“…Research on the effects of source credibility in the courtroom often focuses on the credibility of victims (Bottoms, Davis, & Epstein, ), defendants (e.g., Bottoms et al, ), eyewitnesses (Neal, Christiansen, Bornstein, & Robicheaux, ), or expert witnesses (Cramer, Brodsky, & DeCoster, ), with little focus on credibility aspects of attorneys. When the credibility of the attorney is examined, it is often done in two ways—correlational analyses or experimental manipulation—though much of this research focuses on the constituents of credibility (expertise, trustworthiness) and seeks to assess at least expertise in objective ways.…”