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Examination and Cross- examination

Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

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Page 1: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Examination and Cross-examination

Page 2: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Examination Purpose:• To present the evidence necessary to warrant

a verdict favorable to your client. • All the elements of a law or criminal charge

must be brought into evidence by witness testimony or documents.

• To present the facts with clarity and understanding; to convince the jury of the soundness of your client’s case.

• To present your witnesses to the greatest advantage; to establish their credibility.

Page 3: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Cross-examination Purpose:

• To secure admissions from opposing witnesses that will tend to prove your case.

• To negate your opponent’s case by discrediting his/her witnesses.

Page 4: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

How to examine a witness:• Ask “open-ended” questions. Those usually

begin with who, what, when, where, or how, or by asking the witness to “explain” or “describe.”

• Avoid complex or long-winded questions—questions should be clear and simple.

• Be a “friendly guide” for the witnesses as they tell their stories. Let the witnesses be the stars.

• Be prepared to gather information via questions and answers. Narratives, though very effective, may be open to objections.

Page 5: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

How to cross-examine a witness:• Use narrow, leading questions that suggest an

answer to the witness. Ask questions that require “yes” or “no” answers.

• Expose lack of sincerity or the existence of bias.• Never ask “Why?” It gives a well-prepared

witness a chance to explain.• Generally, don’t ask questions unless you know

what kind of answer you are going to obtain.• Be fair, courteous; avoid the “Isn’t it a fact…?”

type of questioning.• It may be useful not to insist on an answer.

Page 6: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Objections• Ambiguous, Confusing, Misleading, Vague,

Unintelligible• Argumentative• Call for Conclusion• Calls for Speculation• Hearsay• Leading• Personal attacks on counsel, defendant, or witness• Personal opinions by counsel• Relevance

Page 7: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Today’s TaskAttorneys: you have 10 minutes to meet and decide who

will be in charge of collecting information from each of the prosecution’s and defense’s witnesses and understudies today.

**There are a total of 12 witnesses (4 expert, 6 eye, and 2 character)

Witnesses: Use the 10 minutes to collect the evidence that is relevant to YOUR character from the evidence collected on the butcher paper. Write the evidence that is relevant to you in your comp book.

Jurors: You are understudies today. Travel with the witness you are understudying and collect the same information for your character in your comp book. If the witness is not here today, you are solely in charge of collecting the evidence for your character.

Page 8: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Prosecution 

Lawyers:Coby

ConnorGarrettHanah 

Witnesses:Expert Witnesses:

Cody (Eleanor Roosevelt)James (Dalai Lama)Eye Witnesses:

Skye/David (Ralph)Matt/Scott (Samneric)

Michele (Percival)Character Witness:

Leila (Piggy’s Auntie) 

Defense 

Lawyers:NolanTylerKailynJustin

Witnesses:

Expert Witnesses:Michael (Napoleon Bonaparte)

Josh (William Golding)Eye Witnesses:

Blake/Amanda (Jack)Maddie/Ian (Roger)

Kevin/Sonja (Robert)Character Witness:Abby (Jack’s Mom)

Attorneys:  Interview your own witnesses FIRST and then interview your opposing 

side’s witnesses.

Page 9: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Prosecution 

Lawyers:ConnorMorganJavonKassi

Witnesses:Expert Witnesses:

Jonathan/ (Mother Teresa)Stafford (John Locke)

Eye Witnesses:Gracelyn/Shawna (Ralph)Richie/Jesse (Samneric)Jacob/Nathan (Percival)Character Witness:

Kelsey/Soleil (Piggy’s Auntie) 

Defense 

Lawyers:NajaeJustinKaitlinMax

Witnesses:

Expert Witnesses:Blake (Saddam Hussein)Merari (Charles Darwin)

Eye Witnesses:Sheldon/Daniel (Jack)Chris/Loden (Roger)

JJ/Carlos (Robert)Character Witness:

Hannah (Jack’s Mom)

Attorneys:  Interview your own witnesses FIRST and then interview your opposing 

side’s witnesses.

Page 10: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Witness InterviewsAttorneys: Use the next 20 minutes interview ALL

of the witnesses and understudies. Take notes on what they will be bringing to the trial. These notes will help you develop your questions and anticipated responses for the trial.

Witnesses/Jurors: If you are waiting for your interview you should be collecting evidence and preparing your character for the trial. If you are being interviewed you need to be helpful and refer to your Character Bio Sheets. If you are done, witnesses should begin preparing questions & responses and Jurors should begin drafting the pretrial reflection (in comp book).

Page 11: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Attorneys:

As a team, look through the interview notes for all 12 of the witnesses. Discuss with each other, what is missing.

Do you need more evidence from a specific character?

Do you need more information about a character?

Do you remember something from the book that would be useful for your case?

Contact the necessary witnesses about the information you need.

Once all interviews are complete and all information is gathered – work on questions & responses.

Witnesses:

Look over your character bio sheet and character sketch.

Use these tools to begin outlining the kinds of questions you anticipate being asked during the trial (your understudy will help you come up with an outline).

Begin working on the 5 anticipated questions and responses

Jurors:

As the understudy to a witness, help your witness craft and outline for the questions and responses to the 5 anticipated questions and responses that they are responsible for.

Once you have an outline for the 5 questions and responses – switch gears and begin work on your 250 word pretrial reflection. Begin writing a draft of your paper in your comp book.

Page 12: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

HomeworkAttorneys: Questions and anticipated responses for 3 witnesses

from the prosecution and 3 witnesses from the defense (3 questions for each of the 6 witnesses, a total of 18 questions and responses)

***Between the 4 attorneys on your team, coordinate with each other to make sure ALL 12 of the witnesses have questions & responses written for the trial. THERE WILL BE OVERLAP between attorneys since you are responsible for 6 witnesses each.

Jurors: 250 word pretrial reflection

Witnesses: 5 anticipated questions and responses that you believe the attorneys may ask you during the trial.

Page 13: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Homework:Tomorrow we will have a detective (expert

witness) and a deputy prosecuting attorney come and speak to you about the role they play in a trial. They will help clarify how examination and cross-examination works. They will also help you craft good questions and responses for our trial.

On a ½ sheet of paper write down at least 2 questions that you have for the guest speakers tomorrow.

Page 14: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

Journal

• If you are an attorney, witness, or understudy for the Prosecution, you are arguing that a Civil Society existed on the island. What is a civil society? List and describe at least 10 things that make up a Civil Society.

• If you are an attorney, witness, or understudy for the Defense, you are arguing that a Condition of War existed on the island. What is a Condition of War? List and describe at least 10 things that make up a Condition of War.

Page 15: Examination and Cross-examination. Examination Purpose: To present the evidence necessary to warrant a verdict favorable to your client. All the elements

What do we do next?• Finish two of your three interviews today• Lawyers will have a full transcript of their questions written

down for two witnesses.• Witnesses (and understudies) will have a list of questions

from their lawyer and will be prepared to answer those questions with authority.

• All parties will have a typed transcript of those Q’s or A’s in their hand tomorrow.

• The number of questions will depend on the witness but there should be a minimum of 10 questions per witness. Many will have more and quite a few will be straightforward.