Posts Tagged ‘criminal law’
The One “Must Know” Question To Conclude Every Expert Deposition
The case of Jones v. Moore, (2000) 80 Cal App. 4th 557, explains why this question is so important. Jones was a legal malpractice case that arose out of a marital dissolution case.
Read MoreLetting Go and Grabbing The Trapeze. The Story of A Former Prosecutor Finding Her Way As a Civil Trial Lawyer
When Anne says, “It taught me everything I know,” she is talking about how to try a case in front of a jury. “You learn the evidence rules. You learn to organize the evidence. You learn to think on your feet and there is no better grounds for training than the prosecutor’s office or the public defender’s office. We had to learn all of the predicate questions for experts. How to lay a foundation for the admissibility of evidence.”
Read MoreCivil Trial Lawyer, Craig Peters, Makes Transition From Criminal Defense Look Easy
The hardest part of the transition for Craig was learning all of the rules of civil procedure. “In criminal, whatever you’ve got, you’ve got to turn over to the other side, and whatever they’ve got, they’ve got to turn over to you. That’s it. There is one rule.” Looking back, Craig feels that criminal lawyers making the switch benefit from sitting down and just reading the entire code of civil procedure.
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