Evidence and Objections

This is the longest evidence-and-objections treatment in the trilogy, and it earns its length: it walks through evidentiary planning, timing and phrasing of objections, motions in limine, offers of proof, preservation of error, and curative instructions, then catalogues objections by type — direct-examination form, cross-examination form, exclusionary, irrelevancy, privilege, competency and foundation, improper opinion, documentary, hearsay (with a full taxonomy of exceptions and unavailability rules), and constitutional limits in criminal cases. The depth makes it usable as a primary text for an applied-evidence course, or as the doctrinal anchor for a trial advocacy class that wants every student performance to be evaluated with a real evidentiary lens.