Don't Eat the Bruises: How to Foil Their Plans to Spoil Your Case (Audiobook)

Keith Mitnik

Format: Audiobook
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Read by the author himself, the Don't Eat the Bruises audiobook gives listeners on-the-go access to one of America's best trial lawyers as he talks them through his case-changing methods.

Keith Mitnik lives in courtrooms. When he’s not in trial, the senior trial counsel for Morgan & Morgan, the largest injury law firm in America, spends his time inventing cutting-edge courtroom strategies. In Don’t Eat the Bruises, Mitnik draws from the hard-won experience of his prolific and innovative career to offer an approachable system for trying and winning cases.

Exploiting juror bias, taking things out of context, and overemphasizing imperfections at trial are all bruises—cheap tricks the defense uses to distract from facts and well-constructed cases. Mitnik offers strategies for dealing with these issues in jury selection, opening statement, and beyond, with a heavy focus on dismantling defenses based on bias, sympathy, and prejudice at the very beginning of your case.

Whether you’re a new lawyer seeking guidance for your first auto case or a seasoned advocate looking for a fresh approach to your next trial, Mitnik’s framework provides you with practical tools to win. His techniques accommodate the nuance of any case—big or small—without the constraints of a soulless, ineffective template.

Dont Eat the Bruises will give you the skill and confidence to get out of your office and into the courtroom to seek full justice on your next case.

CD/Audio Digital Download: 767 minutes; 12 discs; 1st edition(2015); ISBN: 9781941007907;
Publisher: Trial Guides, LLC

CD 01 77:13

1 Title 00:13

2 Dedication 02:05

3 Introduction 24:21

 

Part I Jury Selection: Cutting Out Bias

4 Chapter 01 - Getting Rid of Bias Lightning-Quick 29:33

5 Chapter 02 - Educating Jurors about Bias 21:01

 

CD 02 78:32

1 Chapter 03 - Identify Those at Risk for Bias 24:40

2 Chapter 04 - Establishing, Expanding, and Fortifying Cause 31:34

3 Chapter 05 - Nuances and Common Complications 22:19

 

CD 03 57:33

1 Chapter 06 - Identification and Cause Questions for Car Crash Cases 30:56

2 Chapter 07 - More Identification and Cause Questions 26:38

 

CD 04 58:35

1 Chapter 08 - Identification and Cause Questions for Medical Negligence Cases 28:32

2 Chapter 09 - Wrapping Up Bias 30:03

 

CD 05 58:08

1 Chapter 10 - Completing the System after Bias 26:44

2 Chapter 11 - Putting It All Together 31:24

 

CD 06 55:25

Part II The Untapped Power of Opening Statements

1 Chapter 12 - Getting Ready to Give and Take 28:00

2 Chapter 13 - Owning Their Favorite Facts 27:27

 

CD 07 65:48

1 Chapter 14 - In Context versus Out of Context 39:39

2 Chapter 15 - The Language of the Case 26:10

 

CD 08 57:44

1 Chapter 16 - Rounding Out the Untapped Power of Opening 30:02

 

Part III The Evidence Phase: Keeping the Lead

2 Chapter 17 - Direct-Exam-Building on Opening 27:42

 

CD 09 59:56

1 Chapter 18 - Cross-Examination-Holding Your Ground 31:11

 

Part IV Closing: Bearing Fruit to the End

2 Chapter 19 - Finishing in Full Stride 28:45

 

CD 10 51:50

1 Chapter 20 - Holding All the Cards 30:47

2 Chapter 21 - The Dignity of Damages 21:04

 

CD11 67:50

1 Chapter 22 - Damages Models 33:48

2 Chapter 23 - The If-It-Was-Only Damages Model 34:02

 

CD12 78:09

1 Chapter 24 - The Power of Analogy 40:39

 

Part V Burden of Proof: A Brand-New Way

2 Chapter 25 - The Civil Burden of Proof 26:57

3 Conclusion 04:13

4 Acknowledgements 04:16

5 Publisher's Note 02:04

What Legal Leaders Are Saying

Don’t Eat the Bruises offers trial attorneys the fruits of Keith’s spectacular career. Full of great analogies and helpful tips, this tasty treat will ensure that you remove all the spoiled and bruised parts of your next case—leaving you with a case that is fresh, crisp, and deliciously effective.

— Brian Panish, member of the Inner Circle of Advocates

Keith Mitnik’s book is a must-read for any aspiring personal injury attorney and for more experienced trial lawyers. Mitnik is the finest civil trial lawyer to present cases to the jury in trials over which I have presided. 

— Judge Alan Dickey, retired circuit judge of the 18th Circuit of Florida

Keith lives in courtrooms. His ideas on jury selection, opening, and burden of proof are original, practical, and usable in your next trial.

