Alan J. Lazarus | Drinkler Biddle & Reath | July 1, 2019 The steady but sometimes slow adoption by the states of the Daubert standard for expert admissibility, and the accompanying recession of the Frye standard, is something of a coming of age for the national jurisprudence. Frye has become outmoded and anachronistic in an era of dizzying technological and scientific… Continue reading Growing Pains: The Story Behind Florida’s Daubert Arc – Part 1
Tag: Daubert Standard
The Final Word? The Florida Supreme Court Adopts the Daubert Standard for Evidence
J. Blake Hunter | Butler Weihmuller Katz Craig | May 29, 2019 Prior to 1993, federal and state courts used the standard enunciated in Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013 (D.C. Cir. 1923), to determine whether scientific evidence should be admitted at a trial. The Frye standard requires the offeror of the evidence to establish that the… Continue reading The Final Word? The Florida Supreme Court Adopts the Daubert Standard for Evidence