Objections
Building a Case
Witnesses
Order of a Mock Trial
General Court Info
100

What does a "asked and answered" objection mean?

This is used during a cross examination when the opposing council repeats a question that was already asked and answered by the witness.

100

Who builds the case in a trial?

An attorney.

100

What is a witness?

A witness is someone who appears in court to testify what they know about a case or topic.

100

How long is an opening statement in mock trial?

5 minutes.

100

Who decides the verdict in a trial?

The judge and jury.

200
What is a "hearsay" objection?

An objection used when the witness testifies about something another person said or something they heard outside of the courtroom.

200

What should you find and build your case around in a trial?

The theme.

200

What is a direct examination?

A part of a trial where the attorney gets to ask questions to the witnesses they called in. This happens before the cross examination.

200

How long does a typical mock trial last?

2-3 hours.

200

What are the 2 types of trials and what's the difference?

Criminal cases and civil cases. Criminal cases are usually prosecuted by the state and deal with sentencing, whereas civil cases deal with two parties such as families or friends arguing legal duties and civic responsibilities.

300

What is a "invention of facts" objection?

This is used when a witness testifies something not mentioned or contrary to what is in the fact pattern.

300

What does it mean to "draw the string."

To acknowledge anything that could be negatively used against your client before the other side brings it up.

300

What is a cross examination?

A part of a trial where an attorney gets to ask the witnesses on the other side questions. This happens after direct examination.

300

How many witnesses are there in a typical mock trial case?

6, 3 on both sides.

300

What should you always say first before speaking once you're at the stand?

"May it please the court."

400

What is a "compound question" objection?

This is used when opposing council asks more than one question at one time.

400

What are examples of elements in a case?

Relevance, motive, cause and effect, moral authority, character, or anything else that will make the jury sympathize with your client.

400

What makes an expert witness different from others?

The expert typically has no personal connection to the case and is just there to provide facts and not a personal account.

400

How many attorneys are assigned on each side?

3

400

In mock trial do you represent plaintiff/prosecution or the defense?

Both, in high school mock trial you won't know which side you represent until shortly before the competition.

500

What does a "scope of witness examination" objection mean?

This means that the opposing council is asking something that's outside of the witnesses first-hand knowledge.

500

What are "exhibits" in a trial?

Physical/tangible evidence that can be used to support a witness testimony as well as your case.
500

What is a leading question and when can you not ask leading questions?

A leading question is a question that implies a specific answer and can usually be answered with just a yes or no. You may not ask leading questions during direct examination.
500

Which side starts the trial?

Prosecution/plaintiff.

500

What is an impeachment?

When opposing council attempts to discredit a witness because of a contradicting statement, possible bias, or their reputation.