Attacking Trace Evidence Such as Fingerprints, Tool Marks and Firearm Matches
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Trace evidence is often used to place your client at the scene of the crime or to put damning evidence in his hand. While there is much trace evidence to be had, fingerprints, firearm evidence and tool marks make up much of the evidence we have to worry most about. Learn how these examples of trace evidence are weak on their best days, their reliability has been attacked by academic groups, excluded by judges and how best to attack the government’s use of such evidence.
These presentations were recorded August 23-25, 2012, during the Multi-Track Seminar and the Fundamentals of Federal Criminal Defense Training in Chicago, Illinois. The Multi-Track Seminar was designed to offer in-depth instruction in a variety of substantive criminal defense areas. The five tracks for 2012 in Chicago were: 1) Sentencing in a Post-Booker World; 2) Immigration and a Closer Look at Padilla; 3) Computer Crimes, Social Networking and the Electronic Footprint We Leave; 4) Science, Experts and the National Academy of Science Report (NAS); and 5) Trial Skills: Techniques & Issues. Tracks 1-4 were presented in four distinct hour-long time blocks. These sessions were presented on Thursday, August 23, 2012 and then repeated on Friday, August 24, 2012. This design provided seminar participants with the opportunity to attend two of the four separate tracks taking place on Thursday and Friday. On Saturday, August 25, 2012, seminar participants had the opportunity to attend both plenary and small group breakout sessions for the 5th track, Trial Skills: Techniques & Issues. Saturday sessions addressed topics of general interest and importance to criminal defense practitioners during trials. Each Saturday session was provided twice so attendees could attend two areas of interest concerning trial techniques & issues. The following sessions were recorded and are available for viewing:
Seminar Date:
August 24, 2012
Seminar Location:
Chicago, IL
Minutes: 70.00 |
Streaming This Seminar is presented free of charge. |