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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Proposed Ohio Rules Of Evidence: The General Assembly, Evidence, And Rulemaking, Paul C. Giannelli
The Proposed Ohio Rules Of Evidence: The General Assembly, Evidence, And Rulemaking, Paul C. Giannelli
Faculty Publications
The Ohio Supreme Court has twice promulgated and the Ohio General Assembly has twice disapproved the proposed Ohio Rules of Evidence. Moreover, the office of the Attorney General has opposed the proposed Rules in an article published in this review. The author examines the arguments against the Rules and concludes that the supreme court has the constitutional authority to prescribe most rules of evidence and that the General Assembly should accept the proposed Rules with amendments.
Credibility Of Witnesses, Paul C. Giannelli
Credibility Of Witnesses, Paul C. Giannelli
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Eyewitness Identifications, Paul C. Giannelli
Eyewitness Identifications, Paul C. Giannelli
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Polygraph Evidence, Paul C. Giannelli
The Trade Act Of 1974 Revisited: The Need For Further Reform, Scott C. Whitney
The Trade Act Of 1974 Revisited: The Need For Further Reform, Scott C. Whitney
Faculty Publications
Approximately four months after President Ford signed into law the Trade Act of 1974,1 the first petition for import relief was filed invoking the "liberalized" provisions of Title II.2 In the three years since the effective date of the 1974 Act, the United States International Trade Commission (ITC) has instituted investigations concerning a wide variety of commodities. 3 Nonetheless, even though Congress by enacting the 1974 Act intended to minimize the President's control over trade policy and to make import relief more accessible to both industry and labor, the lTC's recommendations have rarely been followed. This article will analyze the …