Found 25 support title Experts and Expert Witnesses.
|
 |
|
|
| Expert on new and developing wireless standards for ANSI-41, GSM, and 3rd Generation systems, ANSI-41, GSM, All-IP (3G Standards), FCC and US Government mandated features and requirements
|
 |
|
|
| Nationally recognized expert in employment discrimination: age/race/sex, disparate/adverse impact, statistics/data analysis, test bias, test validity, job performance evaluation, equal pay, etc.
|
 |
|
|
| Former trucking company owner, Corportate Executive (Sr. V.P. Risk Management Director of Safety / Compliance) provides valuable insight, analysis & expert testimony in most any trucking related case.
|
 |
|
|
| 30 years experience in chemical exposures that affect human health and welfare. He is a Board-Certified Toxicologist with a Ph.D. in Environmental Toxicology and Licenced Professional Engineer.
|
 |
|
|
| A 20 year background in research, development, management, operations and clinical services. A prolific researcher, writer, speaker, and clinician in rehabilitation, health care operations, occupational therapy...
|
 |
|
|
| Over 30 years of hands-on check, deposit, cash management, loan operations and branch office products and services experience at banks, savings and loans and other financial services organizations.
|
 |
|
|
| Expert witness for Aircraft engine and Automotive structural issues Experience at GE Aircraft Engines, GE Power Systems and GE Research Center,Instron and Rolls-Royce.
|
 |
|
|
| Founder and President of Professional Escrow Resources, LLC, Shari Nestor has over 30 years experience in the area of Title, Escrow, Marketing & Sales of Real Estate Related Services, Loan Processing and Real Estate Development. Ms. Nestor has created curricula and has taught classes to Real Estate Agents, Financial and Escrow Personnel. She has created and/or assisted in creating training manuals for office staff. Additionally Shari Nestor has written and implemented Marketing Plans and auth...
|
 |
|
|
| Medical illustration and exhibit presentation graphic design for litigation support
|
 |
|
|
| EW # 13812 has 21 years with the Miami P.D., and was investigating death cases in the Homicide Unit.
|
 |
|
|
| I am a specialist in Periodontics with a focus on Implant dental/surgical procedures. I will consult, review records, prepare reports, and am available to testify in depositions and trial. I have approximately 10 years experience as a legal expert for both Plaintiffs and defendants. My fees are to be discussed on a case by case basis....
|
 |
|
|
| 40 years trial experience with DEA, Customs, BATF, IRS & FBI and as a Trial Consultant. Expert testimony accepted on more than 300 occasions in state and federal courts in 17 states and Puerto Rico.
|
 |
|
|
| Expertise in psychiatric cases involving children, adolescents and adults with particular relevance to personal injury.
|
 |
|
|
| EW #13831 PhD, board certified Toxicologist, peer reviewer for NIH, EPA, Superfund, CDC, ATSDR, since 1984 an expert for attorneys in 14 states, specializing in complex, multidisciplinary cases.
|
 |
|
|
| EW # is a board certified internist by the ABIM who is ready to review your medical malpractice case.
|
 |
|
|
| 19 years and currently a computer and network architectural specialist concentrating on voice, video, data and facsimile transmission systems for the telecommunications industry.
|
 |
|
|
| A state and federal court receiver. His receivership experience includes hundreds of cases filed throughout California, Nevada and Arizona during the last decade.
|
 |
|
|
| EW #187 P.E. is a registered professional engineer with primary focus being physical securities issues.
|
 |
|
|
| Over 35 years experience in commercial banking and real estate finance with extensive background in business and agriculture. SEE CASE SYNOPSIS ON WEBSITE.
|
 |
|
|
| Expert Witness - Internet Marketing Litigation, Search Engine Optimization Litigation - Search Engine Engineering Litigation
|
 |
|
|
| Certified nurse midwife in active practice since 1990. Adjunct faculty member University of Miami. Certified legal nurse consultant, expert witness for both plaintiff and defense.
|
 |
|
|
| Safety & Health Expert, Hazardous Material Expert, Board Certified Indusrtial Hygienist. He has over thirty years of experience in health and environmental risk evaluation and mitigation.
|
 |
|
|
| Board certified physician in both Neurology and Occupational and Envrionmental Medicine.
|
 |
|
|
| A much sought-after consultant, national speaker, writer, and expert on fire and EMS systems designs, standards of care, and practices.
