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22 March 2019 / Kay Linnell
Issue: 7833 / Categories: Features , Expert Witness
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A light bulb moment

Kay Linnell shares a personal account of the road to becoming an expert witness… plus a few inside tips

After many years in professional practice—helping clients with their accounts, tax compliance, general planning and becoming involved in dispute resolution—I had the opportunity to use my industry expertise in a court case. Here, I learnt that my expert evidence was a rounded way to achieve a much better result and that being an expert witness is a very challenging and rewarding way to use one’s technical experience.

Based on that single experience, I decided that I could contribute to the furtherance of ‘better justice’ by becoming a professional expert witness. The difficulties or challenges in making such a transition fell into specific categories.

Playing by the rules

I needed to study and understand the requirements for persons holding themselves out to be expert witnesses. I started, initially, with the Civil Procedure Rules Pt 35 and PD 35 to better understand the key elements of expert testimony and report writing, including admissibility, contents, conduct and

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NEWS
The government has pledged to ‘move fast’ to protect children from harm caused by artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots, and could impose limits on social media as early as the summer
All eyes will be on the Court of Appeal (or its YouTube livestream) next week as it sits to consider the controversial Mazur judgment
An NHS Foundation Trust breached a consultant’s contract by delegating an investigation into his knowledge of nurse Lucy Letby’s case
Draft guidance for schools on how to support gender-questioning pupils provides ‘more clarity’, but headteachers may still need legal advice, an education lawyer has said
Litigation funder Innsworth Capital, which funded behemoth opt-out action Merricks v Mastercard, can bring a judicial review, the High Court ruled last week
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