THE COURTROOM WORKGROUP II:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TRIALS AND TRIAL PROCEDURES.  Trials command public attention  Spectacular crimes  Notorious parties  Sympathetic victims  Visible representative.
Advertisements

Goal 5.03 Describe the adversarial nature of the judicial process.
Criminal Cases Chapter 16 Section 2.
Chapter Two – Overview of the Criminal Justice Process Rolando V. del Carmen.
Chapter 13: Chapter 13 Packet #1.
Proceedings Before Trial
Rights of the Accused / Steps in the Criminal Justice Process
The Organization of the Criminal Justice System
What will happen if you get arrested!. Oh man Mr. Mason I just got arrested! What is going to happen to me now?
PRETRIAL. Prosecutorial Review After arrest, prosecutor reviews case to decide what charges to make against arrestee Decide if there is enough evidence.
Steps in Criminal Cases Criminal Court Proceedings.
Pre-Trial Procedure.
Pretrial Proceedings Law and Justice Chapter 13. Booking and Initial Appearance Booking and Initial Appearance Booking and Initial Appearance Booking.
UNIT 2B: THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROCESS. Steps In a Trial - Felony  1. Crime Occurs  2. Investigation  3. Arrest  4. Booking  5. Initial Appearance.
The Criminal Justice System
Chapter 12 The Criminal Trial.
Institute of Social Control
The Court System Pretrial, Trial and sentencing. Proceeding Before a Trial Booking –Police station for booking –Process of making a police record Fingerprinted,
Chapter 13 Criminal Justice Process: Proceedings Before Trial.
Do Now pg What are the steps in a civil court case? 2. Name 3 major differences between criminal and civil cases.
The Trial Chapter 9 in Your Text John Massey Criminal Justice.
Chapter 13: Criminal Justice Process- Proceedings before the Trial
Unit 4 Notes. Judges act in three major roles: 1. Adjudicator – must assume a neutral stance between the prosecution and the defense. Must apply the law.
UNIT 5 AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. LESSON How do the 5 th, 6 th, and 8 th Amendments protect the rights within the judicial system. Objective: Explain.
Courts, Crime and Controversy
Chapter 13: Proceedings Before the Trial. Booking and Initial Appearance Booking: Formal process for arrests  Provide personal information and info on.
Arrests, Interrogations, and Confessions. Definitions Arrest: person is deprived of his or her freedom Interrogation: person accused or arrested is questioned.
Criminal Justice Process: Proceedings Before Trial.
Which of the five types of crimes are shown in the pie chart? Bell Ringer.
Criminal Procedure Chapter 16.2 Review. What is a crime? An action that breaks the law Felonies are serious crimes Misdemeanors are less serious crimes.
Understanding the Criminal Justice System CJUS 101 Chapter 9: The Court Process From First Appearance through Trial.
The Criminal Justice System
Constitutional Criminal Procedure
CHAPTER 13 Criminal Justice Process: Proceedings Before Trial.
Basic Legal Rights Review Article I of the Constitution & the Bill of Rights, gives basic rights to all people.
Criminal Justice Process: Proceedings Before Trial – Chp 13 Booking – Formal process of making a police record of an arrest -Give private info such as:
The Courts. The Criminal Justice System has three major components: Police Courts Corrections Each plays an important role in the system and all three.
The Judicial System What Courts Do and Crime. Stages of Criminal Justice.
Criminal Court Proceedings. Investigation Police gather evidence in the crime, in order to get an arrest warrant signed by a judge. Police may arrest.
Criminal Justice Process: Proceedings Before Trial Chapter 13.
Bell Ringer Criminal Law: Stages of a Criminal Case  Criminal prosecution develops in a series of stages.  Try to place the following stages in the correct.
CJ227 Criminal Procedure Welcome to our Seminar!!! (We will begin shortly) Tonight – Unit 3 (Chapter 5 – Pretrial Proceedings) (Chapter 6 – Place and Time.
CJ in the USA: Copyright 2011 Curriculum Technology, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Outline of the U.S. and Arizona Criminal Justice Systems
Introduction to Criminal Justice 2003:
Criminal Law ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS Why does conflict develop? How can governments ensure citizens are treated fairly?
Criminal Legal Process
Jury System.
Criminal Court Process
Lesson 32: How Do the Fifth, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments Protect Rights Within the Judicial System?
Criminal Justice Process
10 CHAPTER Pretrial Activities and the Criminal Trial
Steps After a Crime Investigation and Arrest Booking Nolle Prosequi-
The Criminal Trial Process
Key terms and procedures involved in criminal cases
Procedures for a CRIMINAL case
Unit 2B: The Criminal Justice Process
Civil Vs. Criminal People vs People Tort/lawsuit No punishment
Criminal Case Steps Arrested and booked.
Civil Vs. Criminal People vs People Tort/lawsuit No punishment
Arrest—Police arrest and “book” suspect by photographing and
Vocabulary Activity Indictment Grand Jury
Steps in a Criminal Case
Key terms and procedures involved in criminal cases
CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROCESS: PROCEEDINGS BEFORE TRIAL
REVIEWING the Arrest to Trial Procedures
Steps After a Crime Investigation and Arrest Booking Nolle Prosequi-
Steps After a Crime Investigation and Arrest Booking Nolle Prosequi-
Copyright © 2019 Robert Costello. All rights reserved.
Presentation transcript:

