Shane Read has done it again; he has written another
must-read book for lawyers and law students. Read’s latest book is Turning Points at Trial: Great Lawyers ShareSecrets, Strategies and Skills. This new work is on a par with his prior
award winning books Winning at Deposition
and Winning at Trial.
Turning Points at
Trial delivers exceptional trial strategies and techniques in an effective and
highly readable fashion. Shane Read recruited superb trial lawyers to help with
his project and set about interviewing them. Each of those talented lawyers was
asked to share the trial skills that turned the trial in their client’s favor.
Read gathered transcripts from these lawyers and included excerpts from those
transcripts in the book to illustrate the particular trial skills under
discussion. Also, Read wanted the ideas in the book to stick with the reader,
and this determined which cases he included in his book. Read expressed it this
way: “Learning trial skills from great lawyers in the context of these
fascinating cases makes them easier to learn and more memorable.”
Here is an example of how turning points in trial are
discussed in the book. Chapter 8 “Wage Guerrilla Warfare with the Expert”
begins with an introduction to the trial lawyer and the case that will be used
to illustrate the trial techniques covered in the chapter. The attorney is
Robert S. Bennett, whom Read describes as “one of the country’s finest criminal
defense attorneys and crisis management lawyers for corporations.” Following a
description of Bennett’s background and the prominent clients he has
represented, the chapter provides a synopsis of Zapruder v. United States, the case involving an arbitration of the
government’s dispute with Zapruder over the appraisal of the film showing the
assassination of John F. Kennedy. Next, Read lays out Bennett’s strategies and
techniques including: setting up cross-examination in opening statement and
cross-examination principles, such as narrowing cross to one or two points –
“less is more”, looking for ways to make the expert look weak or not
knowledgeable, and how to use the pitch of your voice when asking a question to
indicate doubt or demand an agreement. For the rest of the chapter, Read employs
excerpts from the transcript of the Zapruder trial to illustrate the strategies
and techniques already discussed plus others. Finally, the chapter concludes
with a “Chapter Checklist” summarizing: Bennett’s trial strategies; Bennett’s
tips for cross-examination; Bennett’s strategies for cross-examination of
expert witnesses; Bennett’s insights for hiring expert witnesses; Summary of
cross of Macauley (the government’s appraisal expert); Summary of the
cross-examination of Staszyn (another government appraisal expert), and
Bennett’s advice for closing argument. Read’s utilizes this approach for each
chapter and it is both thorough and engaging.
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In addition to covering every aspect of trial work, Turning Points for good measure has
chapters on “Depositions” and “Appellate Oral Argument.” Turning Points is Shane Read’s latest engaging masterpiece on trial
and appellate advocacy.
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