本帖最后由 choi 于 6-9-2024 09:37 编辑
(2) Eileen Sullivan, Glenn Thrush and Zach Montague, Hunter Biden's Daughter Testifies on His Behalf. at page A20.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/ ... aomi-testimony.html
("But under an intense cross-examination, her claim seemed to crumble. * * * The government produced several text exchanges that suggested he was not in a good place. * * * Ms Biden Neal was subdued as she sat in the witness box, glumly reading a sheaf of her texts printed out by the prosecution. She said she did 'not recall' sending them")
Note:
(a) Naomi Biden
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naomi_Biden
(1993- ; " is the eldest daughter of Hunter Biden and Kathleen Buhle * * * She grew up in Washington, DC, and attended the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia Law School"/ section 3 Personal life)
(b) The rules governing (criminal or civil) trial in common law is basically the same everywhere (in England, United States (states or federal)) Before trial, parties have to produce names of witnesses and lists of evidence they wish to introduce in their respective direct examination. (If a party does not, he can not call a witness or introduce an evidence. Naming or listing does not mean that he will actually call that witness or introduce that witness. So defense attorney in a criminal trial may list defendant as a witness, but not do so, to keep prosecution guessing.)
In a trial, for each one who testifies, there is the sequence: direct (examination), cross, re-direct, re-cross: re-direct is conducted by the same party that did direct, to rehabilitate the one who testify, after cross to impeach or undermine that same person.
The salient rule in cross examination or re-cross is that an attorney can introduce evidence not listed in the pretrial list, solely to impeach the one who is testifying. And this is what happened to the daughter yesterday, which is quoted above.
(c) Here is the (federal) rule to impeach a witness with her prior statement.
Federal Rule of Evidence (abbreviation Fed Rule Evid; federal courts and academics discuss and make rules, and send rules to Congress for change or approval) 613 states in full (2011 edition):
"(a) SHOWING OR DISCLOSING THE STATEMENT DURING EXAMINATION. When examining a witness about the witness’s prior statement, a party need not show it or disclose its contents to the witness. But the party must, on request, show it or disclose its contents to an adverse party’s attorney.
(b) EXTRINSIC EVIDENCE OF A PRIOR INCONSISTENT STATEMENT. Extrinsic evidence of a witness’s prior inconsistent statement is admissible only if the witness is given an opportunity to explain or deny the statement and an adverse party is given an opportunity to examine the witness about it, or if justice so requires. This subdivision (b) does not apply to an opposing party’s statement under Rule 801(d)(2)."
https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/d ... december_2020_0.pdf
(d) What does "extrinsic evidence" mean?
10. Cross-Examination and Impeachment, at page 5. In Professor Alex Tanford's course: 723 Evidence -- Syllabus. Summer 2020 (he does not use textbook; it is online only due to Covid pandemic; "All materials will be distributed online from the syllabus page at no charge").
https://law.indiana.edu/instruct ... 3/10impeach/T10.pdf
Quote:
"The usual foundation is:
(1) The cross-examiner must direct the witness's attention to a specific assertion made on direct examination that will be the subject of the impeachment, eg, 'Now on direct, you said the traffic light was red, is that right?' * * *
(2) The attention of the witness is directed to the time and place where, and the person to whom, the inconsistent statement was made, eg, 'Do you remember giving a deposition at my office on July 8, 2015?'
(3) The content of the prior statement is disclosed to the witness in any reasonable manner, and the witness is asked if she or he made the statement. Commonly, it is quoted [but not shown] by the attorney, eg, 'In that deposition, at page 25, didn't you say the light was green?'
(4) If the witness admits making the statement the questioning can go no further. Extrinsic evidence of the inconsistent statement is not admissible. The cross-examiner may not 'double-prove' it by also introducing (or having the witness read) the writing containing the inconsistent statement.
(5) If the witness denies or does not remember making the statement, and if the statement is on a material issue, then the cross-examiner may introduce extrinsic evidence of it (a written statement, a deposition, or a person claiming to have heard an oral statement). Extrinsic evidence is not permitted if the matter is collateral ['collateral' means related tangentially but not directly]."
-----------------------------------print edition (online version is slightly different, and slightly longer)
WILMINGTON, Delaware -- Hunter Biden’s daughter Naomi Biden Neal took the stand on Friday in hopes of taking her father’s defense into her own hands. By the time she embraced him at the defendant’s table after an hour of emotionally raw testimony, it was unclear whether she helped or harmed his cause.
Ms. Biden Neal, 30, told the court her father seemed “hopeful” and sober weeks before he claimed to be drug-free on a gun application at the heart of the government’s case. But that upbeat assessment was quickly undercut by prosecutors, who introduced anguished texts from that period in which she told her father he had driven her to the breaking point.
“I’m really sorry, dad, I can’t take this,” Ms. Biden Neal wrote in October 2018, after he had failed to respond to several of her messages when they were both in New York.
“I don’t know what to say, I just miss you so much,” she said. I just want to hang out with you.”
The dramatic testimony by Ms. Biden Neal — somber, clad in black and nagged by a nervous cough — capped the first week of Mr. Biden’s trial on charges that he falsely claimed to be sober on an application to buy a handgun on Oct. 12 in Delaware.
