“Core Skills for Judges” Webinar Series: Evidence Workshop
Tuition
199
This webinar is presented at no cost to judges. The $199.00 fee will be fully funded by an NJC scholarship.
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Days & Times
8:00 a.m. Hawaii / 10:00 a.m. Alaska / 11:00 a.m. Pacific / 12:00 p.m. Mountain / 1:00 p.m. Central / 2:00 p.m. Eastern
Course Location
Online
Course Fees
Tuition
$199
This webinar is presented at no cost to judges. The $199.00 fee will be fully funded by an NJC scholarship.
$0
This webinar will help judges develop an “evidence ear” by applying skills to hear, understand, analyze questions and rule on objections to questions or answers pertaining to evidentiary issues in the courtroom during trials and hearings. This interactive workshop will have judges ruling on actual evidence in a manner judges actually experience it. A prosecutor will conduct the direct examination of a law enforcement officer in a criminal prosecution of the case of State v. Jones. A defense attorney will make objections to some of the prosecutor’s questions or some of the witness's answers. Participants will indicate their ruling on each objection and the instructors will discuss each evidentiary issue along with the relevant rule raised by each objection.
Faculty: Judge Edward Wahl and Professor Steve Simon
Course $199
This webinar is presented at no cost to judges. The $199.00 fee will be fully funded by an NJC scholarship. $0
Scholarship assistance makes NJC courses more affordable for judges.
During this course, you will learn to:
- Control the presentation of evidence;
- Analyze evidentiary objections;
- Apply the FREs and procedures for the admission of physical evidence; and
- Effectively Control Bench Conferences
This webinar will help judges develop an “evidence ear” by applying skills to hear, understand, analyze questions and rule on objections to questions or answers pertaining to evidentiary issues in the courtroom during trials and hearings. This interactive workshop will have judges ruling on actual evidence in a manner judges actually experience it. A prosecutor will conduct the direct examination of a law enforcement officer in a criminal prosecution of the case of State v. Jones. A defense attorney will make objections to some of the prosecutor’s questions or some of the witness's answers. Participants will indicate their ruling on each objection and the instructors will discuss each evidentiary issue along with the relevant rule raised by each objection.
Faculty: Judge Edward Wahl and Professor Steve Simon