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Telecommunications Exhibits in Washington

Complete guide to preparing telecommunications exhibits that comply with Washington court requirements. Learn the correct labeling conventions, exchange deadlines, and e-filing procedures.

Washington telecommunications exhibit facts at a glance
  • Washington's primary rule governing exhibit preparation is CR 16.
  • Plaintiffs in Washington label exhibits with Numbers (1, 2, 3...).
  • Defendants in Washington label exhibits with Numbers with prefix (D-1, D-2...).
  • Washington courts require electronic exhibits to be filed through File & Serve.
  • Exhibits must be exchanged with opposing counsel 14 days before trial (CR 16) under CR 16.
  • Common telecommunications exhibits in Washington include call records, esi/electronic discovery, contracts & agreements.
  • ExhibitPrep applies Washington exhibit stamps entirely in the browser, so telecommunications case files never leave the user's computer.
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Washington Exhibit Requirements at a Glance

Plaintiff ExhibitsNumbers (1, 2, 3...)
Defendant ExhibitsNumbers with prefix (D-1, D-2...)
Exchange Deadline14 days before trial (CR 16)
Primary RuleCR 16
E-Filing SystemFile & Serve

Common Telecommunications Exhibits

Call Records

Phone logs, text message records, call detail records. For Washington e-filing on File & Serve, keep each file under 25 MB per document (varies by county).

ESI/Electronic Discovery

Emails, voicemails, chat logs, social media

Contracts & Agreements

Service agreements, terms of service, consent forms

TCPA Compliance Records

Do-not-call lists, consent documentation, scripts

Technical Evidence

Network logs, auto-dialer records, caller ID info

Damages Evidence

Receipts, call volumes, statutory damages calculations

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Washington-Specific Considerations

  • Washington's Evidence Rule 904 admits documents without live testimony if opposing counsel gets 30 days' notice and doesn't object within 14 days.
  • Telecommunications exhibits filed through File & Serve must stay under 25 MB per document (varies by county).
  • Plaintiffs in Washington mark exhibits with Numbers (1, 2, 3...); defendants use Numbers with prefix (D-1, D-2...).
  • Exchange your telecommunications exhibit list 14 days before trial (CR 16), and confirm any county-level variations with the clerk before trial.

How to Prepare Your Exhibits

1

Gather Your Documents

Collect all documents relevant to your telecommunications case. This typically includes call records, esi/electronic discovery, contracts & agreements, and other supporting evidence.

2

Convert to PDF

Convert all documents to PDF format. Washington courts require electronic exhibits to be filed via File & Serve. Scan paper documents at 300 DPI.

3

Apply Exhibit Labels

Use ExhibitPrep to add Washington-compliant exhibit stamps. Plaintiffs use Numbers (1, 2, 3...), defendants use Numbers with prefix (D-1, D-2...).

4

Exchange with Opposing Counsel

Exchange your exhibit list and copies with opposing counsel 14 days before trial (CR 16) per CR 16.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How should I label telecommunications exhibits in Washington?

Use Numbers (1, 2, 3...) for plaintiff exhibits and Numbers with prefix (D-1, D-2...) for defense exhibits, per CR 16. Washington's Evidence Rule 904 admits documents without live testimony if opposing counsel gets 30 days' notice and doesn't object within 14 days. ExhibitPrep's Telecommunications templates apply the right prefix automatically, so you're not re-deriving the local convention on every filing.

When do I have to exchange telecommunications exhibits in Washington?

Washington sets the exhibit exchange window at 14 days before trial (CR 16), though the exact date can shift with your assigned judge's scheduling order. Confirm the deadline in your case's pretrial order before you start stamping, then batch-process the full telecommunications production in one ExhibitPrep session once it's locked in.

What e-filing system handles telecommunications exhibits in Washington?

Washington runs electronic filing through File & Serve, which caps individual uploads at 25 MB per document (varies by county). Export each exhibit as a text-searchable PDF, and split any long call records into separate files before uploading so a single scanned record doesn't blow past the cap.

What exhibits come up most in a Washington telecommunications case?

Telecommunications matters in Washington typically turn on call records, esi/electronic discovery, contracts & agreements, plus whatever case-specific records the dispute calls for. Washington's Evidence Rule 904 admits documents without live testimony if opposing counsel gets 30 days' notice and doesn't object within 14 days. Stamp them all inside ExhibitPrep using the matching plaintiff or defense template, so every exhibit in the production carries a consistent, court-compliant mark before it goes to opposing counsel.

Can I stamp a large telecommunications production for Washington courts?

Yes. The Day Pass ($14.99) gives you unlimited stamping for 24 hours, which covers hundreds of exhibits in a single telecommunications case. Processing runs entirely in your browser, so your Washington case files never leave your computer. That matters here because File & Serve's 25 MB per document (varies by county) cap often forces a large production into dozens of separate uploads.

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