|
 |
|
|
| Looking For A Life Insurance Agent or Quote?
|
 |
|
|
| Looking for a support title expert?
|
 |
|
Find Support Title experts and consultants for Support Title litigation support at www.expertwitness.com. Available to be Support Title expert witnesses and provide Support Title forensic consulting in Support Title litigation, in addition prepare Support Title expert witness reports for use in deposition and/or in-court trial testimony.
|
Categories To Find "Support Title" Experts:
|
ACCOUNTING / BOOKKEEPING / CPAs |
|
Accountancy (profession) or accounting (methodology) is the measurement, disclosure or provision of assurance about information that helps managers and other decision makers make resource allocation decisions. Financial accounting is one branch of accounting and historically has involved processes by which financial information about a business is recorded, classified, summarized, interpreted, and communicated. Auditing, a related but separate discipline, is the process whereby an independent auditor examines an organizations financial statements in order to express an opinion -- that conveys reasonable but not absolute assurance -- as to the fairness and adherence to generally accepted accounting principles, in all material respects.
|
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION |
|
Affirmative action (U.S. English), or positive discrimination (British English), is a policy or a program aimed at increasing the representation of members of groups that have traditionally been discriminated against. This typically focuses on education, employment, government contracting, health care, or social welfare.
|
AGRICULTURE |
|
Agriculture (a term which encompasses farming) is the art, science or practice of producing food, feed, fiber and many other desired goods by the systematic raising of plants and animals. Agri is from Latin ager ("a field"), and culture is from Latin cultura, meaning "cultivation" in the strict sense of tillage of the soil. Thus a literal reading of the English word yields tillage of the soil of a field. In actual usage, Agriculture denotes a broad array of activities essential to food and material production, including all techniques for raising and processing livestock (see Animal husbandry) no less than those essential to crop planting and harvesting.
|
ASSAULT |
|
Assault is a crime of violence against another person. In some jurisdictions, assault is used to refer to the actual violence, while in other jurisdictions (e.g. some in the United States, England and Wales), assault refers only to the threat of violence, while the actual violence is battery.
|
AUCTIONS AND E-COMMERCE |
|
An auction is the process of buying and selling things by offering them up for bid, taking bids, and then selling the item to the highest bidder. Auctioning can be traced as far back as 500 B.C.[1] In economic theory, an auction is a method for determining the value of a commodity that has an undetermined or variable price. Auctions can be with reserve or minimum, or without minimums, or absolute or no reserve. In reserve auctions, there is a minimum bid or reserve price; if the bidding does not reach the minimum, there is no sale (but the person who puts the item up for auction may still owe a fee to the auctioneer or auction company). In absolute or no reserve auctions, the sale is guaranteed, with only the price left to be determined. In the context of auctions, a bid is an offered price.
|
BAD FAITH |
|
Bad faith is a legal concept that can be found in many areas of the law.
In philosophy, mauvaise foi (French, bad faith) or false consciousness, as propounded by French existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, is the flight from existential responsibility and the inauthentic embrace of choices that conflict with ones convictions.
|
BANKRUPTCY |
|
Bankruptcy is a legally declared inability or impairment of ability of an individual or organization to pay their creditors. A declared state of bankruptcy can be requested by creditors in an effort to recoup a portion of what they are owed; however, in the overwhelming majority of cases, the bankruptcy is initiated by the bankrupt individual or organization.
|
BRANDING |
|
Branding may refer to any of:
the imprinting of brand marks on live skin, see Livestock branding, Branding persons and Branding (law).
a marketing technique, see Brand.
a permanent label or warning, such as a title brand affixed to the registration papers of a potentially defective vehicle.
|
BUILDING SURVEYING |
|
Surveying is the technique and science of accurately determining the terrestrial or 3D space position of points and the distances and angles between them. These points are usually, but not exclusively, associated with positions on the surface of the Earth, and are often used to establish land maps and boundaries for ownership or governmental purposes. In order to accomplish their objective, surveyors use elements of geometry (latin: measuring the Earth), of engineering, mathematics, physics, and law.
|
CHILD PORNOGRAPHY |
|
Generally, child pornography (sometimes referred to as CP, child porn, KP, or kiddie porn) is an illegal form of pornography, featuring minors. The term "child" is defined for this purpose by each country's child pornography laws, and these laws also set forth criteria to use in determining whether a particular depiction of a child is child pornography.
