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A map can tell the truth and still confuse everyone in the room. That’s why we sat down with veteran surveyor and expert witness Frank Ferrantello to unpack how he turns dense site data into clean, visual evidence that judges and juries actually understand. From adding targeted photos to forensic surveys to framing testimony in everyday terms, Frank shows how clarity and not theatrics, moves cases forward.

We dive into the shrinking pipeline of seasoned land surveyors and why real expertise goes beyond data collection. Frank breaks down the legal backbone of surveying in New York: easements, boundaries, sidewalk liability, public versus private space. And how staying current on statutes and case law changes outcomes. He shares memorable examples from urban disputes, like when a plaza looks private but is governed by public agreements, and how mapping those lines can reset responsibility and reshape a claim.

Frank also opens his playbook on professionalism: starting each matter with conflict checks, refusing the hired-gun mentality, and deciding whether the facts deserve his name. His preparation focuses on organized digital records, concise answers for cross, and the discipline to let evidence speak for itself. When a case lands late, tight systems and visual exhibits help him deliver fast without bending the truth.

If you care about expert testimony, construction law, real estate disputes, or how to make complex information simple and persuasive, this conversation delivers practical insights you can use today. Hit follow, share this with a colleague who wrangles maps or liability, and leave a quick review to tell us what part changed how you think about evidence.