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Articles Posted in Discovery

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I was encouraged, and then disappointed [amended]

Now, don’t get discouraged when your being encouraged doesn’t work out.  Remember a primary court-room rule:  never let them see they’ve hurt you.  Not too long ago Judge Vowell was chief in the Army’s First Judicial Circuit.  One of her rules of court was that both counsel must comply with…

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I’m encouraged, as occasionally I am

In the world of military justice it’s the small things that seem most encouraging at times.  So . . .  In my standard Article 32, UCMJ, production request (based on R.C.M. 405(f)(9)(10) primarily) or trial discovery demand one of the provisions is this: 3.  Declination to Produce or Disclose.    …

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New Army case on discovery

ACCA has issued an opinion in United States v. Trigueros, 68 M.J. ___ (A. Ct. Crim. App. 2010).  [Post updated to address a CAAFLog point, to add some links, and try to fix some formatting.] This case involves the common problem of discovery of a victims mental health records.  There…

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Discovery-innocent ingestion

R.C.M. 701(b)(2) sets out the requirement for defense disclosure if there will be an innocent ingestion defense. Assuming the accused is the only witness who may testify to an innocent ingestion, must the defense disclose that under the rule.  My answer is no.  To force a disclosure prior to testimony…

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Prosecutors and discovery

A case pending at the U.S. Supreme Court was recently settled out of court, and the case withdrawn from consideration.  It appears that there has been a settlement of $12M, for prosecutorial misconduct. "This means prosecutors who step outside their traditional role and who act as investigators (in criminal cases)…

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Not surprised

Why am I not surprised by Issue III.  See one of my earlier blogs — The Prosecutor’s Gamble.  I’ve blogged several times about trial counsel “suppression” of evidence or information favorable to the defense, despite frequent public relations statements and appellate cases lauding the more open discovery to which a…

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Prosecutors still playing games with discovery

United States v. Mott, once again, explores the prosecution obligation to disclose favorable evidence to the defense at court-martial.  In this case, the prosecutions own expert agreed with the defense theory as to the accused’s mental status.  None of this was disclosed to the defense. In the instant case, this…

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