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Evidence Juror Defense Strategies

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How to Write an Engaging Opening Statement

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First impressions are crucial—especially when you’re delivering an opening statement to a court of law, establishing and framing the crux of a case for judges and jurors when a trial begins. Clarity, conciseness, resonance,...more

Holland & Knight LLP

Closing Argument: Opportunity and Challenge

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Litigation attorney Dan Small shares insights and strategies for delivering a compelling closing argument in this episode of "The Trial Lawyer's Handbook" podcast series. He explains the challenges of delivering a closing...more

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Discover the Benefits of Mock Trials

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Case preparation can take months of research, depositions, and strategic planning—all for that one high-pressure moment in court. Even learning how to write a good opening statement can take a considerable amount of time and...more

DRI

The Hidden Forces of Litigation Success: How the Unseen Determines the Outcome

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You’ve read countless legal articles on how to tactically improve your approach to litigation- like defeating Nuclear Verdicts and the Reptile theory. These topics address objective criterion without much consideration of the...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Defense Damages Counter-Anchor: Get Them to Calculate, Not Speculate

It is an important debate, and one that is likely only going to be settled on a case-by-case basis: when addressing damages, does a civil defendant embrace the idea of a counter-anchor, take the small risk of appearing to...more

Butler Snow LLP

Tell the Best Story if You Want to Win: Ideas About Structure and Characters

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“[T]ell a great story if you want to live.” A newly minted screenwriter, on the verge of pitching his spy thriller to studio executives, was diagnosed with a serious medical condition. He shared this advice from his doctor...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

The Virtual Trial: Be Conscious of What Is Lost and What Is Found

The now one-year-old coronavirus pandemic has caused courtrooms across the country to move many of their functions, as well as some full jury trials, into an online space. On the wisdom of that move, there are broadly two...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Treat Your Credibility as Central, Not Peripheral

The lawyer preparing their case likely goes through a long list of, “What will they think about…” questions, relating to the facts, the evidence, the arguments, and the law. Eventually, that attorney might get to the...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Expect that Jurors Might Generate Their Own Fake News

Every day, we are reminded that we live in a new age that can be called “post-truth.” We pay a lot of attention to external sources of misinformation, whether it is motivated public figures, partisan news networks or...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Know that the Law Does Matter in Deliberations (But Not Necessarily Your Version of the Law)

In the real world, disputes are often settled by someone with more or better knowledge, or at least someone claiming to have more or better knowledge. The courtroom, however, is different. It is a setting that is designed to...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Remember, an Open Mind is a Finite Resource

Our trial system is based on the ideal of a neutral fact-finder. And as much as the social science tells us that this blank slate does not actually exist, it remains true that jurors will try very hard to keep an open-mind....more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Don’t Choose Between Facts and Stories

The title asks a provocative question: “When it comes to jury trials, should you tell a story or stick to the facts?” The piece in the “Your Voice” section of the current ABA Journal is written by Drury Sherrod, a litigation...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Connect with Jurors: Five Practical Ways

We know that when presenting to jurors, the goal is not just to present, but to engage, to relate, to adapt, and ultimately to persuade. You don’t want to simply lay information in front of jurors and hope they will pick it...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Explaining Probability? Use Frequencies Rather Than Percentages

Jurors and judges sometimes need to understand testimony regarding probability. For a criminal jury, maybe that probability relates to the chances of a false-positive on DNA identification. In a products case, maybe it...more

Holland & Hart - Your Trial Message

Don’t Underestimate Just How Much Jurors Want to Reach an Independent Decision

Add this one to the list of reasons why sequestering the jury can be a problem, and more generally, to the “Juries can do strange things” category. The night before deliberations, at the end of a five-week murder trial, four...more

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