1 / 18

MBA Mock Trial Program Mock Trial Basics

MBA Mock Trial Program Mock Trial Basics. Presentation by Jim and Josh McGuire Permission granted for any education use in connection with MBA Mock Trial Program November 18, 2002. What is a Mock Trial?. Trial before a real judge (or lawyer) Held in real courtroom (State Court)

chung
Télécharger la présentation

MBA Mock Trial Program Mock Trial Basics

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. MBA Mock Trial Program Mock Trial Basics Presentation by Jim and Josh McGuire Permission granted for any education use in connection with MBA Mock Trial Program November 18, 2002

  2. What is a Mock Trial? • Trial before a real judge (or lawyer) • Held in real courtroom (State Court) • Examination of witnesses • Introduce evidence and argue objections • “Facts” are fiction; case law is real

  3. Mock Trial Parts • Opening statements • Direct examinations • Cross examinations • Closing arguments • Witness roles

  4. The Mock Trial Team • Prepare both sides:Plaintiff v. Defense(Prosecution v. Defendant) • Each side has: • Lawyers: 3 - 6 • Witnesses: 3 • Students can be on both sides

  5. Team Preparation • Develop the “Theme of the Case” • Write parts: • Q & A • Re-write parts • Practice in groups of 2 or 3 • Rehearse, review, revise, refine. • Audition for Roles

  6. Mock Trial Techniques • Introducing a document • Making and arguing objections • Understanding “hearsay” • Use of affidavit to impeach • Expert witness testimony • Confidence in the courtroom

  7. Opening Statements • Brief preview: what the case is about • Introduce yourself and your team • Establish trial theme • Summarize key facts • do not argue the law • Identify witnesses • brief summary of what they will tell the court • Conclusion: the theme revisited

  8. Direct Examinations • Witness tells Story • What happened ? • What happened next? • Focus on witness, not lawyer • Usually chronological • Tie in with other witnesses, the theme

  9. Cross Examination • Focus is on the lawyer, not witness • Leading questions preferred • Keep the witness from talking • Establish 2 or 3 key points • Do not merely repeat direct exam • Create reason for court to discount direct testimony • Hit it and quit it! Keep it short.

  10. Closing Argument • Review facts presented at trial • Use actual quotes of witnesses • Persuade the judge that you are right • Your facts are the “truth” • You view of the law is “justice” • Strong and sincere • No notes • Remember the theme!

  11. The Role of the Witness • Talk to the judge, not the lawyer • Know everything in your affidavit • Do not invent facts • Stay in role at all times • Understand case theory and how your testimony helps your side

  12. When and why to Object • Objections are based on the Rules of Evidence • Only object if testimony will hurt your case • Question and answer will be “in evidence” unless you object • Object in order to keep it out of the record • If testimony is already in, move to strike

  13. How to Object • Timely objections • Object to the question before the answer • Object to the answer before the next question • Object to the document when used or offered • Rise and say, “Objection” • State grounds briefly • Be prepared to argue • Accept court’s ruling gracefully

  14. Introducing Documents • Show to opposing counsel • Mark for identification • Show to witness • “Do you recognize?” • “What is it” • “Your honor, I offer into evidence as Exhibit #1 the [document] • Defend over objection

  15. Introducing Documents II • ARBPHU • Authentic: It is what it appears to be • Relevant: Makes some fact needed to prove our case more likely to be true • Best evidence: [not a Mock Trial rule] BUT NOT: • Privilege [Not a Mock trial rule] • Hearsay: Important rule to learn and master • Unduly prejudicial: e.g., Gory pictures

  16. Confidence in the courtroom • Stand tall • Loud clear voice • Walk smooth and slow • Dress for success • Clean, neat, conservative • Clean table: no clutter

  17. Mechanics of Competition • Performances are scored 1 to 10 • Discretionary points • Team with the higher score wins • Outcome of the “merits” irrelevant • 3 Trials Guaranteed • After that, win or go home.

  18. Our (F)ilosophy • Play Fair • Obey letter and spirit of rules • Lose and Win gracefully • Have Fun • And Finally… • If you think you can, or you think you can’t, either way– you’re right.

More Related