This contribution examines the idea that partisan witness preparation in criminal trials in the United States amounts to a comparative anomaly in the common law context. In American procedure, parties are not constrained by straightforward rules and ethical canons in their choice and deployment of preparation techniques, save for a prohibition on subornation and use of perjury. The lax regulation of pre-trial witness interviews in the US contrasts with the stricter rules on professional conduct of barristers and prosecutors in England and Wales and the cautious attitude towards extensive witness preparation prevailing in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. These divisions mark deep-seated differences between these countries in what fact-fin...
In Canada, lawyers are barred from using fraudulent means to mislead a court. Lawyers are also barre...
For centuries, the foundation of the Anglo-American trial has been the witness.\u27 Witnesses report...
This article examines the laws guiding witnesses at depositions, hearings, and trials in civil actio...
Differences in the extent and practice of preparing witnesses for trial , and reasons underlying th...
Although all attorneys understand that coaching a witness to testify falsely is unethical, additiona...
Given its controversial nature, one would expect the practice and ethics of witness coaching to have...
This article focuses on the so-called “witness test(Shounin Tesuto)”, or preparation of witnesses by...
In January 2013, Trial Chamber V of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the cases of William R...
In January 2013, Trial Chamber V of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the cases of William R...
Modem American law is, in a sense, a system of compartments. For understandable curricular reasons, ...
This article explores some of the differences between the common law and civilian legal systems with...
Criminal trials in the United States are meant to ascertain the truth. But other societal values, s...
This Article examines the validity of the conventional wisdom. It draws support for its analysis fro...
Across diverse legal traditions, the search for truth is a basic function of the criminal process. U...
There is an epistemic crisis in many areas of forensic science. This crisis emerged largely in respo...
In Canada, lawyers are barred from using fraudulent means to mislead a court. Lawyers are also barre...
For centuries, the foundation of the Anglo-American trial has been the witness.\u27 Witnesses report...
This article examines the laws guiding witnesses at depositions, hearings, and trials in civil actio...
Differences in the extent and practice of preparing witnesses for trial , and reasons underlying th...
Although all attorneys understand that coaching a witness to testify falsely is unethical, additiona...
Given its controversial nature, one would expect the practice and ethics of witness coaching to have...
This article focuses on the so-called “witness test(Shounin Tesuto)”, or preparation of witnesses by...
In January 2013, Trial Chamber V of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the cases of William R...
In January 2013, Trial Chamber V of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the cases of William R...
Modem American law is, in a sense, a system of compartments. For understandable curricular reasons, ...
This article explores some of the differences between the common law and civilian legal systems with...
Criminal trials in the United States are meant to ascertain the truth. But other societal values, s...
This Article examines the validity of the conventional wisdom. It draws support for its analysis fro...
Across diverse legal traditions, the search for truth is a basic function of the criminal process. U...
There is an epistemic crisis in many areas of forensic science. This crisis emerged largely in respo...
In Canada, lawyers are barred from using fraudulent means to mislead a court. Lawyers are also barre...
For centuries, the foundation of the Anglo-American trial has been the witness.\u27 Witnesses report...
This article examines the laws guiding witnesses at depositions, hearings, and trials in civil actio...