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Belleville High School Law Related Education Program.

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Presentation on theme: "Belleville High School Law Related Education Program."— Presentation transcript:

1 Belleville High School Law Related Education Program

2 Mock Trial What is Mock Trial? Mock Trial is a competitive, intellectual activity that requires students to work in a cooperative group to make a coordinated and persuasive oral presentation. The objective is not to determine which side has the strongest argument. The objective is to make the strongest argument for your side.

3 Mock Trial Why Mock Trial? The focus of mock trial is education; it is designed to:  Improve students' problem solving, public speaking, writing, listening, and critical thinking skills.  Educate students about their legal rights and how the legal system works. The goal of mock trial is to

4 How to Begin  Read and review ALL material in the mock trial packet. -Fact pattern -Witness statements -Reports -Physical Evidence PREPARATION AND PRESENTATION OF A MOCK TRIAL

5 PHASE I 1. TEAM ROSTER 2. TIME-LINE OF EVENTS 3. CASE THEORY 4. 3 rd WITNESS STATEMENT 5. EVIDENCE PROFILE

6 PHASE I 1. TEAM ROSTER  Your team is responsible for preparing a Team Roster that lists all team members and the role they will present at trial.  Use the template provided and be sure that all team members sign the document before it is submitted to the court.

7 PHASE I 2. TIME-LINE OF EVENTS  Your team is responsible for preparing a Time-Line of Events to help your team comprehend the who, what, where & when issues of the case.  The Time-Line allows your team to plot out order of significant events in case.

8  The Case Theory is how your team will convince the jury/judge your side/client should win.  The Case Theory is not a statement of your objective.  The Case Theory addresses the essential issue of guilt or innocence by suggesting, why the defendant is or is not guilty. Example: O.J. Simpson trial, defense case theory; “If the glove don’t fit, you must acquit” PHASE I 3. CASE THEORY

9  Your Case Theory must remain consistent during each phase of the trial.  At the conclusion of the trial your Case Theory must be the more plausible explanation of what happened. 3 Steps to develop your Case Theory A. Review the elements of the case you must prove or defend. B. Analyze how you intend to prove/defend each of the elements. C. Analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the case for both sides. PHASE I 3. CASE THEORY

10  Your team must create a 3 rd witness that will testify for your side of the case.  The 3 rd witness should support your Case Theory but cannot be an alibi witness.  Your team must prepare a written statement which must be provided to the other team for review.  Use the template provided and be sure that all team members sign the document before it is submitted to the court. PHASE I 4. 3 RD WITNESS STATEMENT

11  Your team will be given evidence collected by the police during the investigation of this case.  In addition, your team may create evidence that your team will present at trial to support your team’s Case Theory.  The evidence your team creates must be approved by the court and provided to the opposing team prior to trial.  Your team must follow these rules in order to create admissible evidence. PHASE I 5. EVIDENCE PROFILE

12  Your team must create an Evidence Profile for all physical evidence in the case.  Physical evidence is all tangible evidence (pictures, drawings, scale models, police and expert reports) that you intend to introduce during the trial.  This profile should list the points about the evidence that BOTH help and hurt your case.  This will help your team prepare Direct and Cross Examination questions. PHASE I 5. EVIDENCE PROFILE

13 Exhibit J-2 Gun Cabinet Gun used by Defendant

14 State v. Shotem Exhibit J-1 Police Artist rendition of Crime Scene


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