Showing posts with label Michael E. Tigar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael E. Tigar. Show all posts

Sunday, March 25, 2018

HOW TO START YOUR CROSS-EXAMINATION



In his book Examining Witnesses, Michael Tigar recommends how to commence cross-examination. He borrowed the technique from Terry McCarthy and it bears repeating here again. You don’t have to be cross to cross-examine. Tigar states:

To begin (cross-examination) strong you must choose an area in which the witness will agree with you. Preferably, the witness will also want to agree with you. What do I mean “want to”? If you are going to cross-examine a police officer on a defect in his report, you will begin by establishing how careful a report writer the witness is. The witness wants to tell you this.

Face the witness. Smile at the witness. The smile need not be friendly, but it must be polite. Remember, you want this witness to agree with you. You will see British barristers take a superior attitude toward the witness, lofty and disdainful. You will see American lawyers – real or on television – sneering and snarling. Don’t do any of that. With whom will the jury identify in a contest between a witness who is just sitting there and a snarling, sneering, supercilious lawyer? Oh, maybe later, when the jury is brought along to your point of view, you can change mien. But, for now, a polite smile.

The next idea is borrowed from terry MacCarthy. Actually, all good trial lawyers have done what he suggests, but Terry has refined the technique into a “method.” The idea is this: Don’t ask questions. Make statements with which the witness must agree or suffer impeachment. Most good cross examiners use leading questions.

Q. You were in charge of the city’s oil properties, right?

Q. It was your job to review the prices the city was paid, isn’t that right?

You can even eliminate the words “right” or “isn’t that right.”

Stand up. If the rules where you practice require you to examine from a seated position, start your cross with a document or exhibit that requires you to approach the witness so you have a reason to stand. After the obligatory smile, look the witness in the eyes, and make a positive statement, all the while smiling and nodding.

Q. You were in charge of the city’s oil properties?
You reviewed the prices the city was paid for its crude oil?

If the witness agrees with you, but does not answer audibly, give a reminder.
Q. That’s “yes”?

This method is particularly effective when you are leading the witness through a series of assertions, each on part of a picture.

Q. You were in the bar?
Q. You were with John?
Q. Somebody came in?
Q. He had a gun?
Q. This person had on a jacket?

The last in the series illustrates MacCarthy’s shining example of brevity, a one-word question. Brevity is, however, not a result but a means. This style of questions encourages the witness to agree with you by a series of “yes” answers. It leads from point to point, giving the jurors a picture of the action.

Best of all, the method lets you jettison most of the ten commandments as unnecessary. You will almost automatically be brief, short, plain, and nonrepetitive. Because your statements are questions only because you verbally punctuate them as such, you are not likely to ask “one question too many,” “permit the witness to explain,” or “ask the witness to repeat” the direct examination.

If the witness does not agree with you, have your impeachment material ready . . .

Now this is advice worth repeating and repeating.

Friday, March 8, 2013

“AHA” MOMENT AND CROSS-EXAMINATION


Closing the Loop of Cross in Closing

Cross-examination designed to expose the defect in the witness’s testimony may not be evident to the jurors during the cross. Rather, the loop may be closed in closing argument when you unveil the flaw and the jurors comprehend the full impact of the examination. Michael Tiger describes the effect as follows:

“The goal is to have a working plurality of jurors say ‘Aha,’ meaning ‘We see now the flaws in what this witness has said.’ Many lawyers do not understand that the ‘aha’ can come at many possible times during trial, and need not even be the result of cross-examination. The jurors can choose to discredit a witness because of what some other witness has said or based on some other evidence; effective lawyer argument shows the contradiction and points to the right result. In short, you don’t have to cross-examine every adverse witness.

“Even when you do not cross-examine, the ‘aha’ needn’t occur while the witness is on the stand. Trying to make it appear may lead you to take excessive risks with the witness.

“When Edward Bennett Williams had Jake Jacobsen, ex-Treasury Secretary Connally’s accuser, on the stand, much of the cross-examination was derided by journalistic onlookers as boring. Ed was taking Jacobsen through a long series of prior inconsistent statements, most of them under oath. In some measure, Ed was showing Jacobsen power- that he had measured all these facts about Jacobsen, making Jacobsen reluctant to hazard disagreement with the examiner.

“The main purpose of cross was to lay the basis for closing argument, where the inconsistencies could be spread out again and made part of the story of the case. Then the jurors would say ‘Aha!’”

Examining Witnesses, Michael E. Tigar, (Litigation Bookshelf 1972), 156-57