More than 450 students from 24 area high schools will take on the roles of prosecutors and defense attorneys Wednesday in the first round of the 37th annual Riverside County Mock Trial Competition.

The event will begin about 6 p.m. at courthouses in Indio, Murrieta and Riverside. A total of five rounds are planned this month, followed in early March by the semifinal and final rounds, according to the county Office of Education, which is sponsoring the contest along with the Constitutional Rights Foundation, Riverside County Bar Association and the Superior Court.

The county began holding student-level mock trials in 1983. Roughly 14,000 youths have participated since then, according to organizers.

This year’s contest will challenge participants to successfully argue the fictitious case of People v. Klein, involving a “swatting” incident in which a disgruntled ex-employee of a restaurant allegedly makes a false report of a crime-in-progress to send first responders to a former co-worker’s residence in a retaliatory act.

Teams consisting of 8-25 students will play the parts of deputy district attorneys, defense attorneys, bailiffs, witnesses, clerks and investigators.

Contestants are given an allotted time, generally four to six minutes, at each stage of a proceeding, including opening and closing statements and cross-examinations.

Practicing attorneys and judges will assess students’ performance and award points in accordance with criteria established for the competition.

Students from public and private high schools are permitted to take part. Last year’s winning team was Martin Luther King High School in Riverside.

After the final round on March 2 at the Riverside Historic Courthouse, the highest-scoring team will represent the county at the State Mock Trial Competition, slated for March 22-24 in Sacramento.

More information is available at www.rcoe.us/student-events/mock-trial.

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