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Bob is a self-represented plaintiff in a civil case (or, say, private prosecutor in a criminal case). He is also a witness. If the trial is judge-alone aka bench (not jury), he is able to conduct it himself.

At the hearing/trial, Bob (in his capacity as the plaintiff/prosecutor) says:

Your Honour, I call myself.

— and goes to the witness box to be examined by... himself.

Now what? Does he ask himself questions and give answers? Or does he just make statements of fact?

(Any common law jurisdiction)

Greendrake
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1 Answers1

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It depends on the judge. Both narrative and question-answer formats can be required.

Under the narrative format, the defendant gives their statement. The prosecution can then cross-examine.

Under the question-answer format, the defendant plays both the role of themself and the role of their representative. They ask questions to themselves then answer. This was used in United States v. Nivica, 887 F.2d 1110 (1st Cir. 1989).

Comic Sans Seraphim
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