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Paul Porvaznik – Business Litigator

Case Notes and Summaries of Recent Cases (State and Federal Courts – Illinois Focus)

Tag Archives: posner

7th Circuit Takes Archaic Hearsay Exceptions to Judicial Woodshed

Decrying them as flawed “folk psychology” with dubious philosophical underpinnings, the Seventh Circuit recently took two venerable hearsay exceptions to task in the course of affirming a felon’s conviction on a Federal weapons charge. In U.S. v. Boyce (here), the Court affirmed the trial court’s admission of a 911 call recording and transcript into evidence …

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Posted byPaulPApril 4, 2018April 4, 2018Posted inEvidence, Federal CourtsTags: 803(1), 803(2), Admission into Evidence, boyce, evidence, excited utterance, fisher kanaris, hearsay, litigation, LLC, posner, present sense impression, spontaneous lie, startling event, trial
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