About Greg M.
Greg M. Popowitz built his path to the law from an engineering bench. He earned a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2002 and spent the first part of his career designing driveline and chassis components as a product engineer at Visteon Corporation. The move from machines to manuscripts began in law school, where he graduated cum laude from Shepard Broad Law Center at Nova Southeastern University in 2009.
While at law school he took on editorial work and internships that shaped his early legal interests. He served as managing editor of the ILSA Journal of International and Comparative Law in 2008 and worked as a legal intern at Mayback & Hoffman in 2007. Those experiences preceded his first post-bar role as an associate at Gunster, Yoakley & Stewart in 2010, where he practiced general litigation and learned the daily rhythms of client work at a full-service firm.
A technical background and a law degree led naturally to patent practice. He is a registered patent lawyer with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. In 2013 he joined Assouline & Berlowe, P.A. as a partner, taking a seat in a firm known for work on intellectual property and related transactional matters. His registration with the USPTO allows him to prepare and prosecute patent applications before the office, and he is admitted in Florida and before the U.S. District Courts for the Southern, Northern and Middle Districts of Florida.
Beyond private practice, Popowitz has remained connected to legal education and professional groups. He served as an adjunct coach for the Florida Bar Auxiliary Program at Nova Southeastern University in 2012, helping students refine courtroom and advocacy skills. He maintains memberships in organizations that reflect both his technical and legal interests, including the American Intellectual Property Law Association, the American Bar Association and local groups such as the Broward County Bar Association and the Georgia Tech Fort Lauderdale Alumni Network. He is also involved with broader civic organizations, including the Anti-Defamation League and Broward Six Pillars.
Colleagues describe him as methodical and precise in handling patent matters, qualities that echo his engineering training. He moved from product engineering into patent law in a sequence that underlines a practical approach to intellectual property: understand the invention, then translate it into claims that can withstand scrutiny.
Today he practices at Assouline & Berlowe, P.A., where he continues to handle patent prosecution and other intellectual property matters for clients in technology-driven industries. His current practice focuses on patent preparation, prosecution and counseling for clients in mechanical and related fields.