EvidenceInspired by problems that spring from real life, Evidence presents the intricacies of evidence law in a way that law students will find both intellectually compelling and enjoyable. The author covers materials in detail, including relevance, reliability, and privileges. Whenever possible, problems are based on facts quoted from cases or news articles, complete with citations. This fact-based approach piques student interest, causing them to ask, ?How would a good lawyer attack this problem? rather than ?What is the professor driving at? Written with the belief that students typically prefer to look at the courtroom world through the criminal law lense, the casebook emphasizes the criminal context, while using civil cases when illustrating rules that apply mainly in the civil context. |
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abuse accused acts admissible admitted Advisory Committee alleged Amendment argues arrest asked assault assertion attorney attorney-client privilege behavior Bendectin best evidence rule business records exception character evidence charged Circuit claim client committed common law communications conclude conduct confession Confrontation Clause Court of Appeals credibility crime criminal defendants cross-examination Daubert declarant defendant's district court evidence law evidence rules evidentiary excluded expert testimony fact Federal Rules Fifth Amendment guilt hearsay rule Heparin impeach inadmissible inference instruction issue jurors jury jury's JUSTICE lawyer litigation ment murder offense offer evidence opinion out-of-court statements party permitted person petitioner photographs plaintiff police polygraph present prior conviction probability probative value Problem proof propensity prosecution prosecutor purpose question rape reason record relevant reliability robbery Rules of Evidence S.Ct scientific sexual specific subsequent remedial measure Supreme Court testified tion trial court trial judge unfair prejudice United verdict victim witness witness's Zackowitz