[blindlaw] Is blindness ever consitter an issue in court

denise avant dravant at ameritech.net
Wed Jul 10 23:16:11 UTC 2013


As part of discovery, you may be able to review the photos beforehand with an assistant


Sent from my iPhone

On Jul 10, 2013, at 6:12 PM, pattichang at att.net wrote:

> I am blind and have served in Illinois on a jury. There was pictorial evidence. There were also diagrams of the location. The judge asked and I think this is appropriate for most situations that both attorneys verbally describe what they were pointing at and reference verbally anything that related to the evidence. I would also note that most states require a witness to describe what is in the pictures in order to lay a proper foundation.
> 
> 
> Patti S. Gregory-Chang
> NFBI President
> NFB Scholarship Comm. Chair
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> On Jul 10, 2013, at 6:05 PM, "RJ Sandefur" <joltingjacksandefur at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> John Smith is a blind defence aturney. He is defending Mike shafer on murder 1 charges. The state has photos of the defendant at the crime seen. What should the state do taking into consitteration the defence lawyer is blind and is unable to see the pictures? RJ
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