A) The footage is admissible if the officer can authenticate it as a fair and accurate representation. B) The footage is inadmissible unless the police seized it under a warrant. C) The footage is inadmissible because the owner must testify. D) The footage is admissible if the officer can authenticate it as a fair and accurate representation. E) The footage is admissible only if the court personally views the CCTV system.
A) Authentication may be established through testimony of a person who saw the post. B) The evidence is inadmissible unless certified by the NBI Cybercrime Division. C) Authentication may be established through testimony of a person who saw the post. D) The confession is valid because it’s public. E) The screenshot is self-authenticating.
A) The defense B) The court. C) The prosecution D) The defense E) The police investigator
A) The evidence may be excluded due to broken chain of custody. B) The evidence can still be used if the court deems it substantial. C) The delay is irrelevant in criminal proceedings. D) The evidence may be excluded due to broken chain of custody. E) The evidence remains valid if the analyst testifies.
A) The statement is admissible because it relates to the crime. B) The statement is admissible as part of res gestae. C) The statement is hearsay and inadmissible unless the neighbor testifies. D) The statement is hearsay and inadmissible unless the neighbor testifies. E) The statement is admissible since it’s relevant.
A) No B) Yes C) No D) No E) Yes
A) Valid if signed before a barangay official. B) Inadmissible for violation of constitutional rights. C) Admissible if recorded in writing. D) Inadmissible for violation of constitutional rights. E) Admissible if voluntarily given.
A) Only the years of service of the expert. B) Whether the expert is from a government agency. C) Whether the testimony is favorable to the prosecution. D) The expert’s experience and qualifications in the relevant field. E) The expert’s experience and qualifications in the relevant field.
A) That the loss of the original is not due to bad faith. B) That the confession was voluntary. C) That the copy is clear and readable. D) That the loss of the original is not due to bad faith. E) That the witness saw the original.
A) Refuse only if instructed by the client. B) Refuse because it is protected by attorney-client privilege. C) Disclose to prevent miscarriage of justice. D) Refuse because it is protected by attorney-client privilege. E) Disclose since it involves a criminal act.
A) Exclude the report because it lacks proper authentication. B) Admit it as part of public records. C) Admit the report because it came from a law enforcement officer. D) Exclude the report because it lacks proper authentication. E) Admit it if the officer orally testifies to its contents.
A) Testimony of the arresting officer automatically validates the exhibit. B) The firearm is admissible as long as it was seized legally. C) Absence of documentation compromises evidentiary integrity. D) Chain of custody is immaterial if the firearm is present. E) Absence of documentation compromises evidentiary integrity.
A) Admissible only if it proves fraud or mistake in the written confession. B) Inadmissible, because written evidence prevails over oral evidence. C) Admissible, because it clarifies intent. D) Admissible only if it proves fraud or mistake in the written confession. E) Automatically inadmissible in all circumstances.
A) Inadmissible because emails can be altered. B) Admissible once printed copies are presented. C) Automatically admissible as electronic evidence. D) Admissible if proven through metadata and authentication. E) Admissible if proven through metadata and authentication.
A) Only written admissions are binding. B) Statements can be withdrawn anytime before trial. C) Statements in open court are binding judicial admissions. D) Statements in open court are binding judicial admissions. E) Presence at the scene is not material.
A) That the original existed and was lost without bad faith. B) That the copy is certified. C) That the original existed and was lost without bad faith. D) That the information is relevant. E) That the logbook is public record.
A) Ability to perceive and truthfully relate facts. B) Ability to perceive and truthfully relate facts. C) The consistency of statements with police reports. D) The presence of parents during testimony. E) Age alone determines competence.
A) Weight or credibility of evidence. B) Competence of the witness. C) Jurisdiction of the court. D) Weight or credibility of evidence. E) Admissibility of evidence.
A) Deny disclosure to protect state interests unless fairness demands otherwise. B) Compel disclosure since all evidence must be public. C) Automatically deny all such requests. D) Allow disclosure if the informant’s identity is minor. E) Deny disclosure to protect state interests unless fairness demands otherwise.
