Legal Question in Civil Rights Law in Colorado

tape recorded conversations

are they admisssable in court if the other party is lying and wrote other stuff to the court and i feel i have proff of the lies because of the recordings at least one or more and in doing so have also defamed my character


Asked on 5/22/07, 3:02 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Regina Mullen Legal Data Services, PLC

Re: tape recorded conversations

Admissibility is for the judge to decide. You can always try. If it was NOT done over the telephone and it contradicts what someone said under oath, it may not be admissible, but it will probably be heard. Two different things.

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Answered on 5/23/07, 1:28 pm
Philip Rosmarin Rosmarin Law Firm

Re: tape recorded conversations

Whether a tape-recorded conversation is admissible has nothing to do with whether the other party is lying. Just as when a person testifies in person and lies, it is up to the judge (if a trial to the court) or jury to determine whether the witness is lying.

Admissibility is based on whether the recording can be authenticated, meaning that the recording is accurate and unedited, and the voices can be identified.

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Answered on 5/23/07, 12:35 am


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