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MCLE will close at 4:30pm on Friday, December 20, 2024 so that our staff can celebrate the joys of the season with their loved ones and rest and recharge for the new year. We will reopen on Thursday, January 2, 2025 at 8:30am. We wish you a happy holiday season and a bright 2025!!

Introducing & Excluding Evidence at Trial

The mechanics of offering or opposing the introduction of evidence

  • Product Number: 2220239RB2
  • CLE Credits, earn up to:
    4 substantive credits, 0 ethics credits CLE Credit Note
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  • Product Description
  • Agenda & Materials
  • Faculty
  • Product Description

    Product Description


    Every attorney who has tried a case has confronted the question of how a certain, crucial piece of evidence can either be admitted or kept out from the trial of a case. Perhaps it is a document originally written in Japanese with a translation, a photograph of an accident scene taken by a deceased photographer, a newspaper article, a police report, or the results of a blood test. Similarly, attorneys are frequently faced with difficult witnesses that either require a great deal of preparation to put on the stand, or to elicit certain points during cross-examination. 

    This seminar provides both experienced and new practitioners with real-life examples and suggestions to demystify the trial courts, the handling of witnesses, and the effective use of evidence at trial. With a panel of experienced civil litigation practitioners, this seminar provides insight into how evidence can be used effectively at trial. In addition, there is time to discuss their experience in what works and, perhaps most importantly, what doesn’t work! The seminar touches on the latest issues in the introduction of real and demonstrative evidence in both the criminal and civil contexts as well as the latest in electronic discovery.

  • Agenda

    Agenda & Materials

    Please Note

    MCLE webcasts are delivered completely online, underscoring their convenience and appeal. There are no published print materials. All written materials are available electronically only. They are posted 24 hours prior to the program and can be accessed, downloaded, or printed from your computer.

  • Faculty

    Chair

    Donald L. Pitman, III, Esq., The Pitman Law Offices LLC, Newburyport

    Faculty

    Martha R. Bagley, Esq., Brigantine, P.C., Topsfield
    Kathy Jo Cook, Esq., Sheff & Cook LLC, Boston
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