Many criminal cases involve eyewitnesses or other fact witnesses who provide important testimony based on their memory for relevant events. While expert witnesses may be called in certain types of cases to discuss the reliability of memory decisions (eyewitness identifications, delayed outcries, etc), typically the dynamics of human memory are only described in the vaguest of terms.
This course provides a thorough introduction to the systems and processes of human memories, with an eye toward how they could be important in any case involving memory-based testimony.
This course clarifies the distinction between profit and cash flow from a legal perspective. Attorne...
The “Chaptering Your Cross” program explains how dividing a cross?examination into clear...
Evidence Demystified Part 2 covers key concepts in the law of evidence, focusing on witnesses, credi...
This course breaks down GAAP’s ten foundational principles and explores their compliance impli...
This CLE program covers the most recent changes affecting IRS information reporting, with emphasis o...
This presentation teaches attorneys how to deliver memorized text—especially openings and clos...
Part I introduces the foundational principles of cross?examination, explaining how lawyers must meth...
Part 1 - This program focuses specifically on cross?examining expert witnesses, whose credentials an...
Effective data privacy and artificial intelligence governance programs do not happen by accident. Th...
As artificial intelligence becomes the engine of the global economy, the value of "AI-ready" data ha...