Proffer

A proffer is an offer made prior to any formal negotiations.

For the agreement between prosecutor and defendant, see proffer letter.

In a trial, to proffer (sometimes profer) is to offer evidence in support of an argument, or elements of an affirmative defense or offense. A party with the burden of proof must proffer sufficient evidence to carry that burden. For example, in support of a particular argument, a party may proffer documentary evidence or witnesses.

Where a party is denied the right to introduce evidence because that evidence would be inflammatory, hearsay, or would lack sufficient authentication, that party must make a proffer of what the evidence would have shown in order to preserve the issue for appeal.

As in business, a proffer can be a sign of "good faith" a first offer or proposal, to show a willingness to "barter".

  • see good faith bargaining, barter.

Etymology

The word proffer is derived from Anglo-French "por-", forth, and offrir, to offer.[1]

gollark: You are MUCH like Intel's flagship Xeon Platinum 8380 "Ice Lake" 2P server configuration.
gollark: Art will be automated in 10 years anyway.
gollark: If no moon is detected in 24 hours of scanning, it is deemed not there.
gollark: This would work by using shodan and/or scanning the entire IP address space for IP cameras, then looking for the moon in their feeds.
gollark: By using arbitrary IP cameras and computer vision, of course.

See also

References


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