THE COURTROOM WORKGROUP II: PROCESS AND PARTICIPANTS

AGENTS INVOLVED IN THE CJS Prosecutor Defense Attorney Judge Jurors Witnesses Victim Families, friends Clerk Recorder Police Etc…

PROCESS: CHARGING Arrest Police bring charges Prosecutor makes charging decision Leave them the same Drop them Add more charges or increase severity of charge Drop some charges or reduce charge

PROCESS: JURISDICTION DETERMINATION Federal vs. state Between states (parts or all of a crime in multiple states) Defendants can be tried in both federal and state courts or in multiple states – not a violation of 5th Amendment double jeopardy clause Rare

PROCESS: PRETRIAL (Initial Appearance) Review of charges Defendant advised of rights Bail set Possible arrangement of attorney for defendant

PROCESSES: PRETRIAL (Arraignment) Preliminary hearing: prosecutor must present sufficient evidence to judge that defendant has committed crime Grand Jury: jury of citizens sees prosecutor’s presentation of evidence and makes determination as to whether there is sufficient evidence to proceed to trial If sufficient evidence, defendant is arraigned (formally charged) At arraignment, defendant issues plea: Guilty (sentence), Not Guilty (trial), Nolo Contendre

PROCESSES: PRETRIAL (Motions) Discovery Suppression Change of Venue Continuance Dismissal Etc.

PROCESSES: PRETRIAL (jury selection) Voir dire – questioning of prospective jurors (general to group or specific to individuals) Jury pool – random selection For-cause challenges – unlimited (e.g., acquainted with party in case, refusal to be unbiased, etc.) Peremptory challenges – limited number, both sides 85% of cases won in this phase Capital cases: death-qualified (SC – this is constitutional)

PROCESSES: TRIAL (Opening Statements) Begin with prosecutor Defense may waive Explains specific charges Outlines evidence that will be introduced Refer to other side’s case

PROCESSES: TRIAL (Witnesses and Evidence) Prosecution begins – goes through all witnesses and evidence Rules of evidence must be followed (objections raised during trial; appealable) Closes Then, defense (Motion to Dismiss) May simply state that prosecution does not have sufficient evidence and not present a case Prosecution may rebut

PROCESSES: TRIAL (Closing Statements, etc.) Prosecutor first, then defense Charge to jury Summary of legal principles Standard of evidence for conviction Weight jury can give to evidence Jury deliberation Verdict Not guilty (defendant released) Guilty (Sentencing date set) Hung jury (may have further deliberation, re-try case from beginning, opt not to re-try the case)

PROCESSES: TRIAL (Sentencing) Judge approves all sentences Capital cases: bifurcated system Statutory sentencing guidelines in all states

DETERMINING THE CHARGES: POLICE AND PROSECUTOR Due process: reasonable belief that accused committed the crime(s) Prosecutorial discretion: whether to charge, what to charge, evidence to present at arraignment Cooperation between police and prosecutor

DISCRETION AT PRE-TRIAL PROCEEDINGS (Bail) Pre-trial release; innocent until proven guilty 8th Amendment – no excessive bail, but no explicit guarantee of bail What is excessive? When can bail be denied? Public safety, flight risk… Does bail discriminate against the poor? Bondsmen system

DISCRETION AT PRE-TRIAL PROCEEDINGS: Competency to Stand Trial Judge makes determination Temporary NGRI – affirmative defense before trial

DISCRETION AT PRE-TRIAL PROCEEDINGS: Plea Bargaining Not desirable to victim, police Prosecutor considerations: Use of resources (time and cost); community interest with use of resources; benefit of guilty verdict; clearing cases; questionable confidence in case (e.g., witness bailing) Can be initiated by either side at any point prior to verdict Seldom involves victim Judge must approve plea bargain; sentence

SIXTH AMENDMENT: RIGHT TO SPEEDY TRIAL Speedy is undefined (relative to case) Federal cases: 100 days from time of arrest (deadlines in between) Only applied to federal courts until 1967 Klopfer v. NC 1973 – SC provided remedy to defendants denied right to speedy trial

RULES OF EVIDENCE Vary by state Objection should be raised during trial Basis for appeal