Introducing Cross-Examination in Kosovo
For the past week, I (Ron) have been in Pristina, Kosovo teaching trial advocacy, including, of course, cross-examination. The U.S. Department of Justice offered this advocacy training as part of Kosovo’s effort to implement the rule of law. Kosovo is the world’s newest nation, having declared its independence in 2008. The population of Kosovo is approximately 1.8 million.
For the past week, I (Ron) have been in Pristina, Kosovo teaching trial advocacy, including, of course, cross-examination. The U.S. Department of Justice offered this advocacy training as part of Kosovo’s effort to implement the rule of law. Kosovo is the world’s newest nation, having declared its independence in 2008. The population of Kosovo is approximately 1.8 million.
The people of Kosovo have great affection for Americans,
and they were unfailingly gracious to us.
The U.S. involvement in bringing an end to the Kosovo war is a reason
for this attitude, and their appreciation is evident with a statue of Bill
Clinton on Bill Clinton Boulevard and American flags flying throughout the city.
Attendees at the course were Victim Advocates. Victim
Advocates in Kosovo have a four-year undergraduate degree in the law. Under the
new Kosovo Criminal Procedure Code (effective January 1, 2013), they have a new
active role in prosecutions. Their new responsibilities include augmenting the
prosecution’s case and pursuing restitution and compensation on behalf of
victims.
The attendees, like the vast majority of the population
of Kosovo, were Albanian. One spoke Bosnian and the rest Albanian. The training
was done with simultaneous translations.
The trial advocacy courses consisted of training two
groups in two separate sessions back to back. Each training session lasted two
and a half days. During the sessions, the attendees learned about prosecuting a
case from opening statement through closing argument. Jury selection was not
discussed because cases are tried either to a single judge or a three-judge
panel depending upon the nature of the crime. The Kosovo criminal justice
system is evolving. Besides not providing jury trials, there are many other
differences from our criminal just system. Another example is that plea
bargaining was not been possible in the past, and every case went to trial.
My co-trainers - Chuck Ex and Scott Thorley - and I lectured,
demonstrated how to perform different parts of trial, such as give an opening
statement, and worked with the attendees in workshops as they delivered opening
statements and closing argument as well as conducted direct and
cross-examinations. The criminal case fact pattern that they used is the one
provided in Trial Advocacy: Assignmentsand Case Files, 2nd Edition.
Cross-examination was
a featured topic with more workshop time devoted to it than any other topic.
Chuck Ex (pictured above) lectured on cross-examination and then I demonstrated
how to cross-examine with Chuck playing the role of the defendant in a murder
case.
A highpoint of the week was attending an event at the United States Ambassador's residence hat honored Kosovo’s Forum of Women Judges and Prosecutors. Not only is our Ambassador Tracey Jacobsen a woman but so it the President of Kosovo Atifete Jahjaga. The President is an ex-police chief and only 38 years old. Pictured above are Vlora Citaku (Minister of European Integration of the Republic of Kosovo), Chuck Ex, the President, me and my wife.
My colleagues pictured above from left to right were:
Michelle Lakomy (Resident Legal Advisor, Pristina, Kosovo) who was in charge of
the program, Chuck Ex (Program Director for OPDAT – Office of Prosecutorial Development,
Assistance and Training), Benina Kusari (Legal Specialist), me, Scott Thorley
(Assistant United States Attorney in Salt Lake City, Utah), and Elisa Thana
(Victim/Witness Advocacy Program Manager).