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  1. This brief is presented only as a sample brief that acceptably complies with the form and format requirements of the Oregon Rules of Appellate Procedure (ORAP).

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  2. Hall Sample Case Brief. Style:People (Colorado) v. Nathan Hall. Colorado Supreme Court 2004. Procedural History:At a preliminary hearing, the trial court dismissed case for lack of probable cause (defendant won) District court affirmed lack of probable cause (defendant won again) Appellate court reversed (People won)

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  4. In an ongoing effort to help students succeed in law school, the Student Bar Association has provided the following briefs as examples of how to brief a case.

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  5. Case Briefing and Preparing for Class: Briefing a case basically means isolating the significant elements of a judicial opinion and preparing a short written summary of that information. Case briefs serve several purposes. First, briefing requires you to read cases carefully so you can decide which information in a case is most important.

  6. HOW TO BRIEF A CASE. The cases that you will read are the written opinions of trial and appellate court judges explaining their decisions in the lawsuit. A court opinion is similar to a short story of an incident in which a court acted to resolve a legal dispute.

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  7. STATEMENT OF THE CASE. Plaintiffs Bradley Terwilliger, Benjamin Matcek, and Jimmy Don Smith. (“Plaintiffs”) were arrested for the felony offense of Engaging in Organized. Criminal Activity (“EIOCA”). EIOCA is a criminal enterprise offense, under.

  8. WHAT IS A CASE BRIEF? A case brief is a written summary of a legal decision. It outlines the facts, history, issues, outcome and reasoning of a particular case. HOW ARE CASE BRIEFS HELPFUL? Case briefs are useful because they: • Identify the most important aspects of a case, making it easier to synthesize the information; •

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