Expert shopping or witness shopping or expert mining is the practice of finding an
authority
Authority is commonly understood as the legitimate power of a person or group of other people.
In a civil state, ''authority'' may be practiced by legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government,''The New Fontana Dictionary of M ...
on a given subject whose professional opinion is skewed toward the answer that the searching party already prefers. In
civil and criminal litigation, expert shopping occurs when, having received an unfavourable opinion from one expert, a litigant seeks opinions from one or more other experts, until he finds an expert whose opinion is favourable to his case. Expert shopping may result in a
battle of the experts.
An
expert witness
An expert witness, particularly in common law countries such as the United Kingdom, Australia, and the United States, is a person whose opinion by virtue of education, training, certification, skills or experience, is accepted by the judge as ...
can be paid to testify in favor of one side of the case. In this case, the expert witnesses on each side may have totally different opinions. This use is well-known use.
Certain
news media
The news media or news industry are forms of mass media that focus on delivering news to the general public. These include News agency, news agencies, newspapers, news magazines, News broadcasting, news channels etc.
History
Some of the fir ...
have been accused of "expert shopping" in relation to their news reports.
History
Expert shopping in litigation began in the nineteenth century.
References
*Jonah B Gelbach, "Expert Mining and Required Disclosure" (2014) 81 University of Chicago Law Revie
131*Mark Thomas, "Expert Shopping: Appeals Adducing Fresh Evidence in Diminished Responsibility Cases" (2020) 84 The Journal of Criminal La
249*Pamela Louise Johnston, "Court-Appointed Scientific Expert Witnesses: Unfettering Expertise" (1987) 2 High Technology Law Journa
249*Mark James
"Closing Down" The New Law Journal, No 7266, 30 March 2007
*Catherine Urquhart and Johnathan Payne
"Closing Down Sale" The New Law Journal, No 7459, 31 March 2011
*Chris Pamplin
"Buyer Beware: The Hazards of Expert Shopping"(2022) The New Law Journal, No 7974, 8 April 2022
p 19*Judith Hopper
"Replacing experts and the risks of expert shopping" Local Government Lawyer, 19 May 2023
*John Hyde
"Judge rejects 'expert shopping' accusation and allows a sub" The Law Society Gazette, 5 April 2023
*Déirdre Dwyer. The Judicial Assessment of Expert Evidence. Cambridge University Press. 2008. Pages 171
177 284, 310, 356 to 358 and 369.
*Paul Roberts and Michael Stockdale (eds). Forensic Science Evidence and Expert Witness Testimony. Edward Elgar. 2018. Pages 13
221and 222.
*Artur Appazov. Expert Evidence and International Criminal Justice. Springer. 2016. Pages 69 an
77
*Robert Horne and John Mullen. The Expert Witness in Construction. Wiley & Sons. 2013. Pages 27 an
163
*Richard Glover. Murphy on Evidence. Fifteenth Edition. Oxford University Press. 2017. Page
624and 625.
*Adrian Keane and Paul McKeown. The Modern Law of Evidence. Fourteenth Edition. Oxford University Press. 2022
Page 682
*Lena Walhberg and Christian Dahlman. "The Role of the Expert Witness". Philosophical Foundations of Evidence Law. Oxford University Press. 2021
Page 55
*Stuart Sime. A Practical Approach to Civil Procedure. Twenty-fifth Edition. Oxford University Press. 2022
Page 389
*Paula Loughlin and Stephen Gerlis
"Disclosure of Expert's Report" Civil Procedure. Second Edition. Cavendish Publishing. 2004.
*Bankim Thanki (ed). The Law of Privilege. Second Edition. Oxford University Press. 2011. Page
169and 170.
*Nigel Poole. Clinical Negligence Made Clear. Bath Publishing. 2019
Pages 180 and 237
Evidence law
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