Posted On: January 8, 2012 by John Bratt

Trial Organization Part IV- Preparing Yourself to Use Technology at Trial

Having the right equipment is worthless unless you know how to use it. That is why the second important element to using multimedia at trial is preparation. I never, ever, ever use anything at trial that I have not practiced with. For PowerPoint, this means doing a complete practice run just as if I was at trial. This starts with unpacking and setting up the equipment from scratch. Then I click through each slide to make sure that they are in the correct order, they all work and that they appear big enough for the jury to see them.

PRACTICE TIP: I hate text slides and bullet points. So do the experts. I only use PowerPoint for images (photos and important documents) and video. I want the jury focused on me, my client and the story I am telling, not looking past me to read text on a screen. I only use text slides in two circumstances: showing jury instructions in conjunction with my argument, and showing the verdict sheet as I believe it should be completed.

The preparation for using video is basically the same, but may be even more important. If you have a malfunction in opening, you can always ditch the PowerPoint and go old school, Moe Levine-style. Heck, if handled gracefully it might even help you with the jury by humanizing you and showing you are cool under fire. Good lawyers can tell a compelling story with nothing but their words, eyes and body language. Expert video is different. You can’t toss it aside if it doesn’t work because then all of your medical evidence is gone. You have a huge hole in your case where the expert testimony on medical treatment and causation should have been. Yeah, I guess you could read the testimony into the record if there was really no other option, but that is just awful. Unpersuasive and irritating.

Play the video ahead of time, preferably as soon as you get it. Not necessarily all the way through, but enough to make sure it plays on your equipment and that the recording was made correctly. Videographers make mistakes. I have had occasions where the video had audio, but only a black screen, where the video worked but the audio track was never attached, where the audio was obscured by a loud buzzing, and where the audio level was so low it couldn’t be heard even on the loudest setting. That is why I do not recommend doing the video dry run the night before playing it. It is best to practice far enough ahead of time that you can get the videographer to fix any problems with the recording before the trial starts.

PRACTICE TIP: Most laptops have a function that automatically blanks the screen or goes to a screensaver after a certain period of inactivity. Make sure you turn this off. It sucks if the whole setup goes blank during the most important part of your expert’s testimony. Don’t ask me how I know this, but trust me on this one.

I know there are still lawyers out there who are getting good results using 20th century technology like blowups and exhibit boards. But your 21st century jury expects a 21st century trial, and your client is looking for a 21st century verdict. Being organized with the right technology and preparation will allow you to be a 21st century lawyer who can get the results that his clients need.

Comments

Great advice, John. Lawyers should remember that their jury pools now include people born in 1994. Those people grew up with e-mail, instant messaging, text messaging, YouTube, sophisticated videogames and blockbuster special-effects-ridden movies. Additionally, most teachers use technology in the classroom (Google the Promethean Board)--they don't use dry lecture anymore, so lawyers shouldn't, either.

Excellent tips. Always double check EVERYTHING! About 10 years ago I remember getting ready for opening statement. Laptop on and powerpoint ready to go. Jury comes in and judge calls my name. I stand and begin my opening. Of course, the laptop stopped "talking" to the projector. I was forced to pickup my laptop and walk back and forth in front of the jury showing them pics on the screen. The case involved an improperly working medical device and so I was able to include the non-working laptop into my "things happen" and you need to be ready theme. All in all it worked out just fine but I'll always have a more concrete backup plan and never let this happen again. I get knots in my stomach just thinking about this opening :-) Mitch

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