Federalevidence review has an excellent piece on leading questions during the prosecution direct.  As part of the comment they say:

The Seventh Circuit recently explored the limitation on leading questions through FRE 611(c), admonishing the government about a trend that was disturbing, even if at most it would be only harmless error.

I see this regularly in courts-martials as well.  There are times when it is proper to ask leading questions:  general introductory matters, moving from a broad topic to another, developing the testimony or focussing a witness.

The News-Tribune reports:  The attorney for a local soldier and alleged member of a so-called Afghan kill team used a hearing Monday and Tuesday to stage an all-out assault on the government’s key witness in the case.  This would be a reference to Pvt Morlock.

And Stars & Stripes reports:  A key government witness in the case of U.S. soldiers accused of murdering Afghan civilians for sport had lied about two of the defendants in hopes of winning leniency, according to a man who was locked up with the witness.

Here’s a new twist; Navy Times reports:

A senior master-at-arms and expert dog handler once censured by Navy Secretary Ray Mabus for abusing subordinates has, in a remarkable twist of fate, been awarded the Silver Star for battlefield heroism during a harrowing 2009 firefight in Afghanistan during which he shot and killed two enemy fighters firing at him from less than 15 feet away.

Senior Chief Master-at-Arms Michael Toussaint “displayed great battlefield courage,” Mabus wrote in the May 11 citation, a copy of which was obtained by Navy Times. The Navy verified its authenticity.

TBO.com reports that:  The mother of [Kiel M. Johanson] a Coast Guard chief who is being kicked out of the service over a hazing incident says her son is the victim of a "witch hunt" and is going to appeal his court martial.  I believe the older Navy terms included “pink belly” and “greasing.”  I seem to remember from defending such cases back in the 80’s.

LTC Lakin, he is still a lieutenant colonel, comments on his appeal (reported on Military.com).

"Realistically, I understand that a very small fraction [of appeals] get reviewed and a smaller fraction get overturned or anything," Lakin said. "But the appeals attorney has some issues he wants to bring up."

I would imagine that the evidence on the missing movement would be an issue.  He contested that charge, and my sense was that there were times of uncertainty in the evidence.  Ultimately though, the members decided the issue against LTC Lakin.  Will the ACCA, using its awesome plenary powers of de nove review reverse.  Always a possibility, but will that affect the sentence – assuming ACCA sets-aside the MM conviction?

Professor Friedman, a true guru of “confrontation” issues notes:

It appears that the next case in the Melendez-Diaz line will come very quickly. The Supreme Court granted cert today in Williams v. Illinois, No. 10-8505, seeking review of People v. Williams, 939 N.E.2d 268 (Ill. 2010). The case presents the issue of what I have called the "not for the truth" end-run in the context of expert evidence: The Illinois Supreme Court held that the absent analyst’s report was introduced not for the truth of what it asserted but rather "to show the underlying facts and data [the in-court witness] used before rendering an expert opinion in this case." I will write something more substantive on this later.

And he opines a little with early thoughts on Bullcoming.

Goffman on the Jury:  Real Juror’s Attention to the “Offstage” of trials.

Social psychologist Erving Goffman, in his classic work The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, provides a framework that explains why jurors may turn their attention at the courthouse to information not formally presented from the witness stand. We dub this “offstage observation,” a type of juror behavior that has not been systematically examined empirically. Analyzing a unique data source of 50 actual jury deliberations in civil trials, we find that jurors do look to the offstage in evaluating the claims of the parties. However, in contrast to predictions, these observations played a surprisingly minor role in the jury deliberation process.

Contact Information