About Sul
Sul Lee earned his law degree from the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University in 2011. He completed his studies there the same year he was associated with the law library, an experience that kept him close to legal research and academic resources early in his career. The Cardozo credential anchors a practice that crosses state and federal procedural lines.
He has served as principal lawyer at Sul Lee Law Office, PLLC since 2013. That title reflects more than a position; it marks steady involvement in client work and case management over several years. Lee is admitted to practice in Texas and is authorized to appear before the United States Patent and Trademark Office, a credential that allows him to represent clients in federal intellectual property proceedings.
Beyond the bar and the patent office, Lee holds a separate credential in language services. He is a Certified New York State Court Interpreter for Korean-English. That certification permits him to act as an interpreter in New York courts and adds a practical bilingual capability to his professional offerings. It also positions him to assist clients who need legal services that involve Korean-language materials or testimony.
The combination of credentials gives a clear sense of the kinds of matters he handles. Representation before the USPTO signals experience with patent and trademark filings, office actions, and related procedural responses. Admission in Texas allows him to bring those federal and administrative matters into state-level contexts when necessary. His interpreter certification is a complementary skill that can matter in cross-border disputes or cases involving Korean-speaking witnesses.
In day-to-day practice Lee manages filings, client counseling, and proceedings that require both technical familiarity with intellectual property law and careful attention to procedural detail. He has maintained an office presence under the Sul Lee Firm, PLLC name, where clients reach him for matters that combine state court work and federal trademark or patent proceedings. He currently concentrates on matters that require representation in Texas courts and before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.