|
CIVIL RIGHTS - EQUAL RIGHTS |
|
Civil rights are the protections and privileges of personal liberty given to all citizens by law. Civil rights are distinguished from "human rights" or "natural rights"; civil rights are rights that are bestowed by nations on those within their territorial boundaries, while natural or human rights are rights that many scholars claim ought to belong to all people. For example, the philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) argued that the natural rights of life, liberty, and property should be converted into civil rights and protected by the sovereign state as an aspect of the social contract. Others have argued that people acquire rights as an inalienable gift from a god or at a time of nature before governments were formed.
|
CLAIMS |
|
A claim is a legal action to obtain money, property or the enforcement of a right protected by law against another party.
Individuals and businesses purchase insurance policies to protect against monetary losses. In the event of a loss, policyholders submit claims, or requests for payment, seeking compensation for their loss. Adjusters, appraisers, examiners, and investigators work primarily for property and casualty insurance companies, for whom they handle a wide variety of claims alleging property damage, liability, or bodily injury. Their main role is to investigate the claims, negotiate settlements, and authorize payments to claimants, all the while mindful not to violate the claimants rights under Federal and State privacy laws. They must determine whether the customers insurance policy covers the loss and how much of the loss should be paid to the claimant. Although many adjusters, appraisers, examiners, and investigators have overlapping functions and may even perform the same job, the insurance industry generally assigns specific roles to each of these claims workers.
|
CONTRACT & MISC. SURETY |
|
A surety is a person who agrees to be responsible for the debt or obligation of another. The situation in which a surety is most typically required is when the ability of the primary obligor or principal to perform its obligations under a contract is in question, or when there is some public or private interest which requires protection from the consequences of the principal's default or delinquency. In most common law jurisdictions, a contract of suretyship is subject to the statute of frauds (or its equivalent local laws) and is only enforceable if memorialized by a writing signed by the surety.
A surety bond is a contract between at least three parties: (i) the principal, (ii) the obligee, and (iii) the surety. Through this agreement, the surety agrees to make the obligee whole (usually by payment of money) if the principal defaults in its performance of its promise to the obligee. The contract is formed so as to induce the obligee to contract with the principal, i.e., to demonstrate the credibility of the principal.
|
COPYRIGHT - GENERAL |
|
Copyright is a set of exclusive rights granted by governments to regulate the use of a particular expression of an idea or information. At its most general, it is literally "the right to copy" an original creation. In most cases, these rights are of limited duration. The symbol for copyright is ©.
|
DEATH INVESTIGATION |
|
Forensic Pathologists can perform a full forensic autopsy which can very often provide answers to families and next of kin when deaths occur that cannot be explained or when there are suspicious circumstances involved. It is often the first step in determining whether there are any issues of Medical Malpractice that can lead to legal litigation.
|
DISCOURSE ANALYSIS |
|
Discourse analysis (DA) is a general term for number of approaches to analysing language use, regardless of production form (e.g., writing, speaking, signing). The term discourse analysis first entered general use as the title of a paper published by Zellig Harris in 1952. Harris' method was more of an expansion of grammatical analysis than what is now commonly thought of as discourse analysis, and as a result this portion of his work is now largely neglected, other than the title itself. Thus, most discourse analysts following Harris have conducted work that falls under the heading of pragmatics in modern linguistics, rather than syntactics, though many discourse analysts would reject linguists tripartite division of the main characteristics of language--the third characteristic being "semantics."
|
DWI - Driving While Intoxicated |
|
Drunk driving is the act of operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol and/or drugs to the degree that mental and motor skills are impaired. It is illegal in all jurisdictions within the U.S..
