Noun
The quality of being admissible; admissibleness; as, the admissibility of evidence.
Source: Webster's dictionaryAs a consequence a defendant may be able to circumvent the federal limitation on the Miranda rule and successfully challenge the admissibility under state constitutional provisions. Source: Internet
For ψ to be a wavelet for the continuous wavelet transform (see there for exact statement), the mother wavelet must satisfy an admissibility criterion (loosely speaking, a kind of half-differentiability) in order to get a stably invertible transform. Source: Internet
He said although M’membe’s evidence could not be repeated in respect of The Post, the same would be evaluated in terms of admissibility subsequently. Source: Internet
The OTP has decided that thresholds of admissibility have been reached, ie the alleged crimes are under ICC jurisdiction, are sufficiently grave and are not being addressed by domestic or other legal bodies. Source: Internet
Proper chain-of-custody records and secure storage facilities can help ensure the admissibility of digital or analog recordings by the Court. Source: Internet
The conduct of the preliminary hearing as well as the specific rules regarding the admissibility of evidence vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Source: Internet