Witness Prep: Figuring Out What To Say

When preparing a witness, don't waste time teaching them combat tactics. Get to the hard stuff.

Better deposition outlines (1 of 3)

Strong depositions start with disciplined prep. Define clear goals for each outline section to avoid drift, stay focused, adapt in real time, and use limited deposition time strategically.

Better Deposition Outlines (2 of 3)

Writing every question in advance exposes risks early, prevents surprises, and builds disciplined deposition skills. It sharpens judgment before the room, not inside it.

Better deposition outlines (3 of 3)

Pasting document clips into your outline keeps everything in one place. It eliminates binder juggling, saves time, and helps maintain rhythm and control during depositions.

Depositions - It's About Cross

Depositions are valuable only if answers can be reused on cross-examination. Discovery or motions don’t change that. If testimony can’t become a clean cross question, it isn’t truly usable evidence.

Depositions - Crystals and Mud

Most deposition questions are “mud” used to move the witness and build context. Stay casual there. When an admission appears, switch to precise, clean questions to extract a usable “crystal” for cross-examination.

Depositions - Carving

When a witness gives a long, muddy answer with an admission inside, it’s unusable for cross-exam. Break the answer into short, controlled questions to isolate clear, precise admissions you can actually use.

Depositions - The Three Ps

Effective depositions rely on persistence. Rephrasing and revisiting questions over time usually breaks evasion. Depositions reward stamina, preparation, and practice.

Depositions - Fly the Plane

Handle deposition objections like you handle a snake in the cockpit: ignore the distraction and fly the plane. Don't argue with counsel; simply focus on the witness and get your answer.