In a patent infringement case in federal court, Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Ethicon Endo-Surgery showed the jury a massive video screen filled with images of the device at issue -- a medical tool that removes tissue for biopsies. Worried that the oversized images would distort the jury's view of the device, attorney Jack Scarola constructed his own replica of the device using Post-it notes, paper clips and homegrown ingenuity. Call it low rent, but Scarola won $2 million for his client.
Details here from the Daily Business Review via Law.com.