Legal Question in Criminal Law in Minnesota

admissible evidence

What is considered relevant evidence in a criminal trial? If I rescued/stole three animals from a research laboratory, for example, could my attorney then introduce evidence (such as stolen lab files) to show that this laboratory's actions were cruel, even if totally legal?


Asked on 8/20/07, 2:38 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Thomas C. Gallagher Gallagher Criminal Defense

Re: admissible evidence

That is a huge topic. A comprehensive answer would be as long as a book. You could look at Article 4 of the Minnesota Rules of Evidence "Relevancy and its Limits," for starters. If some proposed evidence is reasonably related to a criminal charge or a defense, it would likely be relevant. Evidence can be excluded on grounds other than relevance, however.

It sounds like you are wanting to assert a defense like "necessity," "choice of evils," or "defense of others," though for all of those the legal status of animals as property, not persons, presents a problem. As for whether stolen files could be admissible, I don't know. Perhaps equivalent documents could be obtained legally, to avoid problems with that question.

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Answered on 8/21/07, 12:20 pm


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