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Jul. 15, 2000

In Focus

Trial attorneys should not ignore unpleasant case facts. Weaknesses must be evaluated and a plan devised to defuse them before they jeopardize the case.

Noelle C. Nelson

By Noelle C. Nelson
        Lawyers are sometimes reluctant to admit a case's weakness, believing that if they just push a weakness aside, discount or deny it, jurors will do the same. Nothing could be further from the truth. Jurors do not look only where the lawyer wants them to - they have their own questions, theories and opinions. In addition, jurors have the benefit of a collective mind...

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