Texas Defendant Request For Disclosure

State:
Texas
Control #:
TX-G0225
Format:
PDF
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A04 Defendant Request For Disclosure
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FAQ

Requests for Disclosure the most basic form of Texas Discovery. Requests for Disclosure are issued in almost all lawsuits. Requests for Disclosure are designed to produce the most basic information about a lawsuit. In a recent case, a party failed to answer our Request for Disclosure.

Motion for disclosure is a standard motion filed by the state asking you to disclose any evidence you plan on using at trial. Supplemental disclosure means the state has more evidence to give you.

The request for disclosure is a form that the parties send to one another requesting answers to questions and the production of certain documents that are routine in every case (the other discovery items are more specifically tailored depending on the type of case).

Formal discovery is the process of discovery that is clearly regulated by statute and common law. Types of formal discovery include such requests as interrogatories, requests for production of documents, and depositions.

Anything a witness or party saw, heard, or did in connection with the dispute. anything anyone said at a particular time and place (for example, in a business meeting related to the dispute or after a car accident that turned into a lawsuit)

But disclosures under Rule 26(a)(1) or (2) and the following discovery requests and responses must not be filed until they are used in the proceeding or the court orders filing: depositions, interrogatories, requests for documents or tangible things or to permit entry onto land, and requests for admission.

The newly adopted Rule 5(f) requires district courts to issue orders at the outset of a federal criminal prosecution confirming the federal prosecutor's obligations to disclose exculpatory evidence to the defense.

A Brady motion is a defendant's request that the prosecution in a California criminal case turn over any potentially exculpatory evidence, or evidence that may be favorable to the accused.

The initial disclosure test is an objective test. Material must be disclosed if it "might reasonably be considered capable of undermining the case for the prosecution or of assisting the case for the accused".

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Texas Defendant Request For Disclosure