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Practice Areas

  • Access to capital markets
  • Business & strategic planning
  • Fundraising (equity)
  • Licensing
  • M&A
  • Venture capital

Sectors

  • Healthcare
  • Science & lifescience
  • Software
  • Start-ups
  • Tech

Biography

Warren Goldenberg, a partner at Hahn Loeser's Cleveland office, has more than 30 years of experience as a business law attorney. Warren has extensive experience in mergers and acquisitions, debt and equity financing, technology transfer and commercialization, clinical trials, financial restructuring, joint ventures and strategic alliances, licensing and distribution agreements, entity formation, shareholder disputes, and stock option and restricted stock plans. Warren's law practice focuses on technology companies and technology transactions, particularly in the life sciences, information technology and materials industries. He has extensive experience representing startup companies, universities and Fortune 500 companies. Warren's experience with technology companies dates back to the early 1990s when he represented U.S. Biochemical Corp., including the spinoff of Ribozyme Pharmaceuticals, which ultimately went public. Warren oversaw the sale of USB to Amersham Life Sciences. In addition to practicing law, Warren has served as a startup executive for three life sciences companies. Warren is currently the COO of KeborMed Inc., which is commercializing a software platform for the wireless connectivity of medical devices. From 2010 to 2015, he served as the part-time CEO of Fluence Therapeutics Inc. in Akron, Ohio. Fluence Therapeutics is a Case Western Reserve University/University Hospitals spin-off company focused on commercializing photodynamic therapy for the treatment of psoriasis and other skin diseases. Among his accomplishments at Fluence include closing a convertible debt financing round, obtaining Northeast Ohio grant funding and implementation of a European commercialization strategy that included the establishment of a subsidiary in Finland and obtaining funding from the government of Finland. He also participated in the European Commission funded Phos-Istos project run by Inserm (the National Institutes of Health of France) and obtained funding from the European Commission. Warren served as part-time CEO of CardioInsight Technologies Inc. (2006-2009), a Case Western Reserve University/University Hospitals spin-off, in Cleveland. CardioInsight is commercializing electrocardiographic imaging, which is used to guide ablation therapy for atrial fibrillation and other arrhythmias. (CardioInsight was sold to Medtronic in June 2015 for $93 million, plus a potential earnout.) Under his leadership, the company closed a Series A venture capital financing and raised grant funding from the Global Cardiovascular Innovation Center. It also grew to seven employees, initiated clinical trials and hired a full-time CEO in connection with a Series B financing.