Examiner Brian T Mcmenemy has allowed 46 of 84 decided applications in Computer Architecture, Software, and Information Security.
Examiner Brian T Mcmenemy maintains a public record across 2 art units in Technology Center 2100 (Computer Architecture, Software, and Information Security). Across dozens of decided applications, the overall allowance rate is 55%, meaning slightly more than half of his decided applications (allowed and abandoned combined) issue as allowed. The allowance rate across his art units ranges from 17% to 70%, reflecting variation in outcomes by art unit. This pooled figure aggregates his record across both units and describes the historical distribution of allowed and abandoned applications.
A pooled allowance rate combines outcomes from multiple art units into a single percentage, representing the examiner's overall record across all assignments. This aggregate statistic describes past dispositions and does not predict any individual application's outcome. Variation across art units (shown by the range) reflects different subject matter and application volumes within each unit. The pooled rate provides context for the examiner's historical record but is not a forecast for future applications.
These are aggregate statistics from this examiner's past public record — not predictions about any specific application. The per-art-unit figures below show how the record varies across art units. Our approach to patent prosecution →
Each section benchmarks this examiner against that art unit's average. Figures are this examiner's own public record within the art unit; the overall rate above pools them.
Primarily examines control or regulating systems.
Grounds can co-occur, so the four don't sum to 100%. The art-unit figure is the unweighted mean across examiners in the art unit; §102 and §112 carry no art-unit benchmark.
Allowance rate for applications with an examiner interview versus without one.
A correlation, not proof that interviews cause allowances. Based on 35 decided applications with an interview and 25 without.
Primarily examines neural-network / biological-model computing, and machine learning.
Grounds can co-occur, so the four don't sum to 100%. The art-unit figure is the unweighted mean across examiners in the art unit; §102 and §112 carry no art-unit benchmark.
Based on 24 applications — too small a sample to characterize the rejection mix reliably; shown for completeness.
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Methodology. This page pools every art unit in which Examiner Brian T Mcmenemy has a public record within Technology Center 2100. Statistics are computed from publicly available USPTO records, refreshed on a recurring schedule. This page's data was last updated July 14, 2026. The overall allowance rate is total allowed divided by total decided applications (allowed plus abandoned) across all art units — not an average of the per-art-unit rates; pending applications are excluded. Figures are rounded for display. Pooled sample: 84 applications.
Rejection rates. Each §-rate is the share of this examiner's applications that drew at least one office-action rejection in which that statutory ground appears; applications with no rejection on record are excluded, and because grounds can co-occur the four do not sum to 100%. The art-unit figure beside each is the unweighted mean of the per-examiner rates across the art unit, published for §101 and §103 only. Beside the overall allowance rate we show a benchmark: for a single-art-unit examiner it is exactly that art unit's average, labeled “art-unit average”; for an examiner spanning several art units it is the “weighted peer average” — the per-art-unit averages, weighted by this examiner's application count in each — labeled distinctly because it is a blended figure, not any single art unit's average. Both are built from the same per-art-unit averages the panels show.
Lynch LLP is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. Examiner statistics are derived from publicly available USPTO data.
These statistics describe past examiner behavior and do not predict the outcome of any particular application. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Where this page compares an examiner's allowance rate to an art-unit average, that comparison is a factual description of the public record, not a characterization of any individual examiner's conduct or competence.
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