Pocket Prelims (Download Only) Out of Stock
$65.00
$65.00
$65.00
Product Details
This is a digital download of the book. There is no physical copy of this book available.
Whether you are a seasoned public defender or a new prosecutor, Pocket Prelims is an essential guidebook for your next preliminary hearing. Based on years of first-hand experience, this book provides readers with practical advice and information on a wide range of legal issues that can arise in a preliminary hearing. It is a quick reference guide for all of those issues you know you know but can't remember at the moment. Each chapter contains either statutes, case law, definitions, or a combination of all three, for the criminal law area being addressed. In many chapters of the book, Daniel Coble included Factors to Consider when dealing with a particular case.
Preliminary hearings move quickly and can cover nearly all crimes. Because of the fast-paced nature of preliminary hearings, this book was designed to be as user-friendly as possible. The book is spiral-bound, allowing it to lay flat, and has been tabbed at each chapter. This will allow the reader to quickly find the legal issue and present a coherent argument to the court.
Be prepared and confident at your next preliminary hearing with Pocket Prelims.
Pocket Prelims - Short from South Carolina Bar on Vimeo.
Summary
of Contents:
Chapter
1: The Law on Preliminary Hearing
Chapter
2: The Fourth Amendment
Chapter
3: Guns
Chapter
4: Drugs
Chapter
5: Property Crimes
Chapter
6: Assault
Chapter
7: Domestic Violence
Chapter
8: Robbery
Chapter
9: Murder/Manslaughter
Chapter
10: Miscellaneous Issues
Chapter
11: Practice Tips
Chapter
12: SC Magistrate Courts Contact Information
Chapter
13: SC Criminal Rules of Procedure
Chapter
14: SC Rules of Evidence
Pocket Prelims - Table of Contents
Tags
The South Carolina Bar is an accredited CLE provider in South Carolina only. Attorneys are responsible for seeking their own credit in other jurisdictions.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in CLE programs and publications do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the South Carolina Bar, its sections, or committees. The South Carolina Bar believes that all Bar members have the right to both meaningful learning and to the exchange of ideas in a civil environment. The Bar reserves the right to remove or exclude any person from a Bar event if that person is causing inappropriate disturbance, behaving in a manner inconsistent with accepted standards of decorum, or in any way preventing fellow Bar members from meaningful participation and learning.