In the United States, the right to confrontation is the hallmark fair trial protection. Most foreign and international jurisdictions have adopted the right to confrontation as an integral component of their fair trial protections, modeling the right after the U.S. Constitution\u27s Sixth Amendment. Just as any other right, the right to confrontation requires society to strike a balance between a defendant\u27s right to a fair trial with other competing rights in the criminal justice system: namely, victim\u27s and society\u27s right to adjudication of criminal matters. Historically, the United States allowed abrogation of the right to confrontation when evidence was sufficiently reliable. Since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Crawford v....