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Check Sound Check Mike

Check Sound Check Mike. Time. Today’s Lecture:. Settlement, Jury Selection and Trial Procedure 1. Settlement Culture in Civil and Criminal Cases 2. How to Pick a Jury 3. The Procedure of the Trial. Lecture Organization:. Class Announcements. Brief Review. Getting Perspective.

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Check Sound Check Mike

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  1. Check Sound Check Mike Time

  2. Today’s Lecture: Settlement, Jury Selection and Trial Procedure 1. Settlement Culture in Civil and Criminal Cases 2. How to Pick a Jury 3. The Procedure of the Trial

  3. Lecture Organization: • Class Announcements • Brief Review • Getting Perspective • Settlement Culture • Picking a Jury • Trial Procedure Time

  4. Class Announcements 1. Quiz Answers Are Up 2. Next quiz: probably posted next Monday 3. Questions for interview papers are posted on ANGEL 4. They’ll be no discussion of football this week Questions? Time

  5. Review • 1. Discovery • -- civil discovery mechanisms (depositions, interrogatories, etc) • fishing • strategy • formal process of investigation didn’t really begin until after the case was filed (unlike a criminal case) • -- criminal discovery: • more like disclosure, rather than discovery • allegation commenced after formal investigation had started (and reached a strong conclusion)

  6. Review • -- to obtain more complete information, good criminal defense lawyers will make aggressive use of pre-trial hearings • (function as depositions, on the judge is present to police how far you can “dig”) Time

  7. Let’s Get Some Perspective • 1. We are in the process of learning the rules of monopoly …

  8. Procedure organized by chronological sequence What Court? Pretrial practice What For? Pleadings Trial Rules of Evidence Jury Selection Trial Procedure Getting information Settling Cases Frivolous or deficient cases Right paperwork Type of Case, Remedy Court structure, Organization and Culture Jurisdiction and Strategy Time

  9. Settlement Culture • 1. Settlement is where both sides agree to compromise the case • -- How does it work in each system? • -- let’s take a look hobbits ….

  10. 1. The Agreement: • -- client enters what is called a “plea agreement” • -- he agrees to change his plea of not guilty to “guilty” or “no contest” in exchange for something: • promise of lenient punishment • dropped counts, etc • [explain what no contest does. Blocks civil case] • -- agreement is in writing • -- two types of agreements: • (a) Binding – the sentence agreed upon is final. The judge cannot change it. • (b) non-binding – the sentence is merely a recommendation; the judge can change it. Civil: Criminal: Formal process • The Agreement Rare; Judges dislike

  11. 1. The Interrogation: • -- client is interrogated (formally questioned) by the judge on the record in open court • -- Called a plea hearing. [mention the paper]. • -- judge asks a bunch of probing questions • -- the questions ensure: • plea is knowing, intelligent, and voluntary • no coercion or hidden punishments (“he said if I I don’t do this, they would prosecute my mother”) • satisfied with the lawyer (“he sold me down the river”) • -- Note: magistrate court is different! [mention paper] Civil: Criminal: 1. How are you feeling today, is your head clear, have you taken any medications or drugs? 2. Do you know what this agreement is all about, tell me what you think it says, etc. 3. Are you happy with the agreement? Do you think it is what you really want? 4. How was your lawyer? Did he/she do a good job for you? 5. Are you guilty? 6. Do you understand the rights you are waiving [will go through them one at a time] Formal process • The Agreement • The Interrogation Answer: [Explain Habeas Corpus] If one is filed, pull the transcript, read it, and deny the claim. Question: Why does the judge do this? Is it because he or she personally cares about the defendant? Answer: The Judge is making it so that the defendant cannot get out of the agreement after he goes to jail. “Sealing the deal.”

  12. Civil: Criminal: • 1. Factual Basis: • -- there must be a factual basis for the plea • -- you can’t plead to something that has no factual basis • (e.g., plead to a battery instead of a theft) • -- the lawyer will certify in open court what the factual basis for the crime was • (remember, it is a basis, not a proof.) Formal process • The Agreement • The Interrogation • Factual Basis

  13. Civil: Criminal: Extremely informal Formal process • The Agreement illustration • Make agreement on the phone Criminal settlement system: three-party transaction Civil settlement system: two-party transaction • The Interrogation • Mail each other some paperwork • Factual Basis Judge • Phone the judge and tell him you settled Question: Do you think the civil process is like this? Does the agreement have to be approved by the judge? Prosecutor (plaintiff) Defendant Time

  14. Jury Selection 1. Before you begin a jury trial, you have to select the jury members 2. Let’s look at how that works … [illustration]

  15. Generated from: DMV records? Voter Registration? Master List 12 of the 24 must now be “qualified” (selected) “Pool” jurors Question: Anyone know how that happens? Randomly selected for some interval (e.g., term of court?) 24 or so randomly selected from the pool Show up in court the morning of the trial (8.00 a.m.).

