1 / 11

Mock Trial Skills

Mock Trial Skills. Closing Arguments. Opening Talk about facts to be established at trial Arguments from facts not allowed Little or no discussion of law. Closing Work only with facts established in trial Argument from facts is the goal Some discussion of law, burden of proof, etc.

kizzy
Download Presentation

Mock Trial Skills

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mock Trial Skills

  2. Closing Arguments

  3. Opening Talk about facts to be established at trial Arguments from facts not allowed Little or no discussion of law Closing Work only with facts established in trial Argument from facts is the goal Some discussion of law, burden of proof, etc. Closing Versus Opening

  4. So, what is argument? • Going beyond the facts to get to the conclusion you think they support • Think of it in terms of “so…,” “therefore…,” “however” • All cats are mammals…

  5. Theme The “motif” of your case. The idea or phrase that ties it together Think of in terms of “This is a case about…” Theory Your version of how the facts went down. Did he hit her and then dump her in the water? Or did he hit her and the surf dragged her under? Should fit into the law More on Theme and Theory

  6. Primacy and Recency/Rule of 3 • Try to organize into three, overarching points or sections. • Helps you keep it organized in your head, like a set of book marks • Helps others follow along and remember • Put your strongest points first or last

  7. Goals of Direct Let your witness tell their story Make your witness appear credible Witness Talks Focus should be on witness Goals of Cross Tell the witness what to say Make the witness appear un-credible Attorney Talks Focus should be on the attorney Direct versus Cross Ex

  8. Straight Man/Funny Man • Direct is like a Comedy Team • The attorney is the straight man • The witness is the funnyman

  9. Form of the Question • Open ended on direct • Who… • What… • Where… • When… • How… • Leading on cross • …, didn’t you? • …, isn’t it?

  10. Primacy and Recency/Rule of 3 • Direct and Cross should both be organized in three broad groups of questions • Cheating, the beach, school the next day • Initial examination of the body, autopsy, final conclusions • Biggest points first or last

  11. Question Order • Want your questions to build or flow • Think of it as a conversation (direct) or an explanation (cross) • One question should follow from the next, until you get to the end of your big point • Helps jury or judge so answers don’t seem to come out of the blue

More Related