Court Reporters

Description

With all the bickering that goes on at depositions and trials, how can they possibly transcribe it all?

Transcript
Lisa Dimonte: The most common question that we always get is, how do you get it all down? How does that little machine work? Dawn Hart: It kind of looks like a little mini typewriter, but it is not. In a typewriter you will hit one key at a time and you will get one letter at a time. The difference is with this particular machine, this Court Reporting machine, I could depress all the keys at once. Lisa Dimonte: It is more like being a pianist actually because when you are pressing one key on the piano, you make a note, but if you press multiple keys at the same time, you are making a chord or a symphony. Dawn Hart: I can go just like this and I have written a sentence. Lisa Dimonte: In that split second with one stroke, we were able to write, "Ladies and gentleman of the jury." Dawn Hart: 10-15 years ago, I tested it at 280 words a minute. Lisa Dimonte: Licensing by the National Court Reporters Association begins at 225 words a minute. Dawn Hart: The simplest word, 'The' 'a' little articles that don't sound like they are important are major. Lisa Dimonte: If there is any delay whatsoever or hesitancy whatsoever, a sentence, a word, a paragraph has gone by. Dawn Hart: We do have a backup. I write to a computer that creates a voice file, so I have an automatic backup. Lisa Dimonte: We are keepers of the record, not makers of the record. It is not up to us to judge or interpret what the witness said or perhaps did not say. Dawn Hart: I am there to listen, I am there to write, I am not there to make judgments. Lisa Dimonte: What learners do to drive us crazy is when they are trying to make a point, the witnesses speaking and giving an answer and the attorney is asking the next question on top of it. Dawn Hart: Then you contend with people not finishing and then the other person speaking faster will get on top of the person, that is not letting you finish. Lisa Dimonte: That is what drives us crazy is lawyers talking on top of each other and arguing back and forth without taking a breath. We just sometimes need to gently remind them that we are trying to keep the record and one person at a time.
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