Tags: erik magraken, free consultations, ICBC claim, ICBC injury claim, Jury Trials, mistrial, personal injury claim
Posted in Jury Trials, Uncategorized Direct Link Comments Off top ^
Not exact matches
Posts offer research - based persuasion strategies that lawyers can use
in both the pretrial and
trial phases of litigation
in jury, bench or arbitration settings.
Should you friend the opposing side's witnesses as you are prepping for a
jury trial in the hopes you get a peek at their
postings?
Writing
in the rarely used «third - person blog nickname» voice, Summerill
posted here over the weekend that «Maclitigator just completed a four day
jury trial... using the iPad as the primary means of getting information
in front of the
jury.»
Posted in Editorials Comments Off on Wisconsin Supreme Court: No Right to
Jury Trial under Wisconsin's Family or Medical Leave Act
In Colorado, U.S. District Senior Judge Richard P. Matsch was so infuriated by the trial conduct of counsel for Medtronic Navigation Inc. that he had already overturned a jury's $ 51 million verdict in its favor, as The Denver Post report
In Colorado, U.S. District Senior Judge Richard P. Matsch was so infuriated by the
trial conduct of counsel for Medtronic Navigation Inc. that he had already overturned a
jury's $ 51 million verdict
in its favor, as The Denver Post report
in its favor, as The Denver
Post reports.
He also gave the first name of the defendant and described his alleged crimes, writing, «Nowhere do I recall the
jury instructions mandating I can't
post comments
in my blog about the
trial.
Even as the Arkansas story broke, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported that defense lawyers for former Pennsylvania Sen. Vincent J. Fumo moved to halt
jury deliberations
in his
trial on federal corruption charges, contending that a juror
posted messages to Twitter and Facebook, including one that said, «Stay tuned for a big announcement on Monday everyone!»
Without being exhaustive, the danger to the administration of justice is likely to be at its most acute
in the context of criminal
trials e.g., where witnesses who are out of court may be informed of what has already happened
in court and so coached or briefed before they then give evidence, or where information
posted on, for instance, Twitter about inadmissible evidence may influence members of a
jury.
«Any friends of the Ninth Judicial Circuit Public Defender (Orange and Osceola Counties, FL) might want to forward Mr. Hallet's illuminating
post, so whoever's
in jury trial next week can exercise a well - deserved challenge for cause on this self - satisfied superficial twit.»
In the New Hampshire case, the Supreme Court found no error because the blogger's posts were not shared with his fellow jurors and because he assured the trial judge that he had followed his instructions once the jury was seated, as Molly McDonough reported in October in the ABA Journal eRepor
In the New Hampshire case, the Supreme Court found no error because the blogger's
posts were not shared with his fellow jurors and because he assured the
trial judge that he had followed his instructions once the
jury was seated, as Molly McDonough reported
in October in the ABA Journal eRepor
in October
in the ABA Journal eRepor
in the ABA Journal eReport.
Tags: bc personal injury lawyer, erik magraken, free consultation, ICBC claim, icbc claims lawyer, icbc court cases, icbc no fault benefits, icbc part 7 benefits, part 7 deduction, tort claims
Posted in ICBC No - Fault (Part 7) Benefits,
Jury Trials, Uncategorized Direct Link Comments Off top ^
Posts — many of them
in list form — share ideas with litigators about persuading
juries as well as working successfully with co-counsel and
trial consultants.
Tags: bc injury law, Cliff v. Dahl, Madam Justice Bruce, Rule 12, Rule 12 - 2, Rule 12 - 2 (9), Rule 12 - 2 (9)(ab), Rule 12 - 6, Rule 12 - 6 (5), Rule 22, Rule 22 - 4, Rule 22 - 4 (2)
Posted in BCSC Civil Rule 12, BCSC Civil Rule 22,
Jury Trials, Uncategorized Direct Link Comments Off top ^
Tags: bc injury law, Mr. Justice Funt, Norris v. Burgess
Posted in Civil Procedure,
Jury Trials Direct Link Comments Off top ^
And The Washington
Post today contains a front page article headlined «
In Libby
Trial, Big Names Make
Jury Picks a Tall Order; Shallow Pool Teems With Ties to Players.»
Tags: Deventer v. Woods, financial circumstances and future wage loss, future wage loss, ICBC claims, Low Velocity Impact, LVI, Madam Justice Fenlon, photos of vehicle damage, vehicle damage
Posted in Civil Procedure, ICBC LVI (Low Velocity Impact) Cases, ICBC Wage Loss,
Jury Trials Direct Link Comments Off top ^
Apple is doing the same
in its motion (asking the court to hold that Apple's $ 379 million retrial damages claim was the only result a
jury could have reasonably arrived at), but it's not asking for yet another
trial (this
post continues below the document):
3 Nov. 30, 2017 unpublished; received for
posting Dec. 1, 2017 unpublished), a FEHA plaintiff — after two years of litigation and a 10 - day
jury trial involving 24 witnesses — won to the tune of $ 1 million
in compensatory damages.
Posted on June 28, 2017,
in Evidence, exclusion of witnesses, Rule 105, rule 403, Rules of Evidence,
Trial Advocacy, Uncategorized and tagged Evidence, Federal Rules of Evidence, juries, jurors, Motion in limine, Rules of evidence, Trial, trial advocacy, Trial Stra
Trial Advocacy, Uncategorized and tagged Evidence, Federal Rules of Evidence,
juries, jurors, Motion
in limine, Rules of evidence,
Trial, trial advocacy, Trial Stra
Trial,
trial advocacy, Trial Stra
trial advocacy,
Trial Stra
Trial Strategy.
Moreover, when I
posted about the death of civil
jury trials in the federal courts, Vince chewed my ass
in his comment, asking «why would a plaintiff want to be
in federal court?
Davey had been directed about the use of the internet and social media
in a variety of ways: he was sent a copy of «Your Guide to
Jury Service»; he was shown a video that contained the injunction not to «use social networking sites to post any aspects of your jury service»; the jury manager gave the jury a speech with a similar warning; in the jury lounge were six notices to a similar effect; and on the first day of trial the judge said t
Jury Service»; he was shown a video that contained the injunction not to «use social networking sites to
post any aspects of your
jury service»; the jury manager gave the jury a speech with a similar warning; in the jury lounge were six notices to a similar effect; and on the first day of trial the judge said t
jury service»; the
jury manager gave the jury a speech with a similar warning; in the jury lounge were six notices to a similar effect; and on the first day of trial the judge said t
jury manager gave the
jury a speech with a similar warning; in the jury lounge were six notices to a similar effect; and on the first day of trial the judge said t
jury a speech with a similar warning;
in the
jury lounge were six notices to a similar effect; and on the first day of trial the judge said t
jury lounge were six notices to a similar effect; and on the first day of
trial the judge said this:
During the 2015
trial of Ross W. Ulbricht, mastermind of the deep Web black market site Silk Road, U.S. District Court Judge Katherine B. Forrest ruled that it was important for the
jury to view emojis alongside Ulbricht's social media statements
in order to see the complete
posts as he wrote them.