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In this episode of Brushstrokes, Keith will show you how to get zero comparative faults in trip-and-fall cases where the defense is open and obvious.
It's not about whether your client could have seen it or could have avoided it. It is about whether your client acted unreasonably or did something wrong.
It is about blaming the difference between visibility and conspicuity (The competition for one's attention).
By Keith Mitnik4.6
2626 ratings
In this episode of Brushstrokes, Keith will show you how to get zero comparative faults in trip-and-fall cases where the defense is open and obvious.
It's not about whether your client could have seen it or could have avoided it. It is about whether your client acted unreasonably or did something wrong.
It is about blaming the difference between visibility and conspicuity (The competition for one's attention).

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