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Appeals court addresses alleged motion-of-limine violation and record-check testimony in Commonwealth v. Roman

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Oral argument focused on whether statements in the prosecutor’s opening went beyond a pretrial motion in limine and whether a DCJIS employee could properly testify about the absence of a license to carry.

The Appeals Court heard argument in Commonwealth v. Roman (No. 24440) over two issues that arose at trial: (1) whether the prosecutor’s opening statement — which, defense counsel said, referenced surveillance, an arrest on a warrant, and other background — violated a pretrial motion in limine and warranted a mistrial, and (2) whether testimony by a DCJIS employee that a record search produced no license to carry was properly admitted without certification or a witness from the Firearm Records Bureau.

Why it matters: The questions affect acceptable scope of prosecutorial openings and the foundation required to prove absence of a public record (here, license-to-carry status) under confrontation and…

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