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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses the following: How much inquiry is enough; how do you evaluate evidence; and how do you express judgments effectively? Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLC3LawQ.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
common denominator of adequacy has historically been so difficult. Repetition is one of the most important elements of sufficient inquiry, but it does not comprise the sum total of
such inquest; that quality is equally as - if not more - important than quantity creates a critical gap when the sole objective is achieving a certain number over and
above value. According to United States of America v. Oscar Vargas, Sr., "a district court should engage in an inquiry sufficient to explore and understand the defendants concerns about the
inadequacy of counsel" (United States Court Of Appeals Tenth Circuit), such as repeating, rephrasing and approaching the inquiry in such a manner as to "uncover the nature of the defendants
concerns" (United States Court Of Appeals Tenth Circuit). II. HOW DO YOU EVALUATE EVIDENCE? Evidence is evaluated by myriad criteria; sometimes each element represents a unique and individual indication
of guilt which can stand on its own merit, while other times it is but a smaller component of a much larger puzzle. Physical evidence is much easier to
evaluate by virtue of its tangibility; witness-based evidence, however, is much more difficult to prove or corroborate. Children play an entertaining game
of telephone operator, where one child whispers a short story to the next child in line, who then whispers the story - to the best of his or her recollection
- to the third child in line. When the last child finally receives the story, it has typically been modified so drastically from the original version that it is
wholly unrecognizable, a phenomenon of human nature that speaks to the differing perspectives any two people might have of a single situation. The same holds true with relying upon
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