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Court Witness Preparation

Training Courses

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Training course summary

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At TrainingTeams Ltd, we run two training courses that will help and assist employees to give evidence at court. Expert trainers will be able to give the benefit of over 38 years experience in court procedure and best practice advice for witnesses. The first course is a general course for a group of employees in a classroom situation with scenarios to assist in giving evidence in general. The second course is a more personal course for an individual or small group who may have to be called to give evidence to court. All delegates attending this course will be given the opportunity to be cross examined. Delegates will be required to submit a report prior to the attendance of the course for cross-examination course. The report must not be for a historic real or current live matter. TrainingTeams Ltd. can assist with the creation of this report if required

Regions:
  • All Areas
Delivery:
  • In House
Category:
Difficulty:
  • Introductory

Further Details

NOTE- These courses are not coaching courses and specific evidence of a live case will not be discussed. The content of the course has been seen and approved by the CPS and will only cover generalities to make the perspective witness feel and appear more confident and professional in court. We also cannot give this course for people who are defending a case due to the need for professional Defence advice. The course is only for a defence or prosecution WITNESS. In some companies, employees and even Management are sometimes going to be called to court to give evidence as a witness. Most people called as witnesses have never had to go to court before. They will naturally feel nervous about giving evidence in court. The formality and the legal language may appear confusing. Witnesses may feel anxious about giving evidence in front of the accused and other people they do not know in an open court. Most criminal trials take place in a magistrates’ court and if the defendant pleads guilty they will not be required to attend or give evidence. More serious cases are usually sent to the crown court and will be heard in front of a jury if the offender denies the offence. A witness is someone who is asked to tell the court about something that happened. The witness is not on trial and is not in trouble with the court. He or she only has to tell the truth. A person is only called to be a witness because they have something to tell (called 'evidence') which may help a prosecution or defence in the case of a criminal court or a person (a 'party') who is making a claim or disputing a claim made through a civil court. A civil court deals with non-criminal matters, for example: family proceedings, including divorce and adoption; examining the cause of death of a person claims for debt; and claims for damages to compensate for personal injury or damage to property. A person might be asked to be a witness because, for example, they have seen an incident take place, and are able to say how it happened. In this case they are called a 'witness of fact'; or they have a special qualification, knowledge or skill (doctor, dentist, plumber, builder, mechanic), and can give a professional opinion (a 'report'), about injuries, the state of repair of a motor vehicle or the quality of building work done by others. In this case they are called an 'expert witness'.

Guide price

circa £650 1 day per group

 

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