I really enjoyed that part. Of course my fee was a bit higher for days
spent in court (very enjoyable!) and I like to dictate the questions to the
opposing lawyer for his cross - and most would fall for it. The best
invariably was a cross question not quite related to the case at hand which
was so easy to answer: "Sorry, that's out of my expertise and I'm not
qualified to answer." And the judge breaking in telling him to stop wasting
time and keep it relevant. What's nicer than having his honor on your side!
The best I ever had was actually right close to home on an amateur radio
antenna/zoning case (no charge of course) with K3DSF vs U.S.Steel. Two of
us were :Pete's expert witnesses, myself and K3BNS, now W3BE, who
subsequently became FCC's head of personal (Amateur and CB) in DC, and
until recently QCWA president. Story is fairly long - maybe another time
here. But the case - l963 +/- is well known to ARRL, and I don't know why
it hasn't set a precedent for the covenant restriction crap. But I'm no
lawyer, so what do I know. Dave, K3TX
----- Original Message -----
From: "Carter" <k8vt@ameritech.net>
To: "Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment" <tentec@contesting.com>
Sent: Friday, February 19, 2010 7:17 AM
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Electric safety
> DAVID HELLER wrote:
>
>> The real fun came from the cases where some lawyer thought he could
>> show me up on cross-examination. Not once did the lawyer win.
>
> Been there, done that!
>
> I was the forensic expert for a large telcom and spent my share of time
> in court...and no, not once did the opposing lawyer win. They all mostly
> seem to have forgotten the lawyer's Golden Rule of never asking a
> question to which they don't know the answer. :-)
>
> Carter K8VT
>
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