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In most cases, a court expert witness is employed by one
party or the other and is paid by that party. Despite this fact, the expert's
testimony is supposed to be unbiased, researched, and documented. The expert
witness not only answers questions from the attorney that hired him or her, but
also must be able to stand up to cross-examination. For this reason, an expert
generally submits a curriculum vitae, or resume, that details all training,
education, skills, experience, publications, and prior testimony for the
attorneys and the judge to review before approving the person as a court expert
witness. The opposing party has the opportunity to provide court expert witness
testimony from their own expert that contradicts the witness testimony given by
the first court expert witness, assuming there is an expert that disagrees with
the first findings.
Because a great deal of research and preparation goes into
being an expert witness, most any court expert witness charges a steep fee.
With the cost of hiring an expert witness being high, most court expert witness
testimony is reserved for cases in which something of great value is at stake.
It is unlikely that a small claims court case will include expert witness
testimony, because the cost of doing so would likely be higher than any
recovery. In cases of divorce or probate where there is a large estate to
split, court expert witnesses are more likely to testify. When a criminal case
involves rape or murder, there is more than money at stake; for this reason, it
is not uncommon to hear expert testimony offered by the prosecution to explain
how evidence was collected and analyzed, or by the defense to explain how the
process was tainted or not scientifically proven.
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