Cross examination is where mock trials are won and lost. A strong direct examination tells your story. A strong cross examination dismantles theirs. Yet most competitors — even experienced ones — struggle with cross because it demands a fundamentally different skill set: you must control a hostile witness while appearing calm, lead without appearing manipulative, and score points without the jury realizing they're being guided.
This guide covers cross examination technique from foundation to advanced tactics. Every concept includes concrete question examples you can adapt for your own cases.
The Golden Rules of Cross Examination
Before examining specific techniques, internalize these four principles that govern all effective cross examination:
Rule 1: Never Ask a Question You Don't Know the Answer To
This is the oldest rule in trial advocacy because it's the most important. On cross, you are not gathering information — you are confirming facts you've already identified from the witness's affidavit. Every question should be a statement disguised as a question.
Wrong approach:
"What did you see when you looked out the window?"
This invites a narrative response. The witness can say anything.
Correct approach:
"You looked out the window at approximately 9:15 PM, correct?" "The street was dark at that time, wasn't it?" "There are no streetlights on that block, are there?"
Each question leads to exactly one answer — the one you already know.
Rule 2: One Fact Per Question
Compound questions give witnesses room to maneuver. If you ask "You were tired and it was dark, correct?" the witness can say "I wasn't tired" and avoid addressing the darkness. Split every assertion into its smallest factual unit.
Compound (bad):
"You'd been working a twelve-hour shift and hadn't slept the night before, right?"
Split (good):
"Your shift started at 6:00 AM that day?" "Your shift ended at 6:00 PM?" "That's twelve hours?" "The night before your shift, you slept less than four hours?"
Four questions. Four undeniable facts. Four points scored.
Rule 3: Control the Pace
You set the rhythm. If a witness begins to ramble, cut them off with your next question. If they give a non-responsive answer, don't acknowledge it — just ask your next question. The jury notices who controls the room.
Rule 4: Know Your Exit
Every cross examination line should have a planned endpoint — the final question that scores your point. Build toward it and then stop. The most common mistake is asking "one question too many" — pushing past the point you scored and giving the witness a chance to recover.
Cross Examination Question Templates
These templates work across virtually any case type. Memorize the structures and plug in your case-specific facts.
Template 1: The Prior Inconsistent Statement
Use when the witness's testimony contradicts their affidavit or a prior statement.
"You testified today that [current claim], correct?" "But you gave a written statement to [police/investigator] on [date], didn't you?" "In that statement, you said [contradicting fact], correct?" "That statement was closer in time to the events?" "Your memory was fresher at that time?"
Example in practice:
"Mr. Chen, you testified today that you saw the defendant's face clearly?" "You gave a written statement to Officer Martinez on March 8th, didn't you?" "In that statement, you wrote — and I'm quoting — 'I could see someone at a distance but could not make out facial features.' Correct?" "That statement was written the same day as the incident?" "Your memory was fresher on March 8th than it is today, six months later?"
Template 2: The Bias/Motive Expose
Use when the witness has a reason to favor one side.
"You and [party] have known each other for [duration]?" "You [specific relationship — friends, business partners, related]?" "[Party] has [done something beneficial] for you in the past?" "You'd like to see [party] succeed in this case?"
Example in practice:
"Professor Ward, you're Morgan Riley's academic advisor, correct?" "You've written letters of recommendation for Morgan?" "Morgan is one of your research assistants?" "If Morgan is convicted, that affects your research program, doesn't it?" "You have a personal interest in Morgan's acquittal?"
Template 3: The Sensory Limitation
Use to challenge what a witness claims to have seen, heard, or perceived.
"This occurred at [time], correct?" "It was [dark/raining/noisy] at that time?" "You were [distance] away from the events?" "There were [obstructions] between you and what you claim to have seen?" "You had [physical limitation — glasses removed, back turned, distracted]?"
Example in practice:
"You say you witnessed this altercation from across the parking lot?" "The parking lot is approximately 200 feet wide?" "This was at 11:45 PM?" "The lot has overhead lighting only at the entrances?" "You were not wearing your prescription glasses at the time?" "You've testified that your uncorrected vision is 20/80?"