A) Agree, because social media content is public. B) Disagree, because courts cannot judicially notice specific online statements. C) Disagree only if the posts were deleted. D) Agree, since social media is widely used. E) Disagree, because courts cannot judicially notice specific online statements.
A) Admit it if it helps explain testimony and is properly authenticated. B) Exclude the diagram for being illustrative only. C) Admit it only if the defense approves. D) Admit it if it helps explain testimony and is properly authenticated. E) Exclude it because it was not drawn by an architect.
A) No B) Yes C) Yes D) No E) Yes
A) No B) Yes C) Yes D) Both A and C. E) Both A and C.
A) No B) No C) Yes D) Yes E) No
A) Object for violating the opinion rule. B) Allow it as part of the officer’s perception. C) Admit it as expert opinion. D) Object for violating the opinion rule. E) Ignore since it’s harmless.
A) Yes B) No. C) No D) Yes E) No
A) Public document because it is part of an official duty. B) Public document because it is part of an official duty. C) Inadmissible because not from the police. D) Admissible only if certified by the barangay captain. E) Private document unless notarized.
A) The testimony is still valid. B) The witness can be fined but testimony is retained. C) The court may summarize the testimony. D) The testimony should be stricken off the record. E) The testimony should be stricken off the record.
A) Prove due execution and explain non-production of the original. B) Prove due execution and explain non-production of the original. C) Nothing; photocopies are admissible. D) Authenticate the signature only. E) Ask the dealer to testify instead.
A) Hold the earlier admission binding unless clearly shown to be made by mistake. B) Allow the correction as part of truth-seeking. C) Accept whichever statement is favorable to the prosecution. D) Disregard the inconsistency. E) Hold the earlier admission binding unless clearly shown to be made by mistake.
A) No, because judicial notice cannot establish illegality. B) No, because judicial notice cannot establish illegality. C) Yes D) No E) Yes
A) The defense B) The defense C) The complainant D) The Court E) The prosecution
A) The chemist’s testimony cures the defect. B) The evidence remains admissible. C) The integrity of the evidence is compromised. D) The integrity of the evidence is compromised. E) The defense must prove tampering.
A) Yes B) No C) No D) No E) Yes
A) Sustain; body language interpretation is opinion, not expertise. B) Sustain only if the defense disagrees. C) Overrule; criminologists can give any opinion. D) Overrule if the criminologist is licensed. E) Sustain; body language interpretation is opinion, not expertise.
A) Admissible if found in police records. B) Admissible as long as relevant. C) Inadmissible due to lack of authentication. D) Admissible because it’s a confession. E) Inadmissible due to lack of authentication.
A) Admit it if properly identified and relevant. B) Admit it only if the defense agrees. C) Admit it if properly identified and relevant. D) Reject it for lack of pre-trial listing. E) Exclude it for violating due process.
A) Competence if she can perceive and relate events truthfully. B) Competence if she can perceive and relate events truthfully. C) Automatic disqualification due to mental deficiency. D) Competence only if she is literate. E) Disqualification because of unreliability.
A) Yes. B) No. C) Yes D) No E) Yes
A) That the letter was important. B) That the loss of the original was not due to bad faith. C) That the accused wrote the letter. D) That the loss of the original was not due to bad faith. E) That he remembers the contents.
A) Admit it if the captain signed a blotter entry. B) Exclude it as hearsay because the barangay captain is not testifying. C) Admit it under official records exception. D) Admit the statement since the barangay captain is a public official. E) Exclude it as hearsay because the barangay captain is not testifying.
A) A police report confirming the texts. B) Only printed screenshots. C) Presentation of the phone and witness authentication. D) Presentation of the phone and witness authentication. E) Certification from a telecommunications company.
A) No. B) Yes C) Yes D) No. E) No
A) No B) Yes C) Yes D) No. E) Yes
A) That the original was lost or unavailable without bad faith. B) That the copy was notarized. C) That the scan is clear. D) That the original was lost or unavailable without bad faith. E) That the scan was made by the NBI.
A) Ignore the earlier statement. B) Allow the change for clarification. C) Treat the prior admission as binding unless shown to be made under palpable mistake. D) Treat the prior admission as binding unless shown to be made under palpable mistake. E) Allow both versions to stand.