The government’s goal is to prove Mr. Biden was using drugs regularly in 2018 and 2019 and knowingly falsified the form. His lawyers have offered a spirited, if narrower, defense centered on questioning whether Mr. Biden was actually using drugs in October 2018 and challenging the recollection of the prosecution’s witnesses.
Over the previous few days, David C. Weiss, the special counsel in the case, summoned three women with painful, intimate experiences with Mr. Biden’s descent into crack and alcohol after the 2015 death of his brother: his former wife, Kathleen Buhle; a onetime girlfriend, Zoe Kestan; and Hallie Biden, the widow of his brother, Beau Biden, with whom he had an ill-fated romantic relationship.
Ms. Biden Neal has been the only woman called by the defense, led by the veteran defense lawyer Abbe Lowell.
Ms. Biden Neal, who works as a lawyer in Washington, had been eager to help out her father, who she believes is the target of a politically motivated prosecution, according to people familiar with the situation. Even if things had gone more smoothly, she could offer only limited insights into the actions of Mr. Biden, who was often absent from her life for months and erratic even when they were in the same city.
Mr. Lowell guided her through a series of gentle questions during a direct examination that lasted 11 minutes as she sought to bolster the defense’s contention that her father was working hard to kick his addiction to crack cocaine and alcohol in the weeks leading up to his gun purchase.
After having lunch with him in Los Angeles in August 2018, Ms. Biden Neal concluded that he was “the clearest” she had seen him since her uncle’s death three years earlier, she told the court.
“He seemed great; he seemed hopeful,” she recalled.
But under an intense cross-examination, her claim seemed to crumble.
Just three months later, in mid-October 2018, Mr. Biden visited New York City, where his daughter was entering her second year of law school and moving in with her boyfriend.
The government produced several text exchanges that suggested he was not in a good place.
Mr. Biden ignored Ms. Biden Neal’s desperate texts for hours and made a bizarre request when he did resurface, around 2 a.m. “Are you up? Please call me,” he wrote to his daughter. He wanted her boyfriend to bring him his truck, which the couple had borrowed, to Midtown Manhattan from Brooklyn.
Later that day, Ms. Biden Neal and her father exchanged more texts, trying to arrange handing off the keys. She had hoped to see him, but that was looking unlikely.
“So no c u!?” she texted him on Oct. 18, adding a sad-face emoji.
Mr. Biden responded, “I’m sorry, I have been so unreachable, it’s not fair to you.”
They did see each other the next day. But she later admitted their encounters were often fleeting, lasting no more than an hour or two.
Ms. Biden Neal was subdued as she sat in the witness box, glumly reading a sheaf of her texts printed out by the prosecution. She said she did “not recall” sending them when asked to explain her state of mind, noting that her main recollection of those days was how difficult it was for the two of them to connect.
Her father appeared to be fighting tears as she spoke.
After stepping down from the stand, Ms. Biden Neal walked over to her father, who was at the defense table, and embraced him before they exited the courtroom together.
The prosecution, which rested on Friday [June 7] morning, has gone to great length — through witness testimony, hundreds of contemporaneous text messages and bank records, as well as the defendant’s own words — to illustrate that Mr. Biden spiraled through an unrelenting addiction to crack cocaine in the months before and after October 2018.
Over the course of the week, Mr. Lowell has established that no one saw Mr. Biden doing crack cocaine in October 2018, the month he bought the gun. Ms. Biden Neal’s testimony on Friday did not change that.
But two text messages retrieved from Mr. Biden’s phone have been hurting his defense from the start. One day after he purchased the gun, he sent a text saying he was meeting a dealer named Mookie. A day later, he followed up to say that he was sleeping on a car and smoking crack.
The apparent admission came to a head as Mr. Lowell questioned the prosecution’s last witness, Joshua Romig, a special agent with the Drug Enforcement Administration, who was asked to translate drug lingo introduced in the government’s case against Mr. Biden.
Mr. Lowell made the point that while the prosecution has spent days examining Mr. Biden’s communications earlier in 2018 and in 2019, showing pictures of him holding a crack pipe and texts about buying drugs, there was nothing comparable to show for October 2018.
The trial has served as a vivid reminder of a harrowing drama that has played out in the Biden family for years, underlined by the presence of friends and family of Mr. Biden’s in the courtroom every day. The first lady, Jill Biden, flew back from France on Thursday to retake her seat in the front row behind the defense counsel table on Friday.
The case centers on whether Mr. Biden lied on Oct. 12, 2018, when he marked “no” in answering a particular question on a federal gun application. It asked, “Are you an unlawful user of, or addicted to, marijuana or any depressant, stimulant, narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance?”
The first lady, Jill Biden, flew back from France to attend the trial on Friday.Credit...Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
Mr. Biden is charged with three felonies: lying to a federally licensed gun dealer, making a false claim on the federal firearms application and possessing an illegally obtained gun. If convicted, he could face up to 25 years in prison and $750,000 in fines. But nonviolent first-time offenders who have not been accused of using the weapon in another crime rarely receive serious prison time for the charges.
|