Conveying Your Theme & Theory Through Storytelling
This program teaches criminal defense lawyers how to convey theme and theory through storytelling, treating trial advocacy as a battle of competing narratives rather than a mere recitation of facts. It explains why jurors are neurologically wired to understand, remember, and decide cases through story—using structure, scenes, emotion, and point of view to make sense of evidence. The program walks through classic story architecture (steady state, crisis, new normal) and shows how to adapt it to criminal cases so jurors actively engage with the defense narrative instead of passively absorbing the prosecution’s version.
Criminal defense lawyers who watch this program will learn a concrete, repeatable process for building persuasive stories that carry from voir dire through closing argument. The program introduces storyboarding as a preparation tool, teaching lawyers how to identify and sequence 3–5 key scenes, engage the five senses, choose point of view and tense, and “show, not tell.” It explains how to craft powerful hooks, weave legal concepts like presumption of innocence, burden of proof, and reasonable doubt into story rather than lecture, and avoid common mistakes that cause jurors to disengage or misinterpret the defense theory.
The program also delivers courtroom-ready strategies for openings, closings, and cross-examinations that empower jurors as active participants in the story. Lawyers will learn how sequencing affects juror perception, how to frame issues so jurors enter the case through the correct lens, and how to end with clarity and purpose through a strong “ask.” By teaching criminal defense attorneys to think in story—rather than fragments of evidence—this program helps them humanize clients, undermine prosecution narratives, and deliver arguments that jurors remember, believe, and use when it is time to deliberate.
Chris concentrates in criminal defense in federal and state courts. Chris concentrates on defending clients accused of white collar crimes, street crimes, sex offenses, and capital murder in the South and around the country. Since launching his private practice in 2007, Chris has represented clients in serious matters from Las Vegas to New York City to San Juan, Puerto Rico. However, the bulk of his practice is fighting for men and women accused of crimes in and around South Carolina. Prior to opening his own practice, Chris spent 15 years as a public defender or non-profit lawyer. Chris began his career in Charleston, S.C., and he and his family returned in 2010 after spending a decade in Atlanta. The son of two teachers, Chris grew up in Carrollton, Georgia. After graduating from his hometown college, he earned his law degree from Georgetown University in 1992. Chris spent the next eight years as a public defender in Charleston, successfully defending clients against a wide array of criminal charges from driving offenses to capital murder. Chris is recognized by his peers for his excellence as a criminal defense lawyer. Chris served as President of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers from 2020-2021. He was selected by Superlawyers in 2016-2020 for Criminal Defense in South Carolina and has achieved an Avvo of 10.0. In 2000, Chris joined the Southern Center for Human Rights, a nationally acclaimed non-profit law office in Atlanta that defends people facing the death penalty throughout the Deep South. Working with committed and talented defense teams, Chris won a series of impressive results in very difficult cases — an acquittal for death row inmate Gary Drinkard, a DNA exoneration for Douglas Echols, an acquittal for Albert Joe Ryans, and a lesser conviction and sentence for death row inmate Levi Pace. Chris accepted the appointment to become the founding director of the Georgia Capital Defender, the state agency charged with defending indigent men and women facing the death penalty at trial and on appeal. During his tenure (2004-2007), the office accomplished amazing results for its clients, resolving 40 cases without a single client being sentenced to death, including a unanimous life verdict in a double murder case that Chris tried in Brunswick, Georgia. However, the State of Georgia responded by cutting funding so low that it undermined the clients’ constitutional right to effective representation. After being prohibited by the State of Georgia from litigating the issue in court, Chris resigned over the principle of effective representation for all defendants facing the death penalty, which was covered in the New York Times. One of Chris’ most distinguished honors came in 2020, when he was sworn in as the 62nd President of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL).
CLE State Accreditation
- General 0.50
- General CLE-HI: 0.50
- General CLE-SD: 0.50
- General CLE-NY: 0.60
- General CLE-CA: 0.50
- General CLE-IL: 0.50
- General CLE-AK: 0.50
- General CLE-MD: 0.50
- General CLE-VT: 0.50
- General CLE-MA: 0.50
- General CLE-DC: 0.50
- General CLE-ND: 0.50
- General CLE-OR: 0.50
- General CLE-WA: 0.50
- General CLE-CT: 0.50
- General CLE-NH: 0.50
- General CLE-FL: 0.60
- General CLE-VI: 0.50
- General CLE-AZ: 0.50
CLE State Accreditation:
- General 0.50
- General CLE-HI: 0.50
- General CLE-SD: 0.50
- General CLE-NY: 0.60
- General CLE-CA: 0.50
- General CLE-IL: 0.50
- General CLE-AK: 0.50
- General CLE-MD: 0.50
- General CLE-VT: 0.50
- General CLE-MA: 0.50
- General CLE-DC: 0.50
- General CLE-ND: 0.50
- General CLE-OR: 0.50
- General CLE-WA: 0.50
- General CLE-CT: 0.50
- General CLE-NH: 0.50
- General CLE-FL: 0.60
- General CLE-VI: 0.50
- General CLE-AZ: 0.50