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The court decides on whether a witness is qualified as an "expert witness" or not.
An expert witness, professional witness or judicial expert is a witness, who by virtue of education, training, skill, or experience, is believed to have expertise and specialised knowledge in a particular subject.
In legal proceedings, a judge ultimately decides whether someone qualifies as an expert witness. The judge evaluates the witness's credentials, experience, and relevance to the case before allowing them to testify as an expert.
That happens a lot. The judge or jury decides who is more beleivable.
Death of an Expert Witness was created in 1977.
It is 'the court' who decides who gets to be qualified as an "expert witness" - if the testimony was as badly mistaken as the questioner leads us to believe then the judge (or the jury) will take that discrepancy into account when they consider the verdict.
Death of an Expert Witness has 368 pages.
Answer They sometimes can be called an expert, a witness, or an expert witness.
In an expert witness directory one can find an expert witness' resume, photo, hear them speak, learn about their background as an expert witness, read their articles, visit their website, and contact them by phone or email.
The guideline for expert witness testimony at the Court is 'Testifying in Court: Guidelines and Maxims for the Expert Witness'. Stanley L. Brodsky is the author of this book.
The ISBN of Death of an Expert Witness is 0-7432-1962-7.
Expert Witness - 2003 TV was released on: USA: 2003