Chapter 1- 12 Flashcards

1
Q

3 reasons why preliminary hearing should be conducted outside of the jury’s presence

A
  1. defendant made a confession
  2. defendant is also a witness and requested so
  3. as justice so requries
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2
Q

challenges to admission of evidence can only be heard on appeal if:
- 2 types of challenges

A
  1. it substantially effected a party’s right*
  2. judge was notified and had a chance to correct it

Objection: for evidence wrongful admitted
offer of proof: evidence wrongfully excluded

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3
Q

Rule 105: Limited Admissibility Rule

A

limits jury instructions. Evidence admissible for one purpose, not not for another

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4
Q

Rule 106: Rule of Completeness

A

If other party introduces part of a letter, which makes it misleading, I am *automatically and *immediately able to introduce the rest of the letter

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5
Q

Judicial Notice

A

Judge tell the jury that they may accept the fact as given, instead of having to find the fact, if it’s so obviously true

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6
Q

Generally, leading questions are NOT permitted in direct examination. Except:

A
  • hostile witness (opposing party’s witness)
  • difficulty communicating due to age; or
  • preliminary background information
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7
Q

In cross examinations?
- what’s allowed/ what’s the limit?

A
  • Only allowed to ask question within the scope of the questions asked on direct
  • Allowed to use leading questions
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8
Q

Refreshing a Witness’s Recollection

A
  • If the witness is having trouble remembering, may show the witness a doc or thing to help them recall. Witness reads it, and puts it away.
  • It does NOT become part of the evidence
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9
Q

5 common objections

A
  • Asked and answers (if X answered, can ask again and again)
    • Compound question (this and this and this?)
    • Facts not in evidence (still dating that guy?
    • Argumentative (you think the jury is a bunch of idiots?)
  • Questions calling for inappropriate conclusions (witness not qualified to answer)
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10
Q

burden of proof consists of:

A

burden of production: producing the evidence
burden of persuasion: convincing the jury

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11
Q

Rebuttable Presumption

A

when it’s difficult to prove directly, shifts the burden of production but not the burden of persuasion.

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12
Q

if a party destruction of Evidence, what’s the presumption that follows?

A

if a party destroys evince, there is a presumption that the destroyed evidence was adverse to that party

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13
Q

“Relevance” in Evidence means

A

how a particular evidence makes a fact more likely

low bar.

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14
Q

Rule 403

A

a court has discretion to exclude relevant and admissible evidence, if it substantially outweighs its probative value

  • confusion of the issues, unfair prejudice, misleading the jury, or waste of time
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15
Q

Define Character Evidence
- CV?
- CR?

A

Bars introducing evince about someone’s character trait to prove they acted in conformity with that trait.

CV: exception when person’s character is at issue
CR: exception when D opens the door and introduces his good character by bringing in a witness that will speak to D’s reputation or opinion. Then prosecution has 2 options:
- on cross, prosecution can use specific acts to ask that witness and try to rebut
- prosecution can bring their own character witness to rebut

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16
Q

Propensity Evidence is allowed in (2, one in civil case)

A

Impeachment
civil cases: rape/child molestation

17
Q

If D opens door to his good character, what can the prosecutor do?

A
  • introduce evidence of D’s bad character.
  • can use specific acts

(D can only use opinion or reputation)

18
Q

if D opens door to victim’s bad character, what can the prosecutor do?

A
  • introduce evidence to victim’s good character (opinion/reputation)
  • introduce evidence of D’s bad chacater

(usually in the case of violence)

19
Q

someone is deemed competence if they:

A
  • have personal knowledge of the matter at hand
  • willing to take an oath
20
Q

R.606: Jury cannot testify as a witness regarding the indictment or verdict as to:

A
  • statements made during deliberation
  • incidents that occurred during deliberation
  • the effect of any of the juror’s mind
21
Q

Exception to juror’s not being able to testify:

A
  • extraneous, prejudicial information that was improperly brought in
  • an outside influence was improperly brought in
  • a juror made a statement that they relied on racial stereotype or animus in convicting the defendant
22
Q

three ways to impeach a witness

A
  • show their dishonesty
  • bias
  • sensory competence
23
Q

Sensory competence regarding impeachment of witness means:

A

Witness was mistaken in some way
(I,e. did not see or hear clearly)

24
Q

A witness can be impeached by:

A

introducing a witness that will testify by attacking the reputation or opinion of the target witness

25
Q

A witness can be impeached by:

A

introducing a witness that will testify by attacking the reputation or opinion of the target witness

Specific acts can be introduced in cross regarding dishonesty

26
Q

Past criminal convictions can be used to impeach a witness if:

A
  • crimes of dishonesty or false statement
  • felony (unless 403)
  • if criminal defendant ( only if reverse 403)
  • 10+ yrs conviction (only if 403); AND give adverse party reasonable advance notice
  • Pardon, unless found to be innocent or X other felony conviction
27
Q

a witness’s prior Inconsistent statement is admissible for impeachment purposes if:

A

witness has a chance to explain

28
Q

Rehabilitation of a witness
(impeachment) can be done by:

A

give chance to explain or clarify

introduce prior consistent statement

if witness was attacked as having bad character, then introduce evidence to bolster character

29
Q

Lay witness’s opinion is admissible if:

A
  • based on witness’s perception;
    AND
  • helpful to understanding the witness’s testimony or in determining the fact in the case

( cannot be based on technical or specialized knowledge)

30
Q

Expert witness opinion is admissible under the Daubert test if

A

Expert is
1. qualified by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or education; and
2. testimony is based on facts or data,
3. testimony is based on reliable principles and methods; and
4. reliably applied the principles and methods to the facts of the case

31
Q

to authenticate a real evidence (a “thing”)

A
  1. someone w/ personal knowledge testifies that they recognize and identifies the item
    - through unique markings or features

OR

if identical item,

  1. chain of custody
32
Q

Authenticating Documents
- ancient docs
- reply letter doctrine
- handwriting verification
- self-authenticating docs

A

can be authenticated by stipulation by both parties

ancient docs: if 20+ yrs old; in a condition unlikely to create suspicion; and found in a place where it would be

reply letter: authenticated by showing it was written as a response to another letter

handwriting certification: authenticated by expert or juror OR witness w/ personal knowledge of handwriting

self authenticating docs: docs that are so unliekly to be fake, that the mere presence is authenticated. like public docs wit gov’t seal, certified copies, notarized docs, etc.

33
Q

Authenticating Oral statements
- voice
- telephone convo

A

voice: by someone who heard the voice

telephone conversation:
- caller dialed and speaker identified themself.
- caller recognized speaker’s voice
- caller knows only what a person who had a convo would know

34
Q

Best Evidence Rule

A

If the contents are at issue we want to see the actual document, not the witness’s testimony about it.