26. Direct Hit, with Mike Beckwith

26. Direct Hit, with Mike Beckwith In Episode 26 of May the Record Reflect, we’re joined by trial veteran Mike Beckwith to talk about one of the foundations of trial practice: the direct examination. As a Chief Assistant United States Attorney with the Department of Justice, Mike has litigated hundreds of cases before trial courts in multiple federal districts and the Ninth Circuit. Tune in to find out why he thinks direct examination is crucial to your case, the best way to deal with bad facts and unlikeable witnesses, and how to comport yourself on your feet and in the moment. Topics5:35     Where your case is won6:55     Why direct is harder than it seems10:44  How to keep direct interesting 13:40  Humanizing a despicable witness18:50   Objections from opposing counsel21:08  Visual aids 24:23  Body language27:17  If you’ve stunk up your direct30:17  Introducing bad facts34:43  Redirect36:09  Signature sign-off questionsQuote“With a good witness, you feel like Clarence Darrow. With a bad witness, you feel like a first-year law student. But there are good and bad out there, and so you’ve got to listen, because the good witness will give you something you want to follow up on that you didn’t have in your notes, and the bad witness you really need to be careful with because  there’s a reason why they’re doing what they’re doing and a lot of times you can shift to something that’s going to explain that or you can shift them off a topic that’s irrelevant or is just going to go down a rabbit hole that is going to confuse the jury.”  Mike Beckwith

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If you’re a litigator or trial lawyer, your life is full—in and out of the courtroom. May the Record Reflect is the podcast of the National Institute for Trial Advocacy, and we know that if something related to lawyering is interesting to us, chances are it’s interesting to you, too. Trial skills, office life, personal development, and more—it’s all fair game on May the Record Reflect.