Michael Seringhaus
Is a third-year student at Yale Law School, where he serves as an executive editor of the Yale Journal of Law and Technology (YJoLT) and a co-director of the Green Haven Prison Project, as well as the Trumbull College Graduate Affiliate Coordinator.
He completed his PhD and a short post-doc in Mark Gerstein's bioinformatics group in the Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale University in 2007. He did his undergraduate work at Trinity College, University of Toronto and thereafter spent a year as lead bioinformatics scientist at Affinium Pharmaceuticals in Toronto. Before starting law school, he worked for Brake Hughes Bellermann LLP, preparing and drafting patent applications.
In summer 2008, he was the intern to Judge Timothy Dyk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and thereafter worked as a summer associate at Finnegan, Henderson in Washington, D.C.
He enjoys writing, driving, and sailing, but only sometimes in that order.
He completed his PhD and a short post-doc in Mark Gerstein's bioinformatics group in the Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale University in 2007. He did his undergraduate work at Trinity College, University of Toronto and thereafter spent a year as lead bioinformatics scientist at Affinium Pharmaceuticals in Toronto. Before starting law school, he worked for Brake Hughes Bellermann LLP, preparing and drafting patent applications.
In summer 2008, he was the intern to Judge Timothy Dyk on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and thereafter worked as a summer associate at Finnegan, Henderson in Washington, D.C.
He enjoys writing, driving, and sailing, but only sometimes in that order.













