Trials-Anatomy_of_a_Jury_Trial-Captions.xml

Trials-Anatomy_of_a_Jury_Trial-Captions.xml — Extensible Markup Language (XML), 2Kb

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              <p begin="00:00:00.25" end="00:00:05.30">This is your legal minute, brought to you by the Ohio State Bar Foundation.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:06.00" end="00:00:12.10">Trials, whether they are to a judge or a jury follow a prescribed format according to law.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:12.20" end="00:00:15.10">Civil and criminal cases are very similar.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:15.20" end="00:00:18.20">The major difference is what's called the burden of proof.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:18.30" end="00:00:26.20">In a civil case the plaintiff must only convince the triar of fact by a preponderance of the evidence in order to win.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:26.30" end="00:00:32.30">In a criminal case the states burden is much higher. It is proof beyond a reasonable doubt.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:33.40" end="00:00:37.70">Because the plaintiff in both civil and criminal cases usually has the burden of proof</p>
              <p begin="00:00:37.80" end="00:00:43.00">plaintiffs go first in a trial and then they are followed by the defense.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:43.10" end="00:00:52.10">The plaintiff also then has the opportunity for the last word by presenting rebuttal testimony or arguments if the plaintiff chooses to do so.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:52.20" end="00:00:57.00">Over the next few legal minutes we will attempt to break down each section of a trial.</p>
              <p begin="00:00:57.10" end="00:01:03.80">We will explain how each sections works and breakdown the action you might see in the courtroom if you attend a trial.</p>
              <p begin="00:01:03.90" end="00:01:10.00">This legal minute is brought to you by the Ohio State Bar Foundation.</p>

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