We use cookies or similar technologies to improve user experience, analyze website traffic, enable and maintain log-in and personalization settings, connections with selected partners and for marketing purposes (managing advertising space and recommend products of interest to you). You can block or adjust saving cookies at any time, by changing the settings of your web browser. By continuing to use this website without disabling cookies in your web browser you ‘ACCEPT’ saving cookies. Learn more in our Privacy Policy.

Working With Expert Witnesses (and Those Who Aren't): Considerations for Preparing an Effective Witness FJI 2023

Product ID: CA3456R2
Presented By: State Bar of Wisconsin PINNACLE

Learn tactics for preparing expert witnesses so you can ensure their testimony is both informative and effective. Understand how jurors perceive expert testimony and how to communicate expert testimony the jury will find valuable and credible. Learn how to spot inappropriate lay witness testimony that encroaches on expert territory.​

Read More ↓

Interested in sponsoring this program? Find out more.

Select a Format

OnDemand seminar

Pricing

Member $99.00

Non-Member $99.00

Credits

1 CLE

Date and Time

Friday, May 05, 202312:00 PM - 1:00 PM CT

Add to Calendar 5/5/2023 12:00:00 PM 5/5/2023 1:00:00 PM America/Chicago Working With Expert Witnesses (and Those Who Aren't): Considerations for Preparing an Effective Witness FJI 2023

Learn tactics for preparing expert witnesses so you can ensure their testimony is both informative and effective. Understand how jurors perceive expert testimony and how to communicate expert testimony the jury will find valuable and credible. Learn how to spot inappropriate lay witness testimony that encroaches on expert territory.​

aagOTNdBczOPpqCrTmAF60877

No longer available, please choose from options above.

Maximum quantity must be less than or equal to 1.

Learn tactics for preparing expert witnesses so you can ensure their testimony is both informative and effective. Understand how jurors perceive expert testimony and how to communicate expert testimony the jury will find valuable and credible. Learn how to spot inappropriate lay witness testimony that encroaches on expert territory.​

Read More ↓

Katherine H. Judson is the Executive Director of the Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences. She brings with her to the organization her lifelong, passionate support of justice, fairness, and civil rights causes. She previously served as the SBS/AHT Litigation Coordinator for the Wisconsin Innocence Project, where she coordinated strategic litigation efforts in science-dependent cases, trained lawyers, consulted on medically complex cases, taught law students, and engaged in direct representation of clients wrongfully convicted of child abuse and homicide.

Earlier in her career, she served as the Innocence Network Shaken Baby Syndrome Litigation Fellow and as a trial attorney with the New Mexico Public Defender Department, where she represented clients facing felony charges, including capital crimes, and specialized in cases involving complicated forensic evidence. Her background in science–prior to law school–includes a bachelor's degree in Zoology from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and work as a research assistant in a pathology laboratory at the University. She has spoken before the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, the Innocence Network, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and other law schools and professional organizations on topics related to forensic science.​

Dr. Kristen McCowan joined the Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences after completing her doctorate in Law and Psychology, where she leads research initiatives to shed light on faulty forensic sciences. Her research has focused on jurors' perceptions of forensic science and expert testimony, and overall evidence admissibility. She shares the core mission of the Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences in strengthening forensic sciences used in court and helping prevent misjustices. Kristen values using data-driven research methods to help educate laypersons and experts in the field on misconceptions surrounding forensic sciences that have led to wrongful convictions. 

0 Customer Reviews
5 star
0%
4 star
0%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%

Customer Reviews

Share your thoughts with other customers by being the first to review this product and or seminar.