If the defendant in a criminal trial has a record of other offenses or is suspected of a number of crimes although charged with only one, the admissibility of evidence of these other offenses can be crucial. Admissibility depends in part on the purpose for which the evidence is offered. For instance, the prosecution is severely limited in its use of evidence of character. Until the defendant submits evidence of his good character, the subject cannot be raised and even after character is put in issue particular acts are not allowed to show character. The defendant\u27s prior convictions may be used to impeach his testimony, just as similar evidence may be used to impeach any other witness. These uses of other offenses to establish character ...
Juries often use short-cuts to determine the character of the accused, such as their job, age, race,...
Relevancy is the key to the entire analysis of the admissibility of evidence of other crimes, wrongs...
The Federal Rules of Evidence, enacted by Congress, became effective on July 1, 1975. Ten states hav...
If the defendant in a criminal trial has a record of other offenses or is suspected of a number of c...
This article is a discussion of the instances when criminal acts of the accused, occurring both prio...
The general rule has been well established that on prosecution for a particular crime evidence which...
Evidence of other crimes, or uncharged misconduct evidence as it is commonly called, has been import...
On trial in a district court for bribing a federal revenue agent, defendant called five witnesses to...
The cases dealing with admissibility of prior criminal acts are narrowly decided. Indeed, the result...
This article examines a case, United States v. Richards, 719 F.3d 746 (7th Cir. 2013), to illustrate...
Almost every state permits persons convicted of a crime to testify in either their own or another pe...
Despite the time-honored judicial principle that “we try cases, rather than persons,” courts routine...
The classic study of the American jury shows that when a defendant\u27s criminal record is known and...
Any discussion of Judge Pecora\u27s declaration of a mistrial in People v. Hines must adhere firmly ...
This article examines the introduction of evidence by one accused of the criminal disposition of ano...
Juries often use short-cuts to determine the character of the accused, such as their job, age, race,...
Relevancy is the key to the entire analysis of the admissibility of evidence of other crimes, wrongs...
The Federal Rules of Evidence, enacted by Congress, became effective on July 1, 1975. Ten states hav...
If the defendant in a criminal trial has a record of other offenses or is suspected of a number of c...
This article is a discussion of the instances when criminal acts of the accused, occurring both prio...
The general rule has been well established that on prosecution for a particular crime evidence which...
Evidence of other crimes, or uncharged misconduct evidence as it is commonly called, has been import...
On trial in a district court for bribing a federal revenue agent, defendant called five witnesses to...
The cases dealing with admissibility of prior criminal acts are narrowly decided. Indeed, the result...
This article examines a case, United States v. Richards, 719 F.3d 746 (7th Cir. 2013), to illustrate...
Almost every state permits persons convicted of a crime to testify in either their own or another pe...
Despite the time-honored judicial principle that “we try cases, rather than persons,” courts routine...
The classic study of the American jury shows that when a defendant\u27s criminal record is known and...
Any discussion of Judge Pecora\u27s declaration of a mistrial in People v. Hines must adhere firmly ...
This article examines the introduction of evidence by one accused of the criminal disposition of ano...
Juries often use short-cuts to determine the character of the accused, such as their job, age, race,...
Relevancy is the key to the entire analysis of the admissibility of evidence of other crimes, wrongs...
The Federal Rules of Evidence, enacted by Congress, became effective on July 1, 1975. Ten states hav...