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    Witness for the Prosecution: The Civil War Letter of Lieutenant George Taylor
    (1989-09) Scott, Kim Allen
    /X prosecutor must present the jury with evidence against the defendant which is believable beyond a reasonable doubt. Testimony based on hearsay or the recollections of a witness several years after the crime are always subject to damaging critique by the defense. To bolster a case based on a stale reminiscence, the prosecution may use corroborating evidence: the same story told by two different parties. However, if a sharp defense attorney can show that both sources are of equal antiquity, the corroboration strategy can still be easily defused. The best testimony for substantiating old stories is a witness deposition taken immediately after the crime was committed. The introduction of such evidence can confirm the truth of the dated accounts and win the case for the prosecution.
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    Pursuing an Elusive Quarry: The Battle of Cane Hill, Arkansas
    (1997-03) Scott, Kim Allen; Burgess, Stephen
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    The Civil War in a Bottle: Battle at Fayetteville, Arkansas
    (1995-09) Scott, Kim Allen
    THE TERRIFYING MORNING of April 18, 1863, seemed like an eternity for Sarah Yeater as she cowered in a*damp Fayetteville cellar. Muffled sounds of rapid gunfire, shouting men, and jingling harnesses coming from the yard above caused Sarah to tremble violently as she hugged her three-year-old son Charley and stared wild-eyed at the other civilians who huddled with her in the darkness. Sick with ague and five months pregnant to boot, Sarah had ample reasons for trembling beyond the sounds of battle raging overhead, yet an additional shock to the young housewife's nerves was about to be cruelly delivered. As Sarah rose from her mattress to speak to her sister-in-law, Sallie, the cellar rang from the sudden concussion of an artillery shell. The missile shattered the jamb of the basement door, knocked down fragments of brick and mortar from the chimney in the kitchen above, and cracked in two a large iron kettle of lye that rested on the hearth. Choking with dust and screaming in terror, die helpless women and children saw the flash of the iron shell as it bounded rapidly into their midst and just as suddenly disappeared. Sarah could not have known it at the time, but the broken kettle in the kitchen had actually saved her and the others from certain death: the lye had miraculously extinguished the fuse an instant before the projectile dropped down to the refugees below.
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    Demonstrating the Obvious: Elementary School Programs for Reenactors
    (Camp Chase Publishing Co., Inc., 1995) Scott, Kim Allen
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    Sense and Sensibility: Reenacting and the Authentically Correct
    (Camp Chase Publishing Co., Inc., 1996) Scott, Kim Allen
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    Body Lice
    (Camp Chase Publishing Co., Inc., 1989) Scott, Kim Allen
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