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Court Systems
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Court Systems -Two Separate Court Systems Federal – deal with Federal crimes State – deal with state crimes (most cases are actually state cases) -Two kinds of court cases Civil – handles cases where no crime is committed, such as divorce, custody, property disputes.. Criminal – handle cases where a crime has been committed, such as murder, kidnapping, robbery…
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Jurisdiction -Jurisdiction - the authority to hear a question or case in dispute -Original Jurisdiction -this belongs to the court which has the initial authority to hear a case -Exclusive Jurisdiction -means that jurisdiction belongs to only one group -Concurrent Jurisdiction -this means that a case can be heard in one of several courts
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Constitution All of the following cases are heard in Federal Courts. They are outlined in Article 3 Section 2 Clause 1. -Constitutional Law – anything involving the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, or any amendments Examples: Washington, D.C.s handgun ban in 2008, search and seizure in schools, district court rulings on gay marriage before the Supreme Court decision, etc.
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Federal Law -Any crime that breaks a federal law MAY be heard in a Federal Court Examples – U.S. Patents, embezzelment from the U.S. government….
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Maritime Laws -Crimes that take place on the ocean or the Gulf of Mexico on an American ship are heard in Federal courts
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Disputes involving the U.S. Government
-Any time a person files a claim against the U.S. government, that case is heard in the US Federal Court Examples – Federal Government contractors who sue
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Disputes between citizens of different states
-Example: since both states can claim the trial in their state, the case goes to the Federal Courts
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Controversies between states
-Any time a dispute occurs between two states, it is heard in neither states court but goes straight to a federal court, and the US Supreme Court could hold original jurisdiction. (Article 3 Section 2 Clause 2) (this does not involve state cases against criminals, this means when states sue one another or if a state and federal government file lawsuits against one another.) Example – North and South Carolina fought over a boundry near Charlotte, NC.
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Disputes involving Different governments
-Example: Anytime an ambassador from another nation breaks a law in the United States, that trial is heard by a Federal court. This is a case that could have original jursidiction by the US Supreme Court
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Cases involving U.S. Officials in Foreign Nations can go straight to the Supreme Court for original jurisdiction (outlined in Article 3 Section 2 Clause 2) -Example: Should our ambassador break a crime in a foreign nation, and should they be extradited back to the U.S. for trial and punishment, that will be heard in a Federal government.
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Inferior Courts (every Federal court that isn’t the Supreme Court is an Inferior court. They were created by Congress, as outlined in Article 3 Section 1.)
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Federal District Court
-lowest level of Federal Courts -all federal cases must begin at this level -Each court rules over a district. At least one court per state -District Courts complete about 90% of the Federal case load
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Federal District Court
Court’s Purpose -District Courts only handle cases that fall under Federal jurisdiction -District Courts use a jury trial to decide guilt or innocence (amendment 6 and 7, also Article 3 Section 2 Clause 3) -Judges are to interpret the law and determine punishments
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Federal District Court
Court Officials -Judges are appointed by the President w/ Senate approval on federal level, but in NC courts they are elected Judges serve a life-time term on federal level (outlined in Article 3 Section 1) -U.S. Attorneys represent the government in all cases -U.S. Marshals are in charge of protecting the court -Magistrates -Court Clerks
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Federal Appeals Court Appeals Court -Appeals Courts serve as the second level in the system -They have only appellate jurisdiction -there are 12 Courts of Appeal in the U.S. which supervise a district -Cases are appealed to the Court because of unfairness or error
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Federal Appeals Court Court Procedures
-No juries are used in Appeals Courts -No determination is made on guilt or innocence -Only decision is whether a fair trial was given -Written Briefs of the unfair ruling or trial error are prepared and oral arguments are presented before the court -Panels of 3 or more judges hear the cases and make decisions
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-Appeals Courts can make three -Uphold
Federal Appeals Court Court Rulings -Appeals Courts can make three -Uphold confirm the previous court’s decision -Overturn -reverse the previous court’s decision -Remand -send the case back down to a lower court for retrialdecisions in a case
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U.S. Supreme Court (basically, it’s a high level appeals court)
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-Highest Court in the Nation
Supreme Court -Highest Court in the Nation -All Decisions are Final (unless they overturn it themselves or an amendment is passed) -Usually Appellate Jurisdiction Only (outlined in Article 3 Section 2 Clause 2) -Only hears about 150 of thousands of appeals
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-Constitution is the Highest Law
Court’s Power -Constitution is the Highest Law -Constitution is the Supreme Law when there is a conflict with other laws -Court is responsible for upholding the Constitution -Judicial Review – power to declare laws unconstitutional (remember Marbury v. Madison
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Supreme Court Justices
-made up of 9 justices -no official requirements -but most have been lawyers prior to being federal judges on another level before their appointment -appointed by the President w/ Senate approval -appointed to a life term (outlined in Article 3 Section 1) -very important appointment process that usually involves Senate hearings and interviews with the President
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-In session from Oct to June/July each year
Court at Work -In session from Oct to June/July each year -Each month follows a pattern -1st 2 weeks the court hears cases, make announcements, and discuss current cases -2nd 2 weeks the justices are writing opinions, deciding what cases to hear, and researching cases
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Which Cases? -Justices discuss and must agree on the merits of a case for it to be heard -Only hears certain kinds of cases -Usually hears just appellate cases
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Court Decisions -Justices discuss cases with each other
-The Justices make one of three decisions (they’re the same as the appeals court decisions) Uphold Overturn Remand -Each decision is accompanied with a written opinion explaining the law about the case Majority Opinion Concurrent Opinion Dissenting Opinion
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