Vouching: A Defense Attorney's Guide to Witness Credibility, Law and Strategy
American Bar Association - Defending Liberty, Pursuing Justice ABA
View Cart Check Out
ABA Web Store
                               
...the source you trust for practical legal information.

Members of the Criminal Justice Section receive a discount on this book. Join the Section or visit the Criminal Justice Section website to learn more about the valuable resources included with your membership.

Criminal Justice Section

Log In

View Cart

Check Out

Track Orders

Shipping Rates

Help

Administrative Law

Antitrust Law

Bankruptcy Law

Billing

Business Law

Career Development

Children and the Law

Constitutional Law

Construction Law

Corporate Law

Courts

Criminal Law

Disability Law

Dispute Resolution

E-Commerce & Cyberspace Law

Education Law

Elder Law

Employee Benefits

Estate Planning

Ethics & Professional Responsibility

Ethics Opinions

Evidence

Financial Management

General Practice

Government Law

Health Law

Insurance Law

Intellectual Property Law

International Law

Labor & Employment Law

Law Practice Management

Law School, Law Students

Legal Research & Writing

Legal Technology

Litigation

Management / Organizational Skills

Nonprofit Law

Public Contract Law

Public Education

Real Estate Law

Reference

Science & Technology Law

Securities Law

Solos and Small Firms

Transportation Law

Trial Advocacy

Zoning & Land Use


Advanced Search
Site Map
Best Sellers

Vouching: A Defense Attorney's Guide to Witness Credibility, Law and Strategy

Vouching: A Defense Attorney's Guide to Witness Credibility, Law and Strategy
Product Code: 5090112
Author: Donna Lee Elm
Publication Date: March 2008
ISBN: 978-1-59031-929-1
Page Count: 250
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Sponsoring Entities: Criminal Justice Section
Topics: Criminal Law, General Practice, Litigation, Solos and Small Firms
Format: Book - 5090112
Pricing: $89.95 (Regular)
$74.95 (Criminal Justice Section) ABA Members, Log in now to receive this discount!
Quantity:
 
Purchase 5-24 and save 10%
Purchase 25-49 and save 20%
Purchase 50-99 and save 30%
Purchase 100+ and save 40%
 
About the Book

What are those "proper bounds" when arguing credibility of witnesses? Specifically, what is "vouching?" Although ethics rules are explicit and firm, commentators are quick to point out that case law is inconsistent, fact-driven, and highly protective of convictions

Most trial lawyers know vouching, like obscenity, when they see it -- even if they have trouble formulating a definition. Understanding the principles that underlie vouching has been confounded by how it is usually defined: not by why it is problematic, but instead by how it most commonly appears. The basic concept of vouching, then, is that it is an improper means of bolstering a witness's credibility. Witnesses' reliability and honesty virtually always arises at trial, so practitioners frequently find that they need to "rehabilitate" or support their witnesses' statements.

This one-of-a-kind book supplies all you need to know about this sometimes misunderstood concept. In fifteen chapters you'll find the topic of vouching covered from every angle, backed up with relevant case citations whenever applicable. You'll discover when it's permissible, and when it's prohibited. You'll get a cleared picture of where the illusive grey areas lie, and learn to recognize when it's been crossed. If you are a trial lawyer, prosecution or defense, you need this book to help establish your expertise in the sometimes confusing area of vouching.


Table of Contents
Acknowledgment
1. Overview
2. Ethics Proscriptions
3. Personal Opinions of the Speaker (First Person Opinions)
4. Permissible Personal Opinions
5. Permissible Opinions of Others
6. Placing the Prestige of the Government behind Witnesses: Prosecution
7. Placing the Prestige of the Government behind Witnesses: Police
8. Facts Not in Evidence
9. Negative Vouching
10. Non-Verbal Vouching
11. Vouching by Implication
12. Arguing the Risks of Falsely Testifying
13. Melodramatic implications of acquittal
14. Invited response
15. Remedies