Convicting the Innocent

Garrett offers a comprehensive post-mortem of the first 200+ DNA exonerations and extrapolates from that study both a diagnosis of what went wrong and prescriptives for reducing the risk of wrongful convictions.

Acting Effectively In Court: Using Dramatic Techniques

The author, both an attorney and an actor, identifies skills from the latter ‘stage’ and suggests their application in the courtroom.

The Art and Architecture of Closing Argument

As expressed by the authors, “tempered against the “learning from the masters” approach, we will examine the closing argument from the perspective of communication and learning theory. Effective trial advocacy requires more than mere imitation; it requires the integration of fundamental communication principles.”

Confronting Cognitive “Anchoring Effect” And “Blind Spot” Biases In Federal Sentencing: A Modest Solution For Reforming A Fundamental Flaw

This Article explores how judges’ hidden cognitive biases, specifically the “anchoring effect” and, to a lesser extent, the “bias blind spot,” impact decision making. See also Guthrie et al., Inside The Judicial Mind, 86 Cornell L. Rev. 777 (2001).

Hiding the Elephant: How the Psychological Techniques of Magicians Can Be Used to Manipulate Witnesses at Trial

Combining psychological research and the techniques of the magician, Beckman discusses how misdirection, word selection, instructions and other standard tools in magic shows are utilized in trial presentations.

Aging witnesses: Exploring difference, inspiring change

An essential survey of research on the perception and memory capabilities of elderly witnesses that suggests “best practices” for eliciting reliable testimony from such witnesses.

The Investigation Narrative: An Argument for Limiting Prosecution Evidence

Bridging evidence law and advocacy, Professor Poulin dissects and criticizes the practice of telling the back-story – how a defendant came to be a suspect – which is used to increase the richness of story-telling but inevitably runs afoul of the presumption of innocence.

You Had Me At Hello: Examining The Impact Of Powerful Introductory Emotional Hooks Set Forth In Appellate Briefs Filed In Recent Hotly Contested U.S. Supreme Court Decisions

Johnson “posits that powerful emotional hooks set forth in introductory paragraphs in stellar briefs–emotional hooks that often have nothing at all to do with the merits of the case–do certainly play a role in the determination of hotly contested Supreme Court decisions[,]” offering a critical lesson for those who advocate in the written formats.

NOTE: The Role of Nonverbal Persuasion in Juror Decision-Making and the Need to Regulate the Trial Consulting Industry

This student NOTE, focused on whether and how the trial consulting industry should be regulated, contains an abundance of information about nonverbal communication techniques and their effectiveness.