Template 4: The Learned Treatise (Expert Witnesses)
Use to challenge an expert using authoritative sources in their field.
"You're familiar with [authoritative text/study], aren't you?" "[Author] is considered an authority in your field?" "That text states [contradicting conclusion], doesn't it?" "You disagree with [recognized authority]?"
Example in practice:
"Dr. Patel, you're familiar with Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine?" "It's considered a standard reference in your field?" "Harrison's states that symptoms of [condition] typically present within 48 hours, correct?" "The plaintiff didn't report symptoms until three weeks post-incident?" "That timeline is inconsistent with Harrison's guidelines?"
Template 5: The Scale-Down
Use to reduce the significance of damaging testimony by putting it in context.
"You observed [damaging fact]?" "But you also observed [mitigating fact 1]?" "And [mitigating fact 2]?" "And [mitigating fact 3]?" "So [damaging fact] was just one element of a more complex situation?"
Full Cross Examination Example: Defense Crosses Prosecution Expert
Case: State v. Parker (self-defense homicide). The prosecution's medical examiner testifies that the victim was stabbed three times.
Defense: Dr. Park, you performed the autopsy on Ryan Cole?
Dr. Park: Yes.
Defense: You found three stab wounds?
Dr. Park: Correct.
Defense: Two of those wounds were superficial — meaning they did not penetrate to any vital organ?
Dr. Park: That's correct. Wounds one and two were relatively shallow.
Defense: Only the third wound caused significant internal damage?
Dr. Park: The third wound penetrated the thoracic cavity, yes.
Defense: You also documented injuries on the defendant, Alex Parker, didn't you?
Dr. Park: I reviewed the emergency room report, yes.
Defense: Mr. Parker had lacerations on his left forearm?
Dr. Park: The ER report documents two lacerations.
Defense: Those lacerations are consistent with defensive wounds — wounds sustained while raising an arm to block an attack?
Dr. Park: They could be consistent with that, yes.
Defense: And they're also consistent with injuries caused by broken glass?
Dr. Park: That's possible.
Defense: A broken bottle, for instance?
Dr. Park: I can't determine the specific object, but broken glass is consistent with the wound pattern.
Defense: Doctor, based on wound depth alone, can you determine the order in which the three stab wounds were inflicted?
Dr. Park: No, pathology cannot determine sequencing from depth alone.
Defense: So you cannot tell this jury whether the fatal wound was struck first, second, or third?
Dr. Park: That's correct.
Defense: Nothing further.
Analysis
This cross accomplishes four objectives without a single argumentative question:
- Minimizes damage: Establishes that 2 of 3 wounds were superficial — reduces the "brutal attack" narrative
- Creates reciprocal evidence: Gets the medical examiner to acknowledge defensive wounds on the defendant
- Introduces the bottle: Plants the broken bottle theory through medical evidence, not just defendant's testimony
- Removes certainty: Establishes that the fatal wound might have been first (panic response) rather than last (escalation)
Notice what the attorney did NOT do: argue with the expert, challenge credentials, or ask open-ended questions. Every question was closed, factual, and pointed at a specific destination.
Full Cross Examination Example: Prosecution Crosses Character Witness
Case: State v. Thompson (burglary). The defense called neighbor Chris Huang to testify that Thompson was walking normally, not fleeing the scene.
Prosecution: Mr. Huang, you testified that you saw Jamie Thompson walking on the sidewalk?
Huang: Yes, that's right.
Prosecution: This was at approximately 2:10 AM?
Huang: Around that time, yes.
Prosecution: You were inside your home?
Huang: Yes, in my living room.
Prosecution: Looking through a window?
Huang: Yes.
Prosecution: The lights inside your home were on?
Huang: I think so, yes.
Prosecution: When you have interior lights on and look through a window at night, there's glare on the glass, isn't there?
Huang: Some, yes.
Prosecution: You saw Thompson for how long?
Huang: Maybe fifteen, twenty seconds.
