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Take this test.
Watch a cross-examination from almost any televised trial. You’ll probably find it’s pretty bad, maybe even as bad as Cristina Gutierez’s cross-examination of an expert witness (ending at 2:03) in the Adnan Syed case (the topic of last year’s Serial podcast):
Getting it Right
Any lawyer who fails on cross forfeits a major opportunity to prove their case:
Cross-examination is the greatest legal engine ever invented for the discovery of truth. You can do anything with a bayonet except sit on it. A lawyer can do anything with cross-examination if he is skillful enough not to impale his own cause upon it.
-John H. Wigmore
We can do better. That’s because, as former Public Defender for the Northern District of Illinois Terry MacCarthy notes, “cross-examination is not an ‘art’ but rather a science.”
The science of cross has two main parts: organization and delivery. For organization, lawyers couldn’t much better than reading and applying Pozner and Dodd’s Cross-Examination: Science and Techniques.
But the deeper problem seems to be with delivery, and better delivery depends on clear, concise, and concrete cross-examination questions. Here are some of Terry MacCarthy’s recommendations:
What Is to be Done?
Any lawyer that wants to immediately apply these rules to their cross-examination should do these three things: (1) use short, one-fact-per-question statements; (2) drop the “isn’t that true” and “correct” from the end of each statement; and (3) keep doing (1) and (2).
A traditional lawyer’s cross-examination might sound something like this:
But now lawyers are doing it this way instead:
You can find the rest of Terry MacCarthy’s cross-examination tips here, and his cross-examination lectures here. (H/T Professor Charlie Rose.)
Wisdom of the Lawyer-Crowd
And it looks like lawyers are starting to take notice of statement-cross, if the #LawTwitter poll result is any indication:
#LawTwitter Cross-Examination Poll: The better way to finish question “The car was red” is cc @mitchjackson
— Brendan M. Kenny (@KennyBrendan) November 5, 2015
You can find the whole story here.
The 71% of respondents who embraced statement-cross over question-cross in this 21-vote poll may be an indication that lawyers are ready to change the way cross-examination has always been done—or maybe only Terry MacCarthy fans voted.1
Ours Is Not to Reason Why
This Twitter cross-examination geekery raised another question: should lawyers ask non-leading questions on cross?
Veteran trial lawyers Mitch Jackson and Karen Koehler say yes:
@KennyBrendan @mitchjackson the challenge is to ask open ended questions that lead the witness to the answer you seek.
— Karen Koehler (@k3VelvetHammer) November 6, 2015
@KennyBrendan To avoid sounding like a lawyer and to come across as an objective advocate looking for the truth, “What color was the car?”
— Mitch Jackson (@mitchjackson) November 5, 2015
Karen Koehler offered her own cross-examinations of expert witnesses at trials in 2011, 2013, and 2014. Her crosses are brilliant, with her pulling off these feats:
A Simple Cross Is Usually the Right Cross
Mitch Jackson and Karen Koehler seem to be the exceptions that prove the rule. At least, lawyers on Twitter (or the 8 people who actually voted) think so:
#LawTwitter @mitchjackson & @k3VelvetHammer say its OK to ask non-leading ?s on cross https://t.co/sg0Fr1jhHu Agree?
— Brendan M. Kenny (@KennyBrendan) November 6, 2015
There is one thing we should all be able to agree on.
Heretic or not, a lawyer should cross-examine in whatever way best advances their client’s interests—technique be damned.
Featured image: Page 52 of “Australian Sketches made on tour” by Ward, Lock & Co., 1899 is licensed CC.
And for an example of a cross-examination applying both Pozner and Dodd and Terry MacCarthy’s techniques, you can watch my mock cross-examination of Jay Wilds from the Adnan Syed case here. ↩
The Death of Leading Questions? was originally published on Lawyerist.