A) Compel disclosure to ensure full evidence. B) Respect privilege unless disclosure is essential to a fair trial. C) Respect privilege unless disclosure is essential to a fair trial. D) Require partial disclosure. E) Deny the claim since it’s a criminal case.
A) No issue if the bullet is genuine. B) Admissibility issue due to broken chain of custody. C) Admissibility issue due to broken chain of custody. D) Relevance issue. E) Weight issue only.
A) The court B) Both equally C) The defense D) The prosecution. E) The prosecution.
A) No B) No C) Yes D) Yes. E) Yes
A) That the loss was not due to bad faith. B) That the investigator remembers its contents C) That the accused admitted writing the letter D) That the loss was not due to bad faith. E) That a photocopy exists
A) The circumstantial evidence forms an unbroken chain leading to guilt. B) The fingerprints alone suffice C) There’s at least one eyewitness D) The circumstantial evidence forms an unbroken chain leading to guilt. E) The accused’s motive is clearly proven
A) No B) No C) Yes. D) Yes E) Yes.
A) Present a handwriting expert or a witness familiar with the handwriting. B) Ask the accused to confirm its authorship C) Present the envelope only D) Submit it as circumstantial evidence E) Present a handwriting expert or a witness familiar with the handwriting.
A) Her qualifications, training, and experience. B) Her length of service only. C) Her qualifications, training, and experience. D) The title “chemist” is not essential. E) Whether she works in a government lab.
A) No. B) No C) No. D) Yes E) Yes
A) Deny the subpoena because of attorney-client privilege. B) Allow it if the client has died C) Deny the subpoena because of attorney-client privilege. D) Deny only if the lawyer objects E) Allow it since the information concerns a crime
A) That a backup copy exists B) That the footage was unaltered and properly handled from extraction to court presentation. C) That the footage was unaltered and properly handled from extraction to court presentation. D) That the technician’s employment ended legally E) That the footage was relevant
A) Yes B) No. C) No D) Yes E) No.
A) It’s hearsay unless the chemist testifies B) It is a public document admissible as an official record. C) It is a public document admissible as an official record. D) It’s admissible only if notarized E) It must be certified by the DOJ
A) Yes B) Yes C) No D) No. E) No.
A) Automatically acquits the accused B) Potential break in chain of custody affecting admissibility. C) Potential break in chain of custody affecting admissibility. D) None, since the gun is intact E) Only affects weight of evidence
A) Experience and training in firearm forensics. B) Whether statement favors the prosecution C) Experience and training in firearm forensics. D) If the criminologist was first at the scene E) If testimony is consistent with autopsy
A) Yes B) No. C) Yes D) Yes E) No
A) Accuracy of the photocopy B) Existence and loss of the original without bad faith. C) Certification by the barangay D) Testimony from any witness E) Existence and loss of the original without bad faith.
A) Admit only if notarized B) Reject because copies aren’t originals C) Admit it as an exception for official records. D) Reject it; the analyst must testify E) Admit it as an exception for official records.
A) Both statements B) Neither, since the first taints the second C) Only the first, being spontaneous D) Only the second, made with counsel. E) Only the second, made with counsel.
A) Treat both as alternative defenses B) Disregard the earlier admission C) Hold the prior admission binding absent proof of mistake. D) Allow change because it aids defense E) Hold the prior admission binding absent proof of mistake.
A) Yes B) Yes C) A and C are both correct. D) A and C are both correct. E) No
A) Admissible; imperfections affect weight, not admissibility. B) Exclude to prevent prejudice C) Admissible only if retaken D) Admissible; imperfections affect weight, not admissibility. E) Inadmissible due to poor quality
A) Exclude it; unmarked evidence is inadmissible B) Exclude it unless marked within 24 hours C) Admit it if it can still be properly identified as the same object. D) Admit it if it can still be properly identified as the same object. E) Admit it automatically because it’s physical evidence
A) No B) Yes. C) No D) Yes E) Yes.
