Myers explores hearsay exeptions by examining three exceptions: excited utterances, statements for purposes of diagnosis or treatment, and the residual hearsay exception. The focus is child declarants, and these exceptions play key roles in child abuse litigation
The Maryland General Assembly recently passed legislation, effective July 1, 1988, which grants a tr...
Reliability has been defined as worthy of dependence or of proven consistency in producing satisf...
Symposium - Hearsay and Implied Assertions: How Would (or Should) the Supreme Court Decide the Kearl...
Myers explores hearsay exeptions by examining three exceptions: excited utterances, statements for p...
Mosteller examines the treatment of children as victims and witnesses in criminal trials, most frequ...
The admission of hearsay qualifying as an excited utterance, present sense impression, or statement...
A return to the emotionally neutral fundamentals of the hearsay rule presents the clash between prag...
The admission of hearsay qualifying as an excited utterance, present sense impression, or statement ...
The Maryland General Assembly recently passed legislation, effective July 1, 1988, which grants a tr...
The Maryland General Assembly recently passed legislation, effective July 1, 1988, which grants a tr...
This Comment will trace the history of the hearsay rule under both common law and California law. It...
Under the Federal Rules of Evidence, hearsay is generally prohibited, being admitted only when it fa...
This article discusses the residual hearsay exceptions contained in the Federal Rules of Evidence, w...
The thirty-seven principal provisions that permit out-of-court statements to be admitted for their t...
The thirty-seven principal provisions that permit out-of-court statements to be admitted for their t...
The Maryland General Assembly recently passed legislation, effective July 1, 1988, which grants a tr...
Reliability has been defined as worthy of dependence or of proven consistency in producing satisf...
Symposium - Hearsay and Implied Assertions: How Would (or Should) the Supreme Court Decide the Kearl...
Myers explores hearsay exeptions by examining three exceptions: excited utterances, statements for p...
Mosteller examines the treatment of children as victims and witnesses in criminal trials, most frequ...
The admission of hearsay qualifying as an excited utterance, present sense impression, or statement...
A return to the emotionally neutral fundamentals of the hearsay rule presents the clash between prag...
The admission of hearsay qualifying as an excited utterance, present sense impression, or statement ...
The Maryland General Assembly recently passed legislation, effective July 1, 1988, which grants a tr...
The Maryland General Assembly recently passed legislation, effective July 1, 1988, which grants a tr...
This Comment will trace the history of the hearsay rule under both common law and California law. It...
Under the Federal Rules of Evidence, hearsay is generally prohibited, being admitted only when it fa...
This article discusses the residual hearsay exceptions contained in the Federal Rules of Evidence, w...
The thirty-seven principal provisions that permit out-of-court statements to be admitted for their t...
The thirty-seven principal provisions that permit out-of-court statements to be admitted for their t...
The Maryland General Assembly recently passed legislation, effective July 1, 1988, which grants a tr...
Reliability has been defined as worthy of dependence or of proven consistency in producing satisf...
Symposium - Hearsay and Implied Assertions: How Would (or Should) the Supreme Court Decide the Kearl...