DOJ-OGR-00033078.jpg

523 KB

Extraction Summary

3
People
2
Organizations
1
Locations
2
Events
1
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Deposition transcript
File Size: 523 KB
Summary

This document is page 90 of a deposition transcript dated July 26, 2017. In this excerpt, an unidentified witness is questioned about their preparation for the deposition, which included a meeting with a 'Mr. Leopold' that morning. The witness also confirms they have previously read police reports related to the case and clarifies that a statement they gave to the police was in the form of a narrative police report, not a question-and-answer transcript.

People (3)

Name Role Context
Mr. Leopold
Mentioned as the person the deponent met with to prepare for the deposition.
Questioner (Q) Interrogator
The individual asking questions during the deposition.
Answerer (A) Deponent/Witness
The individual answering questions during the deposition.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
Censor & Associates, Reporting and Transcription, Inc. company
The firm that produced the transcript, listed in the header.
Police government agency
Mentioned in relation to police reports and a statement given by the deponent.

Timeline (2 events)

A meeting to prepare for the day's deposition.
A deposition where a witness is being questioned about their preparation and knowledge of case documents.

Locations (1)

Location Context
The address of Censor & Associates, listed in the footer.

Relationships (1)

Answerer (A) professional Mr. Leopold
The deponent (A) met with Mr. Leopold to prepare for the deposition, suggesting a client-advisor or similar professional relationship.

Key Quotes (3)

"When did you meet with Mr. Leopold to prepare for today's deposition?"
Source
— Questioner (Q) (Inquiring about the deponent's preparation for the testimony.)
DOJ-OGR-00033078.jpg
Quote #1
"A transcript has questions and answers on it. A police report is just typed out narrative."
Source
— Questioner (Q) (Explaining the difference between two types of documents to the deponent.)
DOJ-OGR-00033078.jpg
Quote #2
"Oh, it's a police report."
Source
— Answerer (A) (Confirming the format of the statement they gave to the police.)
DOJ-OGR-00033078.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,088 characters)

Censor & Associates
Reporting and Transcription, Inc.
Page 90
1 Q. Anybody else?
2 A. No.
3 Q. When did you meet with Mr. Leopold to
4 prepare for today's deposition?
5 A. This morning.
6 Q. And how long did that meeting last?
7 A. Until it started.
8 Q. Now you told me that you previously had
9 read the police reports in this case?
10 A. Yes.
11 Q. Have you read your statement that you gave
12 to the police?
13 A. Yes, sir.
14 Q. And in what form was that statement?
15 A. What do you mean?
16 Q. Was it in the form of a police report or a
17 transcript?
18 A. What's the difference?
19 Q. A transcript has questions and answers on
20 it. A police report is just typed out narrative.
21 A. Oh, it's a police report.
22 Q. And when did you read the police report?
23 A. A few days ago. I overread it a few days
24 ago.
25 Q. Had you read it before that?
Ph. 561.682.0905 - Fax. 561.682.1771
1655 Palm Beach Lakes Blvd., Suite 500 - West Palm Beach, FL 33401
07/26/17 Page 2765 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DOJ-OGR-00033078

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