  16. Jury Selection • 1. Before you begin a jury trial, you have to select the jury members • 2. Let’s look at how that works … [illustration] • 3. Juror Qualification: • (i) Judge questions the 24 jurors (usually as a group) • -- if the answers don’t come out right, either side may move to strike the juror [explain how that works] • -- judge could decide on his/her own to strike • Have you ever been convicted of a crime? • do you know the parties/lawyers in the case? • can you be fair in this case 3 stages

  17. Jury Selection • (ii) Lawyer Questioning • -- lawyers make up the questions, called “voir dire.” • (But judge may ask them, depending upon protocol.) [some lawyers like this, some may not – explain] • Type of questions lawyers ask or want asked: • in a medical malpractice case, plaintiff’s lawyer will want to know if any of the jurors believe that it is wrong for the civil justice system to award millions of dollars in damages • in a criminal case, the defense lawyer may want to know whether jurors believe that the system coddles criminals or gives them too many rights Question: What kind of questions do you think the lawyers want asked? • Are any of you against the death penalty? • Do any of you believe that doctors are abused by the civil justice system?

  18. Jury Selection • -- The Point: Lawyers will want to probe for juror attitudes • -- Note: just because an answer is given to these questions doesn’t mean that the juror will be stricken. The Judge will ask follow up questions • “Does this prevent you from being a fair juror in this case?” • Does that mean you could not award a million dollar verdict if the facts and law warranted it? • (Depending upon these answers, the juror may be struck for cause)

  19. Jury Selection • (iii) Peremptory Challenges • (Most important thing to learn) • -- after the jurors have been initially qualified (steps (i) (ii)), lawyers still get to strike a few of them for STRATEGIC REASONS • -- lawyers will have jury questionnaires (employment, age, residence, family status, etc.) • -- high powered lawyers may even have utilized focus groups • BASIC IDEA: striking to get a strategic advantage or to negate the other side’s advantage • striking old people in a marijuana case • striking married people in a DUI case? • striking anyone in the medical profession if it is a medical malpractice case (assuming they are not stricken for cause) • story of O.J. [middle aged African American women]. Question: What does this have to do with getting at the truth?

  20. Jury Selection • CAREFUL: cannot strike for reasons of race and gender, but you can strike persons of race and gender for non-discriminatory reasons. [Batson Hearing] Time

  21. Trial Procedure • 1. Opening Statement • -- not allowed to argue. • -- simply tell the jury what the case is about from your vantage point; tell them what they can expect to see. • -- like giving an orientation to your case, not arguing it. • … examples: • [your own examples:] • case involving a burglary of a PlayStation • case involving a incest of an adopted daughter Question: What do you think the prosecutor said in opening statement for the rape case we read about in “false cases” earlier in the semester? Question: What do you think the defendant’s opening statement was like?

  22. Trial Procedure • 2. Plaintiff’s Case • -- call one plaintiff’s witness at a time • -- witness testifies (direct testimony) • -- then is subjected to cross examination • -- then redirect (if needed) and re-cross (if needed) • (excused unless needed further) • -- repeat this procedure until you are out of witnesses illustration Assume the plaintiff’s case has 5 witnesses ¶1 direct, then cross ¶2 direct, then cross ¶3 direct, then cross ¶4 direct, then cross ¶5 direct, then cross “Plaintiff rests”

  23. Trial Procedure • 2. Plaintiff’s Case • -- call one plaintiff’s witness at a time • -- witness testifies (direct testimony) • -- then is subjected to cross examination • -- then redirect (if needed) and re-cross (if needed) • -- repeat this procedure until you are out of witnesses illustration The defense goes next (assume a 3 witnesses) Δ1 direct, then cross Δ2 direct, then cross Δ3 direct, then cross Defense rests

  24. Trial Procedure • 2. Plaintiff’s Case • -- call one plaintiff’s witness at a time • -- witness testifies (direct testimony) • -- then is subjected to cross examination • -- then redirect (if needed) and re-cross (if needed) • -- repeat this procedure until you are out of witnesses illustration Plaintiff can elect “rebuttal” ¶ 6 direct, then cross But can only be for rebuttal purposes; not for new or forgotten evidence ¶ 7 direct, then cross ¶8 direct, then cross Plaintiff rests

  25. Trial Procedure • 2. Plaintiff’s Case/ Defense Case • -- call one plaintiff’s witness at a time • -- witness testifies (direct testimony) • -- then is subjected to cross examination • -- then redirect (if needed) and re-cross (if needed) • -- repeat this procedure until you are out of witnesses • -- Defendant takes his/her turn (same process) illustration The defense then has the right of “surrebuttal” Δ 4 direct, then cross Again, only for rebuttal purposes Δ 5 direct, then cross Defense rests

  26. Trial Procedure • 3. Jury Instructions (Jury Indoctrination) • -- extremely important • -- judge instructs the jury on what the law says • [e.g.,]: if the jury doesn’t know that self-defense is a defense to the charge of battery, how is it going to be able to judge who is innocent or guilty? • [e.g.:] the jury needs to know that (a) consent is a defense to rape; and (b) what both rape and consent consist of • -- jurors are told what the elements of the offense are, what the defenses are, what the burden of proof is, and how to properly discharge their function. illustration Burden of Proof: 1. criminal = beyond a reasonable doubt 2. civil = preponderance of evidence 90% ??? 50%

  27. Trial Procedure • 4. Closing Argument • -- most important part of the trial • -- studies show it is most central to the jury’s verdict • -- this is where each side takes turns arguing what it believed was proven in the trial • 5. Deliberation and Verdict • -- retire to the jury room, foreperson selected • -- begin deliberations (secret) • -- unanimity is generally required (but not in all states) Time

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