LOUIS NIZER'S GEMS OF TRIAL PRACTICE

Quoted, digested and paraphrased by Steve Posner

In 1973, Louis Nizer, one of the 20th Century's great trial lawyers, published an analysis of the espionage case against Julius and Ethel Rosenberg called The Implosion Consipracy. Nizer covered every stage of the proceedings, from jury voir dire to the final appeals and executions. He ground his analytical ax fine, and in the process, threw off sparks of tactical lore that might help aspiring and perhaps even experienced practitioners. I've listed some of them here by topic. I keep the list in my desk drawer. I hope you find it as useful as I do. The cites are from the 1973 Fawcett paperback edition.

Courtroom Psychology

Judges

Opening Statements

Objections

Completeness

Witnesses Generally

Cross-Examination

The Fifth Amendment Right Against Self-Incrimination

Summation

Sentence

END