fernandez-Vina on the Supreme Court of New Jersey. Outside of Morgan Lewis, Mark Fanelli is an adjunct professor of management in the Erivan K. Haub School of Business at Saint Joseph’s University. He also serves on the Vice Chairs’ Committee to the Haub School’s Board of Visitors. He mentors alumni of his high school alma mater, Saint Joseph’s Preparatory School, pursuing careers in the legal profession.

Linked authors

Morgan Lewis (Washington)
Morgan Lewis (Washington)
Morgan Lewis (Washington)
Morgan Lewis (London)
Morgan Lewis (Washington)

Articles

353 Bulletin

William McEnroe, Brendan Fee, Zachary M. Johns, Ryan Kantor, Steven A. Reed, Daniel S. Savrin, Mark J. Fanelli The US DoJ rescinds three longstanding pieces of guidance on the exchange of competitively sensitive information through third parties

49

The US Department of Justice (DOJ) Antitrust Division is withdrawing three enforcement policy statements that provided important guidance on the exchange of competitively sensitive information through third parties. The guidance previously created a safe harbor for market benchmarking surveys (...)

Zachary M. Johns, Daniel S. Savrin, Mark J. Fanelli, Brian Morris The US District Court for the District of Delaware enters a federal jury’s verdict sanctioning a company for committing antitrust violations under Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Act in the honeycomb carbon adsorbents scrubbers in fuel vapor canisters market (BASF / Ingevity)

304

A recent BASF jury verdict highlights the breadth of the Sherman and Clayton Acts—particularly the remedies available to plaintiffs involved in the manufacturing of goods—if supply agreements are found to hinder marketplace competition. The verdict serves as an important reminder for automotive (...)

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