Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2015
Abstract
Pending before the District of Columbia's highest court in a case asking whether cell phones can cause cancer is whether to replace the jurisdiction's venerable Frye standard for reviewing the admissibility of scientific evidence with the approach adopted by the U.S. Supreme Court in Daubert v. Merrell Dow. The author analyzes one aspect of the two evidentiary standards that leads him to question the trial judge's suggestion in Murray v. Motorola that adopting the Daubert perspective would allow greater leeway in excluding the plaintiff's evidence.
Recommended Citation
David H. Kaye, Cell Phones, Brain Cancer, and Scientific Outliers in Murray v. Motorola, 43 Product Safety & Liability Rep. 1418 (2015).