Authenticating and Admitting Electronic Evidence
This course if provided free of charge to active judges through an NJC scholarship.
199
Days & Times
11 a.m. PDT/Noon MDT/1 p.m. CDT/2 p.m. EDT
Course Location
Online
Course Fees
This course if provided free of charge to active judges through an NJC scholarship.
$199
Electronic evidence has become almost routine in litigation, with most cases including some combination of text messages, emails, social media postings, digital images, and data compilations. Despite frequent use, the admission of electronic evidence often presents challenges to counsel and the courts. This course is designed to enable identification and navigation of those evidentiary challenges.
This course if provided free of charge to active judges through an NJC scholarship. $199
During this course, you will learn to:
- Predict and analyze evidentiary challenges related to the authentication and admissibility of all types of electronic evidence and electronically stored information.
- Adopt an analytical structure, based on existing evidentiary rules, to address these kinds of evidence;
- Rule confidently and correctly on objections to the introduction of all types of electronic evidence and electronically stored information.
- Simulate evidentiary rulings on specific cases involving the introduction of webpages, social media evidence, email and text messages, call logs, real-time videos, and cell data tracking information.
Electronic evidence has become almost routine in litigation, with most cases including some combination of text messages, emails, social media postings, digital images, and data compilations. Despite frequent use, the admission of electronic evidence often presents challenges to counsel and the courts. This course is designed to enable identification and navigation of those evidentiary challenges.