©2025 SEAK. Inc.
By James J. Mangraviti, Jr., Esq.
Below are a non-exhaustive list of 33 expert witness deposition tactics used by lawyers when deposing expert witnesses.
- Beginning a deposition with a pointed, challenging question in an attempt to rattle the expert witness.
- Requesting that the expert witness waive reading and signing of the deposition transcript.
- Making the deposition physically uncomfortable for the expert witness (temperature, chair, stuffy room, no hydration, etc.).
- Conducting a lengthy deposition in an attempt to wear the expert witness down.
- Questioning on notes taken by the expert witness while at the deposition.
- Jumping to different topics to keep the expert witness off balance.
- Asking about the notes the expert witness took/created in the case.
- Asking if anything has been removed from the expert’s file.
- Intimidating the expert witness with a professional but unfriendly demeanor.
- Asking about conversations the expert witness had with retaining counsel during a break.
- Trying to get an answer that contradicts the expert witness’s report or disclosures or the interrogatories in the case.
- Trying to lock down the expert witness on how critical a factual assumption is.
- Questioning the expert on documents the expert has not previously reviewed.
- Attempting to get the expert witness to unwittingly attest to the authenticity of a document.
- Asking about key names and dates.
- Trying to get the expert witness to lose her cool.
- Asking unintelligible questions in an effort to get the expert witness to volunteer information.
- Remaining silent after the expert finishes answering a question to try to elicit more information.
- Getting the expert witness in a rhythm.
- Asking the expert witness long and convoluted questions.
- Asking “catchall” questions to limit future testimony.
- Using the expert’s own office against her.
- Bringing the opposing party to the deposition in an attempt to intimidate the deponent.
- Asking if the expert has anything else to add.
- Playing the “wide-eyed student” in an effort to get the expert talking.
- Using hypothetical questions designed to turn the expert against their retaining counsel’s case.
- Trying to get the expert thrown off the case- eliciting information to set the expert up for a motion to exclude.
- Questioning “magic word” legal standards.
- Scheduling a deposition over multiple days to get the expert to contradict herself.
- Getting the expert to criticize co-defendants.
- Mischaracterizing the expert’s testimony or opinion.
- Getting the expert to agree that a text, journal etc. is “authoritative.”
- Asking if the expert turned in a colleague she was critical of for professional discipline.



 
			

