Testimonial Objectives

Testimonial Objectives - Testimonial Objectives refer to the various arguments, purposes, or exceptions regarding testimonial evidence. Examples include out-of-court statements that might be admitted into evidence. These testimonial objectives can include items such as present sense impression, excited utterance, and situations where the declarant is unavailable to testify in person.

Class Information

Identification

Label (rdfs)
Testimonial Objectives
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Definition and Examples

Definition
Testimonial Objectives refer to the various arguments, purposes, or exceptions regarding testimonial evidence. Examples include out-of-court statements that might be admitted into evidence. These testimonial objectives can include items such as present sense impression, excited utterance, and situations where the declarant is unavailable to testify in person.
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Class Relationships

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Additional Information

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Deprecated
False

Metadata

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Testimonial ObjectivesTestimonial Objectives - Testimonial Objectives refer to the various arguments, purposes, or exceptions regarding testimonial evidence. Examples include out-of-court statements that might be admitted into evidence. These testimonial objectives can include items such as present sense impression, excited utterance, and situations where the declarant is unavailable to testify in person.Evidentiary ObjectivesEvidentiary Objectives - Evidentiary Objectives refer to the goals or purposes of presenting and challenging evidence in a legal proceeding. These objectives include ensuring the relevance, reliability, and fairness of the evidence, as well as preventing undue prejudice or confusion.Hearsay Avoidance ObjectivesHearsay Avoidance Objectives - Hearsay Avoidance Objectives refer to the various purposes or exceptions that allow out-of-court statements to be admitted into evidence during a legal proceeding, thereby avoiding the exclusion of such statements under the hearsay rule. These objectives include direct testimony, present sense impression, excited utterance, and situations where the declarant is unavailable to testify in person.sub_class_ofparent_class_ofsee_alsois_defined_byselfsub_class_ofparent_class_ofsee_alsois_defined_by