The specific criminal offense is usually called driving under the influence [of alcohol and/or other drugs] (DUI), and in some states driving while intoxicated (DWI) or operating while impaired (OWI). Such laws may also apply to boating or piloting aircraft.
|
EMPLOYMENT |
|
Employment is a contract between two parties, one being the employer and the other being the employee. In a commercial setting, the employer conceives of a productive activity, generally with the intention of creating profits, and the employee contributes labour to the enterprise, usually in return for payment of wages.
|
ENGINEERING - CHEMICAL |
|
Chemical engineering is the application of science, in particular chemistry, physics and mathematics, to the process of converting raw materials or chemicals into more useful or valuable forms.
|
ENGINEERING - CIVIL |
|
In modern usage, civil engineering is a broad field of engineering that deals with the planning, construction, and maintenance of fixed structures, or public works, as they are related to earth, water, or civilization and their processes. Most civil engineering today deals with roads, structures, water supply, sewer, flood control and traffic. In essence, civil engineering is a profession which makes the world a more habitable place to live.
|
ENGINEERING - ELECTRICAL |
|
Electrical engineering (sometimes referred to as electrical and electronics engineering) is a professional engineering discipline that deals with the study and application of electricity, electronics and electromagnetism. The field first became an identifiable occupation in the late nineteenth century with the commercialization of the electric telegraph and electrical power supply. The field now covers a range of sub-disciplines including those that deal with power, control systems, electronics and telecommunications.
|
ERGONOMICS |
|
Ergonomics (or human factors) is the scientific discipline concerned with the understanding of interactions among humans and other elements of a system, and the profession that applies theory, principles, data, and methods to design in order to optimize human well-being and overall system performance (definition adopted by the International Ergonomics Association in 2000).
|
ERRORS & OMISSIONS |
|
In the litigious world we live in today, many business owners protect themselves with errors and omissions insurance (E&O). This type of insurance may be appropriate for anyone who gives advice, makes educated recommendations, designs solutions or represents the needs of others, such as teachers, consultants, software developers, ad copywriters, Web page designers, placement services, telecommunication carriers or inspectors.
|
ESCROW |
|
Escrow is a legal arrangement in which an asset (often money, but sometimes other property such as art, a deed of title, website, or software source code) is delivered to a third party (called an escrow agent) to be held in trust pending a contingency or the fulfillment of a condition or conditions in a contract such as payment of a purchase price. Upon that event occurring, the escrow agent will deliver the asset to the proper recipient, otherwise the escrow agent is bound by his or her fiduciary duty to maintain the escrow account.
|
FARM EQUIPMENT |
|
Farm equipment is any kind of machinery used on a farm to help with farming. The best-known example of this kind of equipment is the tractor.
|
FIDUCIARY DUTIES |
|
The fiduciary duty is a legal relationship between two or more parties, most commonly a "fiduciary" or "trustee" and a "principal" or "beneficiary", that in English common law is arguably the most important concept within the portion of the legal system known as equity. Since the Judicature Acts merged the courts of Equity (historically based in England's Court of Chancery) with the courts of common law, the concept of fiduciary duty also became usable in common law courts.
|
GENERAL PRACTICE |
|
A general practitioner (GP) or family physician (FP) is a physician/medical doctor who provides primary care. A GP/FP treats acute and chronic illnesses, provides preventive care and health education for all ages and both sexes. Some also care for hospitalized patients, do minor surgery and/or obstetrics. The term general practitioner is common in the United Kingdom, where the word "physician" is only used for certain specialists and not for GPs.
|
GEOLOGY |
|
Geology (from Greek γη- (ge-, "the earth") and λογος (logos, "word", "reason")) is the science and study of the Earth, its composition, structure, physical properties, history and the processes that shape it. It is one of the Earth sciences. Geologists have helped establish the age of the Earth at about 4.6 billion (4.6x109) years, and have determined that the Earth's lithosphere, which includes the crust, is fragmented into tectonic plates that move over a rheic upper mantle (asthenosphere) via processes that are collectively referred to as plate tectonics. Geologists help locate and manage the earth's natural resources, such as petroleum and coal, as well as metals such as iron, copper, and uranium. Additional economic interests include gemstones and many minerals such as asbestos, perlite, mica, phosphates, zeolites, clay, pumice, quartz, and silica, as well as elements such as sulfur, chlorine, and helium. Experts who analyze slope creep, slides, earthquake damage, fault studies, environmental contamination, and construction claims.
|
HAZMET - HAZARDOUS MATERIALS |
|
A hazardous material (HAZMAT) is any solid, liquid, or gas that can cause harm to humans, other living organisms, or the environment due to being radioactive, flammable, explosive, toxic, corrosive, a biohazard, an oxidizer, an asphyxiant, or capable of causing severe allergic reactions. The term hazardous material is used in this context almost exclusively in the United States. The equivalent term in the rest of the English-speaking world is Dangerous Goods.
|
| |