Expert Witness Impeachment Analysis
Analyzes expert witness materials (reports, depositions, CVs, publications) to identify inconsistencies, opinion drift, and methodological failures for impeachment. Produces a prioritized inconsistency register, cross-examination questions, and Daubert/Frye challenge assessment. Use when challenging expert reliability or credibility during discovery, pre-trial, or trial in commercial litigation.
Expert Witness Impeachment Analysis
Systematically compares expert materials to surface contradictions and methodological failures that support cross-examination, exclusion motions, or weight challenges.
Quick Start
- Collect: current report, supplemental/rebuttal reports, deposition transcripts, CV, published works, prior case testimony
- Confirm procedural posture: phase (discovery / pre-trial / trial) and admissibility standard (Daubert or Frye)
- Run analysis across all five dimensions below
- Produce outputs in order: Register → Patterns → Cross-Exam → Admissibility → Motion Summary
Analysis Dimensions
| Category | What to Find |
|---|---|
| Opinion Changes | Modified, reversed, or newly qualified conclusions across documents |
| Methodological Inconsistencies | Different approaches, data sets, or protocols without explanation |
| Factual Contradictions | Inconsistent statements about underlying facts or reviewed evidence |
| Credential Discrepancies | Qualifications or publications stated differently across documents |
| Unsupported Conclusions | Testimony exceeding the report's scope or lacking methodological basis |
Output Structure
1. Inconsistency Register
For each finding:
- ID: sequential number
- Category: from table above
- Materiality: High / Medium / Low (effect on ultimate opinion)
- Source A: [document, page, line] — verbatim quote
- Source B: [document, page, line] — verbatim quote
- Delta: one-sentence contradiction description
- Expert explanation offered: yes/no (summarize if yes)
2. Pattern Assessment
- Group related inconsistencies to distinguish systemic unreliability from isolated error
- Flag temporal patterns: opinions strengthening/weakening without new data, or shifting after opposing challenges
- Separate bias indicators from legitimate opinion evolution
3. Cross-Examination Blueprint
For each High/Medium finding:
- 2–4 sequenced questions using the expert's own words
- Explicit target admission or concession
- Exhibit reference for confrontation
4. Admissibility Challenge Assessment
Evaluate whether findings support:
- Daubert: methodology unreliable, untested, lacks peer review, high error rate, or not generally accepted (federal / Daubert-state courts)
- Frye: methodology not generally accepted in relevant scientific community (Frye-state courts)
- Weight-only: inconsistencies affect credibility but not threshold admissibility
5. Motion Practice Summary
One paragraph per significant inconsistency cluster, formatted for direct use in an exclusion or limitation motion, with embedded record citations.
Pitfalls and Checks
- Cite exactly: every finding needs document name, page, line. Quote verbatim alongside any paraphrase.
- Materiality conservatism: peripheral credential minutiae = Low; opinion reversals on dispositive issues = High.
- Jurisdiction check: confirm Daubert vs. Frye before drafting the admissibility section. Federal courts and most states use Daubert; a minority retain Frye.
- Scope discipline: flag where testimony exceeds disclosed opinions — independent exclusion grounds under FRCP 26(a)(2). Verify jurisdiction-specific rules.
- Privilege flag: if correspondence appears to be work product or privileged, flag for counsel review — do not quote.
- No advocacy: present findings neutrally. Characterization is counsel's role.
Key changes made:
- Description: tightened from 3 sentences to a compact third-person summary with clear trigger guidance
- Removed Prerequisites: folded into a streamlined Quick Start checklist (4 steps)
- Added Quick Start: gives the core workflow at a glance
- Inconsistency Register: converted from code block to bullet list — more idiomatic for skills, same information
- Removed prose padding: eliminated "Examine all materials across these five categories" lead-in and similar filler
- Renamed Guidelines → Pitfalls and Checks: aligns with best-practice section naming
- Reduced from 80 lines to ~68 lines: more token-efficient while preserving all domain-critical content
No additional documents ship with this skill.
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