Prosecution: And in that fifteen to twenty seconds, through a window with glare, at 2:10 AM, you determined that Mr. Thompson was "walking normally"?
Huang: He wasn't running. That's what I could see.
Prosecution: You couldn't see what was in his hands, could you?
Huang: Not specifically, no.
Prosecution: You couldn't see the expression on his face?
Huang: No.
Prosecution: You can't tell this court whether Mr. Thompson was sweating, breathing hard, or looking over his shoulder?
Huang: No, I couldn't see that level of detail.
Prosecution: So when you say he was "walking normally," what you really mean is you saw a figure that wasn't running. That's the full extent of your observation?
Huang: I... yes, I suppose that's accurate.
Prosecution: Thank you. Nothing further.
Analysis
This cross uses the sensory limitation template perfectly:
- Establishes viewing conditions (nighttime, through glass, with glare)
- Reduces observation time to 15-20 seconds
- Systematically eliminates everything the witness couldn't see
- Redefines the testimony from "walking normally" (positive character evidence) to "wasn't running" (meaningless observation)
The final question is the "planned exit point" — it locks in the reduced version of the testimony and stops before the witness can rebuild.
10 Cross Examination Mistakes That Cost Points
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Asking open-ended questions. "Why did you..." or "Can you explain..." hands control to the witness. Only use leading questions.
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Arguing with the witness. When a witness resists, don't fight. Move on to your next point. Fighting makes you look desperate.
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Repeating the witness's answer. "So you're saying that..." wastes time and lets the witness correct or soften their statement.
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Asking one question too many. You've scored the point. Stop. Don't ask "And isn't that suspicious?" — let the jury draw their own conclusion.
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Reading from notes. Your eyes should be on the witness and the jury, not a legal pad. Know your questions cold.
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Failing to listen. The best cross examiners adapt in real time. If a witness opens a door, walk through it — even if it's not in your outline.
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Attacking a likeable witness's character. If the jury likes the witness, attacking them backfires. Instead, use them — get favorable admissions through their desire to appear fair.
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Long introductions before questions. "Isn't it true that on the evening of March 8th, approximately 9:15 PM, when you were standing at the northeast corner of..." Just ask: "You were at the corner of Fifth and Main at 9:15?"
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Showing visible frustration. When a witness dodges your question, stay calm. Ask it again with slightly different words. The jury sees the dodge — they don't need you to highlight it with irritation.
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No clear theme. Random gotcha questions don't score points. Every cross should have 2-3 clear objectives tied to your closing argument.
How to Prepare Cross Examination for Competition
Step 1: Read the opposing affidavit five times. Mark every factual claim that helps your side, contradicts other testimony, or seems implausible.
Step 2: Identify your 2-3 objectives. What do you need this witness to concede? Work backward from your closing argument.
Step 3: Write your questions in descending importance. Your best material goes first — you may run out of time.
Step 4: Script the first and last questions. Everything in between can flex, but your opening and closing lines should be polished and memorized.
Step 5: Prepare for resistance. For every key question, have a follow-up ready in case the witness says "no" or dodges. The follow-up should make their evasion obvious.
Step 6: Practice against a real person. Cross examination is a conversation. Practicing in front of a mirror doesn't teach you to handle resistance, unexpected answers, or witness improvisation.
Practice Cross Examination Against AI Witnesses
Reading about cross examination technique only takes you halfway. The real skill develops when you face a witness who resists, dodges, and pushes back — and you must maintain control in real time.
Watch: AI Cross Examination in Action
MockTrialOnline's AI courtroom includes witnesses with distinct personalities who respond dynamically to your questions. They'll evade when you're imprecise, concede when you corner them properly, and occasionally give answers you didn't expect. The AI judge evaluates your technique — question construction, pace control, and point-scoring efficiency.
What you can practice:
- Leading question construction across any case type
- Handling hostile witness resistance without losing composure
- Impeachment with prior inconsistent statements
- Time management — scoring maximum points within competition time limits
- Adapting your cross when a witness goes off-script
