Evidence Bar Exam Essay Explained (July 2013 MEE): Hearsay & Confrontation Clause
Studicata Studicata
47.2K subscribers
7,348 views
89

 Published On May 10, 2021

📚 LAW SCHOOL & BAR EXAM PREP

Law school prep: https://studicata.com/get-started/law...
Bar exam prep: https://studicata.com/get-started/bar...


🤝 CONNECT WITH YOUR INSTRUCTOR

Michael's Instagram:   / studicataguy  


❤️ COMMUNITY & REVIEWS

Community: https://studicata.com/groups/community
Testimonials: https://studicata.com/testimonials-an...
Submit a review: https://shoutout.studicata.com


📱 TECH

iOS app: https://studicata.com/ios
Android app: https://studicata.com/android


📣 ABOUT

Studicata provides a fresher, more relatable way to prep for law school finals and the bar exam. With top-rated video lectures, exam walkthrough videos, outlines, study guides, strategy guides, essay practice exams, multiple-choice assessments, performance tracking, and more—Studicata has you covered with everything you need to ace your finals and pass the bar exam with confidence.

Email: [email protected]

Learn more: https://studicata.com


🎬 VIDEO INFO

Evidence Bar Exam Essay Explained (July 2013 MEE): Hearsay & Confrontation Clause

Topics covered:

Hearsay Rule (FRE 801)
Hearsay Exception: Present Sense Impression (FRE 803(1))
Hearsay Exception: Excited Utterance (FRE 803(2))
Hearsay Exception: Statement Made for Medical Diagnosis or Treatment (FRE 803(4))
6th Amendment Confrontation Clause as a Constitutional Limitation on Admissible Hearsay
Testimonial Statements vs. Nontestimonial Statements
Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004)
Davis v. Washington, 547 U.S. 813, 822 (2006)
Michigan v. Bryant, 562 U.S. 344 (2011)

Learn more: https://studicata.com

show more

Share/Embed