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- Title
A NEW TEST FOR TWO-WAY VIDEO TESTIMONY: BRINGING MARYLAND V. CRAIG INTO THE TECHNOLOGICAL ERA.
- Authors
Montell, Natalie D.
- Abstract
The article discusses the use of two-way video testimony in U.S. courtrooms in 2012 in light of the two-part test created in the U.S. Supreme Court case Maryland v. Craig. A defendant's right to confront his or her accuser, which is known as the Confrontation Clause, can be found in the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. A 2010 ruling by the Court of Appeals of New York court in the case People v. Wrotten states that two-way video testimony is constitutional.
- Subjects
UNITED States; LEGAL testimony; TECHNOLOGY &; law; TWO-way communication; MARYLAND v. Craig (Supreme Court case); UNITED States. Constitution. 6th Amendment; DEFENDANTS; CONSTITUTIONAL law; ACTIONS &; defenses (Law)
- Publication
University of Louisville Law Review, 2011, Vol 50, Issue 2, p361
- ISSN
1942-9274
- Publication type
Article