Criminal Justice Today Ch 10: Pretrial Activities and the Criminal Trial
First Appearance
- An appearance before a magistrate - legality of the defendants arrest is assessed - defendant is informed of charges on which he or she is being held. - rights advisement - bail may be set or pretrial release arranged.
preliminary hearing
- if crime was committed - if defendant is person to committ crime (probable cause) - competency - any misconduct when determines release, bail, or early intervention program
Stages of a Criminal Trial
1. Trial initiation 2. Jury selection 3. Opening statements 4. Presentation of evidence 5. Closing arguments 6. Judges charge to the jury 7. Jury deliberations 8. Verdict
appearance bond
10% of bail deposited, will get 90% of that after case closed
Speedy Trial Act
1974 federal law requiring that proceedings against a defendant in a federal criminal case begin within a specified period of time.
Bail Bond
A document guaranteeing the appearance of a defendant in court as required with the accused promising money or property to be paid to the court if he or she does not appear.
Competent to Stand Trial
A finding of the court that the defendant has sufficient present ability to consult with his or her attorney with a reasonable degree of rational understanding of the proceedings against him or her. determined @ prelim. hearing
Sequestered Jury
A jury that is isolated from the public during the course of a trial and throughout the deliberation process.
Nolo Contendere
A plea of "no contest." Does not admit guilt but also cannot provide basis for later civil suits that might arise following criminal conviction.
Evidence
Anything useful to a judge or jury in deciding a case. Can be witness testimony, written documents, videos, photos, objects, etc.
types of bail bonds
Cash Surety Appearance Recognizance Unsecured Property Conditional Signature
Rules of Evidence
Court rules that govern the admissibility at criminal hearings and trials.
Real Evidence
Evidence that consists of physical material or traces of physical activity.
Direct Evidence
Evidence that if believed, directly proves a fact (eyewitness testimony, video documentation)
Circumstantial Evidence
Evidence that requires interpretation. Requires the judge or jury to draw conclusions.
Plea
In criminal proceedings, the defendants formal answer to charge against him or her (guilty, not guilty, no contest)
Opening Statements
Initial statement of the prosecutor or the defense attorney made in court to a judge or jury describing the facts that he or she intends to present during trial to prove their case.
Perjury
Intentional making of a false statement as part of the testimony of a sworn witness.
count reduction
Judges offer to sentence defendants to concurrent sentences rather than consecutive recommend leniency to judge
Danger Law
Law intended to prevent the pretrial release of criminal defendants deemed a danger to others in the community.
Closing Argument
Oral summation of a case presented to a judge/jury by the defense or prosecution in a criminal trial.
Jury Selection
Process in which members of a jury are chosen.
Plea Bargaining
Process of negotiating an agreement among the defendant, prosecutor, and court as to appropriate plea and sentence in a case.
ROR
Release on recognizance. Release of a criminal defendant on his or her written promise to appear in court as required.
Hearsay
Something that is not based on the personal knowledge of a witness.
Probative Value
The degree to which a particular item of evidence is useful in proving something in a trial.
information or indictment
The grand jury hears evidence presented by the prosecutor and decides whether the case should go to trial. indictment- filed by prosecutor no defense present true bill or no bill
Conditional Release
The release by executive decision of a prisoner from a federal or state correctional facility who has not served his or her full sentence.
Pretrial Release
The release of an accused person from custody on his or her promise to appear in court when required.
Peremptory Challenge
The right to challenge a potential juror without disclosing a reason.
Property Bond
The setting of bail in the form of land, houses, stocks, or other tangible property.
Adversarial System
Two sided structure under which American criminal trial courts operate (pits the prosecution against the defense)
pre-trial proceedings
arrest booking first appearance preliminary hearing information or indictment arrangement and plea
array challenge
biased/nonrepresentative jury pool
surety bond
bondsman will provide insurance if you don't show fee
bail reform act
can detain someone without opportunity of bail if threat to society individual v. social interest
jury v. bench trial factors
character of defense, judge, and nature of case
types of pretrial motions
continuance discovery suppression change of venue dismissal
pretrial motions both sides can use
continuance and dismissal
reasons for dismissal
death of important player, loss of evidence, not sound case, violation of speedy trial, plea, confession, suppression of something the prosecutor needs
booking
fingerprints, mugshot, search establish identity and charges can only be 48 hours before cut loose or formal charges (but can be rearrested) no rights to attorney until line of interrogative questioning not part of critical stage
cons of plea bargaining
gives deal to "bad guy" innocent people get convicted
arraignment/ plea
if guilt- waives right for prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt
cause challenge
juror shows bias
setting bail
misdemeanor: strict guidelines felony: discretion
right to jury trial?
only if facing 6months +
Arrest
police initiated judge initiated grand jury indictment (of jurors)
purpose of jury
prevent government oppression
probable cause
prima facie
horizontal overcharging
prosecutor brings a number of different counts for a single criminal incident concurrent sentences tho so no difference in imprisonment time
vertical overcharging
reduce charge
pros of plea bargaining
reduce judicial backup cheaper higher conviction rate
manhattan bail project
release pretrial based on risk assessment, not ability to pay bail
vera report
risk assessment to determine release instead of bail
types of plea bargains
vertical overcharging, horizontal overcharging, count reduction