This Article examines a disturbing trend in civil litigation: the demise of the jury’s historic prerogative to draw inferences from circumstantial evidence. Judges have arrogated to themselves the power to dismiss cases if they find the proffered inferences factually implausible. They have increasingly dismissed cases under the “equal-inference rule” by finding the proffered inferences no more plausible than other available inferences. And they have severely limited the powerful inferences jurors can draw when they conclude that a witness has lied. Commentators have bemoaned the heightened-pleading standard of the 2007 and 2009 U.S. Supreme Court cases, Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, but that heightened standard is on...
During the past decade, particularly during the years immediately following the California Supreme C...
Following a federal jury trial, losing litigants may seek a new trial by challenging, or impeaching,...
When evidence with a scientific basis is offered, two fundamental questions arise. First, should it ...
This Article examines a disturbing trend in civil litigation: the demise of the jury’s historic prer...
For at least two centuries, Anglo-American courts have responded to a party\u27s evidence tampering ...
In this article, I argue that the new focus on the risks of spurious expertise compels attention t...
This Article proposes that courts should refrain from imposing adverse inference jury instructions a...
Over the years, the courts have developed numerous devices for controlling the jury in the exercise ...
This article will offer nonempirical grounds to show that instructed inferences operate as the disse...
Lawyers routinely make strategic advocacy choices that reflect directly, if inferentially, on the cr...
Empirical research indicates that jurors routinely undervalue circumstantial evidence (DNA, fingerpr...
The trial of Robert E. Chambers, Jr., for the murder of eighteen year old Jennifer Levin in Central ...
In Nebraska a directed verdicts based on circumstantial evidence leading to an inference presents a ...
Reflecting a traditional bias against defendants\u27 trial testimony, the modern American criminal j...
Fact inferences made by the trial judge are the lynchpin of civil litigation. If inferences were a m...
During the past decade, particularly during the years immediately following the California Supreme C...
Following a federal jury trial, losing litigants may seek a new trial by challenging, or impeaching,...
When evidence with a scientific basis is offered, two fundamental questions arise. First, should it ...
This Article examines a disturbing trend in civil litigation: the demise of the jury’s historic prer...
For at least two centuries, Anglo-American courts have responded to a party\u27s evidence tampering ...
In this article, I argue that the new focus on the risks of spurious expertise compels attention t...
This Article proposes that courts should refrain from imposing adverse inference jury instructions a...
Over the years, the courts have developed numerous devices for controlling the jury in the exercise ...
This article will offer nonempirical grounds to show that instructed inferences operate as the disse...
Lawyers routinely make strategic advocacy choices that reflect directly, if inferentially, on the cr...
Empirical research indicates that jurors routinely undervalue circumstantial evidence (DNA, fingerpr...
The trial of Robert E. Chambers, Jr., for the murder of eighteen year old Jennifer Levin in Central ...
In Nebraska a directed verdicts based on circumstantial evidence leading to an inference presents a ...
Reflecting a traditional bias against defendants\u27 trial testimony, the modern American criminal j...
Fact inferences made by the trial judge are the lynchpin of civil litigation. If inferences were a m...
During the past decade, particularly during the years immediately following the California Supreme C...
Following a federal jury trial, losing litigants may seek a new trial by challenging, or impeaching,...
When evidence with a scientific basis is offered, two fundamental questions arise. First, should it ...