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Courts and Courtroom Work Groups What are the different levels of courts? Roles of Judges, Prosecutors, and Defense attorneys.

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Presentation on theme: "Courts and Courtroom Work Groups What are the different levels of courts? Roles of Judges, Prosecutors, and Defense attorneys."— Presentation transcript:

1 Courts and Courtroom Work Groups What are the different levels of courts? Roles of Judges, Prosecutors, and Defense attorneys

2 National and State Courts are separated into three tiers: – Lower Courts – Felony Courts – Appellate Courts

3 Lower Courts Have limited jurisdiction They deal with misdemeanors and pretrial proceedings They look at traffic offenses, drunk and disorderly conduct, shoplifting, and prostitution They assign lawyers to indigent (poor) defendants

4 Felony Courts  They decide facts and apply the law on felony cases.  Decide cases from capital murder down to theft

5 Appellate Courts (appeals courts) They review trial courts’ application of the law and the facts.

6 What does that mean?  They don’t decide guilt or innocence  They review court’s proceedings to make sure the trial courts are following procedures and aren’t violating defendants’ constitutional rights.  Defendants do not have to be present.  Appeals Courts include Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court

7 U.S. Supreme Court

8 U.S. Constitution is the “Supreme Law of the Land” What does that mean?

9  Constitution is the highest law  State law cannot violate the Constitution

10 What to know about the Supreme Court: You have no constitutional right to a review of your case. The Supreme Court doesn’t decide whether you’re guilty or not Almost everything the Court does is secret except for: – Lawyers’ arguments – Briefs – Published opinions

11 Writ of certiorari: The Court decides to hear a case from a lower appeals court

12 The Supreme Court decides to hear a case for two specific reasons:  A conflict exists among the lower courts  An important constitutional issue has not been resolved.

13 Mission of the Courts

14 Courts have three important missions:  1. Administer Justice according to the rules of the law That is called the Due Process Mission – everything is fair. That is why everything is done in open court. Fairness is more important than convicting guilty people

15  2. Public expects courts to make sure guilty people are convicted and punished. That is called the Crime Control Model Public expects the criminal justice system to punish “bad” people. Prosecutors are supposed to be ruthless Defense attorneys should not “get their clients off on technicalities” Judges should be hard on criminals

16 Vocabulary Word  Adversary Process: getting the truth by fighting in court according to the formal rules of criminal proceedings Attorneys, judges are all part of the adversarial process.

17 3. Public expects the courts to do what is “best” for victims and offenders. 3. Public expects the courts to do what is “best” for victims and offenders. –That is called the Social Justice Mission –In this system, it’s important to consider what type of person the defendant is – look at the background, nature of offense and then determine – probation, jail time, throw away the key, etc.

18 The Courtroom Work Group Judges, Prosecutors, Defense Attorneys

19 Judges Play a huge role in the adversarial system. They interpret the law and sentence people

20 Bench Trial: a trial before a judge; no jury

21 Prosecutors Serve as an important link between police and courts and between courts and corrections Police bring arrests to prosecutors, not to judges Prosecutors not judges decide which cases go to court. Prosecutors have an enormous amount of power. By deciding not to charge a person for a crime, prosecutors can stop a police investigation dead in its tracks

22 Prosecutors direct what charges and what type of sentencing they are looking for. They also play a huge role in plea bargaining. Prosecutors are referred to as county attorneys or the DA (district attorney) They work for the state

23 Plea Bargaining

24 Defense Attorneys  1. They defend their clients  2. Bargain with prosecutors to get the best deal for their client  3. They have a constitutional duty and professional responsibility to make sure the government plays by the rules.

25  You have private defense attorneys (commercials on TV)  You have Public Defenders who work for the state and are appointed to those who cannot afford an attorney

26 Public defenders often get a bad rap, but the question always arises: Can lawyers rigorously defend clients they have never seen before and probably won’t see again?

27 How much does it cost to go to law school? Hamline – 28,392 William Mitchell – Approximately 32,000 University St. Thomas – 34,472 University of Minnesota 25,324 (+3000 in fees) We’re looking at 84,000-104,000 for three years!

28 How much do attorneys make? $74,980 and $163,320. (U.S. Department of Labor). Average –Depends on where you work also –2007 County Attorney – 100-144,000 –Public Defenders 40-85,000

29 How much do Judges make?  70-180,000 (depending on what type of judge)  of 2009, the Chief Justice of the United States receives an annual salary of $217,400, and the Associate Justices receive annual salaries of $208,100.

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