CHAPTER 73

EXPERT WITNESSES AND THE DAUBERT CHALLENGE

Chey Cobb

73.1 INTRODUCTION

73.2 DAUBERT

73.2.1 Expert Witnesses' Testimony

73.2.2 Daubert Challenge

73.3 WHETHER THE DAUBERT CHALLENGE IS APPLICABLE: REFINING DAUBERT

73.3.1 General Electric Co. v. Joiner

73.3.2 Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael

73.4 DIVIDED WE FALL?

73.5 BEING THE BEST YOU CAN BE

73.5.1 Prepare Your Résumé

73.5.2 Find Out Exactly What Testimony Is Expected

73.5.3 Examine the Paperwork

73.5.4 Start Reading

73.5.5 Prepare a Written Report

73.5.6 Ask for Pretrial Meetings

73.5.7 Be Professional

73.5.8 Accept the Oddities

73.6 SUMMARY

73.7 FURTHER READING

73.8 NOTES

73.1 INTRODUCTION.

Whenever science or technology enters the courtroom, there must surely be an expert who can give clear and proper explanations of the subject matter to the judge and jury. As new sciences and technologies have emerged, the courts have had to decide if a person is, indeed, an expert and whether or not the science is real and admissible.1

In 1923, the United States courts began accepting scientific evidence based on a new rule. That rule used the “general acceptance” test to determine if evidence was legitimate. This test was based on the rulings in Frye v. United States, which declared that if a scientific practice was generally accepted among the scientific community in which it was practiced, it could be admitted in court. This has become generally referred to as the Frye test.2

In 1975, the federal government made the scientific assertions ...

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