A) Yes B) No. C) No D) No. E) Yes
A) Yes B) Yes C) No. D) No. E) No
A) Automatically uphold privilege B) Allow disclosure only to the judge in private C) Compel disclosure in all cases D) Deny disclosure unless essential to ensure fairness. E) Deny disclosure unless essential to ensure fairness.
A) Strike out the entire testimony B) Excuse him from answering C) Compel him to answer; cross-examination is a right. D) Compel him to answer; cross-examination is a right. E) Allow written answers instead
A) No B) Yes C) Yes. D) Yes. E) No
A) Exclude it for lack of personal examination. B) Admit it if the expert is well-known C) Exclude it for lack of personal examination. D) Admit it if based on police data E) Accept it as expert opinion
A) No. B) Yes C) No D) No. E) Yes
A) Demand authentication of logs B) Simply deny the allegation C) Present evidence proving unauthorized use. D) Shift burden back to prosecution E) Present evidence proving unauthorized use.
A) Admit it only if expert testimony is offered B) Exclude it for lack of DNA analysis C) Admit it if it helps identify the accused’s participation. D) Admit it if it helps identify the accused’s participation. E) Exclude it as immateria
A) No. B) Yes C) No D) No. E) Yes
A) Violation of laboratory procedure but not evidence rules B) Only affects credibility, not admissibility C) Irrelevant unless sample contaminated D) Break in chain of custody affecting admissibility. E) Break in chain of custody affecting admissibility.
A) Overrule if the statement is logical B) Sustain; the statement is improper opinion. C) Sustain only if witness not licensed D) Sustain; the statement is improper opinion. E) Overrule; criminologists may interpret behavior
A) That the post came from the accused’s account and was not altered. B) That the printout is clear and readable C) That the post came from the accused’s account and was not altered. D) That the website is legitimate E) That the witness saw it online
A) Yes B) Yes. C) No D) No E) Yes.
A) No. B) Yes C) No. D) Yes E) No
A) The prior admission is binding unless shown to be made under mistake. B) The prior admission is binding unless shown to be made under mistake. C) Both are disregarded D) The admission is withdrawn automatically E) The new statement overrides the old one
A) The authenticity and integrity of the data during transfer. B) That the system was government-owned C) hy That the USB was sealed D) The authenticity and integrity of the data during transfer. E) That the copy matches the original by appearance
A) Strike the affidavit; absence denies cross-examination. B) Allow it as documentary evidence C) Strike the affidavit; absence denies cross-examination. D) Admit it if the defense had notice E) Admit it since it’s notarized
A) Certification by the police chief B) The suspect’s oral confirmation C) Authentication of the photo by anyone D) Proof that the original was lost or destroyed without bad faith. E) Proof that the original was lost or destroyed without bad faith.
A) Accept it if it reflects sincerity B) Overlook since it’s minor C) Allow it as part of witness perception D) Object; the statement is a conclusion not based on expert competence. E) Object; the statement is a conclusion not based on expert competence.
A) Yes B) No C) Yes. D) No E) Yes.
A) Admissible automatically B) Valid if signed before an officer C) Inadmissible for lack of authentication. D) Inadmissible for lack of authentication. E) Admissible but with lesser evidentiary weight
A) No B) Yes C) Yes. D) Yes. E) No
A) Deny disclosure unless material to the accused’s right to defense. B) Deny disclosure unless material to the accused’s right to defense. C) Automatically sustain the privilege D) Refer to the DOJ for decision E) Compel immediate disclosure
A) No B) Yes. C) Yes D) No E) Yes.
A) His employment background B) Whether he has prior testimony experience C) His capacity to perceive, recall, and communicate truthfully. D) His capacity to perceive, recall, and communicate truthfully. E) His age and education only
A) It’s disregarded once denied B) The admission is binding unless made under palpable mistake. C) The prosecution must prove it again D) The defense can withdraw it anytime E) The admission is binding unless made under palpable mistake.
A) Admit it; clarity affects weight, not admissibility. B) Exclude unless enhanced C) Exclude it due to poor quality D) Admit only if expert testimony is added E) Admit it; clarity affects weight, not admissibility. |