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Witnesses' Guide is an inexpensive, sensible way to
avoid the most common major mistakes witnesses make when they give testimony in
the U.S. or Canada. A copy of Witnesses' Guide should be given to each person
headed for the witness stand.
Telling your story
The problem is how to tell our side of the
story to strangers when we know how difficult just getting our family and
friends to understand what we are trying to tell them. The thought of a hostile
attorney firing trick questions at us in front of a crowded courtroom causes
terror in the bravest.
Our problems are further aggravated if the
outcome of our case depends heavily on the testimony of other witness's. Our
strongest supporters can turn into our worst legal nightmare in a matter of
minutes under the skilled questioning of the opposition's attorney. A marginal
witness with important testimony could destroy your entire case. A negative
legal decision can alter the rest of our lives or be a matter of enormous
amounts of money.
Big corporations employ skilled seasoned
professionals who spend many hours and a great deal of money preparing their
witnesses for deposition and court in order to minimize potential damage and
maximize their witnesses testimony. Most of us do not have the experience in
court or vast company resources.
Pre-Appearance Interview
The average pre-appearance
interview time an attorney spends with a witness before testimony is less than
an hour. There is virtually no actual `witness testimony preparation' time
before most appearances. Consequently a witness without proper understanding and
expectation is subject to fear and surprise which will prevent the witness from
doing a proper job. Even the most dedicated attorney cannot completely prepare
you and each of your witnesses for this important experience. Since you have the
most to gain or lose you must make sure you and your witnesses produce the
results you need.

Foreword for Witness
Guide
Going to testify at deposition or at
trail can be frightening.
A few people rise to the challenge
but most shrink from it. The court and players are intentionally
intimidating. It is their game and you are an observer rather
than a player.
It has been said that people can be
divided into three groups: those who make things happen, those
who watch things happen and those who wonder, what happened?
The adversary system of justice is a
team sport made up of three sets of participants:
1. Those who make things happen: the judge and the opposing
attorneys.
2. Those who watch things happen: the bailiff, stenographer,
clerk of the court, jury, gallery, and witness.
3. Those who wonder what happened : the plaintiff and
defendant who are paying for it all: who must live with the
outcome. You may be in group two or three.
This easy-to-read guide will take
you by the hand, step-by-step, through the mysterious judicial
process. The reading is interesting, entertaining and fun. You
will learn so much about the judicial system that your
deposition or court appearance will be anticlimactic.
You will have a sense of deja vu
(been there before). This is because this book tells you all of
the challenges you might run into and you will not have to face
them all.
Lawyers and judges go to school to
learn the judicial game. You have this book. Good reading, good
learning and good luck. --by
Dan Poynter.
Mr. Poynter is an expert witness in parachute
design and skydiving practice. Of his 27 books, seven are on parachutes and
skydiving and he has worked as an expert on scores of cases and has testified
numerous times in the past 15 years.author of "The Expect Witness
Handbook"
Mr. Poynter highly recommends "Witnesses' Guide to Testifying for Deposition or
Court" for the lay person facing these daunting tasks.
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