In PLI's Evidence in Negligence Cases, renowned litigator Thomas A. Moore shows you how to win personal injury cases by picking, preparing, presenting, and reinforcing your most powerful evidence.

Evidence in Negligence Cases gives you the knowledge and tools to gather and organize your strongest evidence and develop winning case plans; impress jurors with your competence and conviction as early as voir dire; select the right lay and expert witnesses and prepare them effectively; anticipate and counter your opponent's strategies to get an early edge; establish (or undermine) the four key elements of a prima facie case; maximize the probative power of different types of demonstrative evidence; draft and deliver convincing opening statements and summations; destroy the credibility of witnesses through cross-examination; rehabilitate witnesses through successful redirect examination; and request charges that put you in a better position to win.

Included are more than 225 sample forms, legal and medical documents, trial transcripts, case law examples, and other litigation resources.

Updated at least once a year, Evidence in Negligence Cases is an indispensable litigation handbook for every attorney who handles a personal injury case, for plaintiffs or defendants.

Founded in 1933, Practising Law Institute (Practicing Law Institute,PLI) is the nation's foremost provider of continuing legal education. PLI is a leading publisher of authoritative legal references and other information resources and offers more than 300 live and electronic programs nationally.

About the Author

Honored twice as National Law Journal's Lawyer of the Year, Thomas A. Moore is a Senior Partner and trial lawyer in the New York City law firm of Kramer, Dillof, Livingston & Moore. To date, Mr. Moore has won more than 80 jury verdicts of million or more, all in personal injury cases for plaintiffs injured through negligence or medical malpractice.







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Evidence in Negligence Cases (November 2010 Edition)








Orignal From: Evidence in Negligence Cases (November 2010 Edition)

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