Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Arizona v. Bible (1)
- Attorney Accountability Act (1)
- Barefoot v. Estelle (1)
- Clever v. Hillberry (1)
- Elliott v. Pearl (1)
-
- Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (1)
- Federal Rules of Evidence (1)
- Frye v. United States (1)
- Hangar v. United States (1)
- Mercado v. Ahmed (1)
- National Railroad Passenger Corp. v. National Ass'n of Railroad Passengers (1)
- Rule 703 (1)
- The King v. Parker (1)
- Tome v. United States (1)
- United States v. Starzecpyzel (1)
Articles 1 - 2 of 2
Full-Text Articles in Law
Expert Witness Testimony: Back To The Future, L. Timothy Perrin
Expert Witness Testimony: Back To The Future, L. Timothy Perrin
University of Richmond Law Review
Expert witnesses are at once detested and treasured. The scorn is significant because of the increasingly prominent role experts play in both civil and criminal litigation. Experts are seen as mercenaries, prostitutes or hired guns, witnesses devoid of principle who sell their opinions to the highest bidder. Experts are not impartial professionals who explain difficult concepts to the trier of fact. Rather, experts become advocates for the side who hired them. The consequences of this role change are not desirable: experts testify to matters beyond their expertise, render opinions that are unreliable, speculative or outside what the experts would be …
Clinging To History: The Supreme Court (Mis)Interprets Federal Rule Of Evidence 801(D)(1)(B) As Containing A Temporal Requirement, Christopher A. Jones
Clinging To History: The Supreme Court (Mis)Interprets Federal Rule Of Evidence 801(D)(1)(B) As Containing A Temporal Requirement, Christopher A. Jones
University of Richmond Law Review
The adoption of the Federal Rules of Evidence (the Rules) resulted in a more liberal standard for the admission and use of various forms of evidence. For example, the Rules altered the definition of "relevant evidence" increasing the scope of evidence that can be presented to a jury. Also, the Rules per- mit prior inconsistent statements to be admitted as substantive evidence rather than for impeachment purposes only. The Advisory Committee enunciated these changes, and other changes resulting from the adoption of the Rules, in their notes accompanying the Rules.