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Most cases are not lost at trial. They’re lost during discovery. In this video, Attorney Damon Moore breaks down 10 discovery mistakes that can end your case before trial — including procedural traps that many people never see coming. If you are involved in a divorce, custody case, civil lawsuit, or any kind of litigation, understanding the discovery process is critical. Discovery is not just paperwork. It is sworn testimony under oath. In this video, you’ll learn: Why discovery responses lock in your story Why “I don’t remember” can damage your credibility How text messages and emails often matter more than live testimony How missing discovery deadlines can cause you to waive objections Why unanswered requests for admission can be deemed admitted How a real Texas case resulted in a 100% award of a marital home due to discovery admissions Why gamesmanship in discovery usually backfires How discovery shapes settlement leverage and trial strategy Discovery in the law is the phase of a lawsuit where parties exchange information through interrogatories, requests for production, depositions, and requests for admission. Handled properly, discovery can strengthen your case. Handled poorly, it can quietly destroy it. By the time trial begins, credibility impressions are often already formed. ⚖️ This is not legal advice. This is courtroom reality. If you have not watched Video #1 — “Most Cases Are Lost in Discovery (Not at Trial)” — start there to understand why discovery matters before diving into these 10 rules. Subscribe for practical insight into litigation, trial strategy, family law, and courtroom dynamics. #DiscoveryProcess #CivilLitigation #FamilyLaw #TrialStrategy #DiscoveryMistakes #CourtroomReality