— John Edwards, US senator, presidential candidate, Democratic vice-presidential nominee, trial lawyer

Keith’s ideas are fresh, exciting, and powerful. This is a truly exceptional book for trial lawyers of all skill levels. People will be talking about this book for a long time. 

— Lisa Blue, past president of the American Association for Justice

Unlike approaches that require attorneys to cram evidence into a one-size-fits-all template, Mr. Mitnik’s framework can be integrated with any case’s nuances. This innovative approach will change the way you try cases.

— Brad Bradshaw, Ph.D., jury consultant and author of The Science of Persuasion: A Litigator’s Guide to Juror Decision-Making

Don’t Eat the Bruisesis the best book on trial advocacy you will read this year. I guarantee it will wash the bad taste of opposing counsel’s shenanigans right out of your mouth!

— Charles H. Rose, III, professor of excellence in trial advocacy, director of the Center for Excellence in Trial Advocacy, Stetson University School of Law

Keith is a killer, and his book is a compendium of killer concepts. There are brand-new ideas borne of painstaking devotion and remakes of tried and true techniques that shine as new. For years I’ve sought and used his guidance at trial, now you can too.

— Scott P. Schlesinger

Keith Mitnik is the kind of down-home trial lawyer who comes along once in a lifetime. He doesn’t just try cases, he knows how to teach trial lawyers to win.

— Bob Kelley, member of the American Board of Trial Advocates, and listed in Best Lawyers in America

I was lucky enough to have Keith teach me how to become a lawyer right out of law school. The lessons in this book armed me with the confidence to try any case. His methods allowed me to become one of the youngest board-certified civil trial lawyers in the history of Florida.

— Mike Morgan, attorney for Morgan & Morgan

After seven years of practicing law without Keith’s concepts, I began learning and implementing them. Shortly thereafter, I obtained a $2.9 million verdict that would not have been possible without Keith’s teachings.

— Alan Stagmeier, attorney for Morgan & Morgan

He got seven-figure verdicts, then eight-figure verdicts. They just keep coming, and I have had a front row seat for twenty years. He has a secret sauce that he has bottled just for us with this book. Try it. You’ll like it.

— John Morgan, founder of Morgan & Morgan

As a jury consultant who works all over the country with some of the best lawyers in the business, I can tell you Keith Mitnik is one of those rare talents that comes along every decade or so. If Mitnik wrote it, you would be wise to read it.

— Dr. David Illig, litigation consult and witness communication specialist, Portland, Oregon

I was fortunate to learn Keith’s techniques right out of law school. I went from a ‘baby lawyer’ to a real threat. I’ve tried eighteen cases to verdict in four years and only lost one. I credit much of my success to Keith’s systems. The best part is it works on all cases, not just the big ones.

— Matt Morgan, attorney for Morgan & Morgan

Keith Mitnik’s Don’t Eat the Bruises is destined to be a masterwork in the pantheon of trial practice literature. It’s a must-read, must-use, must-reread manual on the righteous fight!

— Russ Herman, past president of the American Association for Justice and past president of the Roscoe Pound Foundation

I am a warrior—a trial lawyer. My arena is the courtroom. This book is a must-read for anyone who aspires to be a real trial lawyer.

— Geoffrey Fieger, legal defense for Dr. Jack Kevorkian, star of the Fox series Power of Attorney, winner of the largest single-injury verdict in the country.

I clerked for Keith while I was in law school. Listening to him lit a fire in me that will never be extinguished. Reading this book is the greatest gift young lawyers will ever give themselves.

— Alex Brown, attorney at Morgan & Morgan

Warning—reading this book will make you want to try more cases! Mitnik has shoehorned decades of experience into deceptively simple strategies for any personal injury case—big or small. This book is for any lawyer ready to turn down the insurance company’s next low-ball settlement offer and seek justice in a courtroom.”

— Tim Semelroth, past president of the Iowa Association for Justice and president-elect of the Iowa chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates

Keith Mitnik is an ‘in the courtroom’ trial lawyer. He is encouraging us all to realize we can be the same. This is going to be my firm’s new handbook!

— Paul Byrd, past president of the Arkansas Trial Lawyers Association

Don’t Eat The Bruises is the A-to-Z guide on selecting a jury and trying a case. After reading this book, I incorporated Keith’s strategies into my practice and I will never pick a jury the same way again.

— Jon Peeler, 2014–2015 president of the Tennessee Association for Justice

Keith is a lawyer who can try any case, big or small. He got on my radar screen by being cutting edge. He’s smarter than the average bear. 

— Don Keenan, author of Reptile