This Document Supplement contains the text of the current federal rules of evidence, as well as the legislative history of those rules, including the Advisory Committee Notes as well as excerpts from congressional committee reports. In addition, it contains the text and legislative history of rules and amendments that were recommended by the Supreme Court but rejected by Congress. Furthermore, it contains the text and Advisory Committee Notes for proposed amendments to federal rules of evidence 404, 408, 606, and 609.While designed primarily for use as a Document Supplement to Evidence: Problems, Cases and Materials, it can be used to supplement any evidence textbook, and is also useful to practitioners in need of an up-to-date copy of the federal rules of evidence.This work supplements Evidence Problems, Cases and Materials
See , e.g. , Sterling v . Interlake Indus . , Inc. , 154 F.R.D. 579 , 587 ( E.D.N.Y. 1994 ) . However , where a party's failure to disclose experts is inexcusable , courts will take the " drastic remedy ” to exclude the experts .
After the main evaluation report was completed, the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules of the Judicial Conference of the United States asked RAND to conduct further analyses of the CJRA evaluation data to see if additional light could be ...
An Analytical Approach to Evidence: Text, Problems, and Cases
New material, a new co-author, and a new student friendly uniform chaper organization highlight the second edition of this chapter organization highlight the seconde of of this incisive evidence casebook....
McCormick on Evidence
Medicine in the Litigation Process
Eyewitness Testimony: Challenging Your Opponent's Witness
This compelling investigation into the unsolved murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman focuses on the time-frame when the murders occurred - the "killing time", sometime between 10 PM...
Focuses on the most important aspects of evidence law as it relates to criminal justice. This book covers various areas, such as the forms of evidence, the hearsay rule and...
Criminal evidence