Overview
Caroline A. Yuen is an attorney at Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy. Her practice spans securities fraud, consumer protection, trade secrets litigation, and emerging technology cases.
Caroline’s representative matters include Pampena v. Elon R. Musk, a securities fraud class action lawsuit arising out of Musk’s 2022 purchase of Twitter. She was a member of the trial team that successfully secured a landmark jury verdict for the investor plaintiffs.
Prior to joining CPM, Caroline practiced law in England, where she worked as a commercial litigation lawyer at a global law firm. There, she worked on complex and cross-border commercial and property disputes.
Caroline has a law degree from the University of Oxford and a Master of Laws from UC Berkeley. Caroline currently serves as an Adjunct Professor at UC Law SF and a Lecturer at UC Berkeley Law School.
Experience
Representative Matters
Giuseppe Pampena v. Elon R. Musk - representing class plaintiffs in securities fraud class action arising out of Musk’s 2022 acquisition of Twitter.
PTC Therapeutics, Inc. v. AcureX Biosciences Corporation et al – representing defendants in trade secrets misappropriation case concerning the development of pharmaceutical drugs for neurodegenerative diseases.
Landsheft v. Apple Inc. – representing plaintiffs in putative consumer protection class action against Apple regarding its marketing of device-based AI features.
In re Bank of America California Unemployment Benefits Litigation – representing class plaintiffs in a multi-district litigation against the Bank of America for their handling of state unemployment and disability benefits during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Honors & Awards
Honors & Recognitions
Super Lawyers Rising Star 2026
The Queen's College Benefactors' Award (Oxford)
Dean's List (Berkeley)
Publications
Publications
In the News
Affiliations
Professional
California Bar Association
Practices
Education
University of Oxford, Bachelor of Arts in Jurisprudence (Law)
University of Berkeley, Master of Laws in Environmental Law
Admissions
- California State Bar
- Northern District of California
- Southern District of California
- England and Wales