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- Introduction
- A. State and local judges conduct most of the nation’s judicial business
- B. State judges have final say on most cases; a few exceptions
- 1. Writs of habeas corpus
(petitioner being held by state in violation of due process) can cause
federal district court review of state court action
- 2. Federal questions: state
judge has interpreted national constitution or law
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- C. New judicial federalism has caused state judges to become more
prominent
- D. Tort law revolution has increased number of state court cases
- E. Criminal cases have also increased with tougher state action against
criminals
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- A. Minor courts
- 1. In most states minor courts
handle misdemeanors
- 2. Decisions of these courts may
be appealed and in most cases tried de novo – tried again without
reference to what happened in the minor court
- 3. In cities, these minor courts
are known as municipal courts and are often divided into traffic courts,
domestic relations courts, small claims courts, and police courts with
paid magistrates presiding over
most of these courts
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- 4. The justice of the peace
system survives, especially in rural areas with their authority limited
to performing marriages, notarizing, handling traffic violations, and
hearing misdemeanors usually involving fines of less than $200;
traditional justice of peace courts are being phased out
- 5. A new and effective reform of
courts is the establishment of court-watching groups
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- 1. Trial courts where cases first
appear (original jurisdiction) are called county courts, circuit courts,
superior courts, district courts, and common pleas courts
- 2. Trial courts administer
common, criminal, equity, and statutory law; states generally also have
special probate courts to administer estates and handle related matters
- 3. There is growing recognition
that trial courts not only apply the law, they also shape the law
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- 1. In a few states, appeals from
trial courts are carried directly to the state supreme court; however,
most states have intermediate appeals courts much like the United States
courts of appeals
- 2. All states have a court of
last resort, usually called the Supreme Court; unless a federal question
is involved, state supreme courts are the highest tribunal to which a
case may be carried
- 3. All state judges of all state
courts take an oath to uphold the supremacy of the U.S. Constitution and
all state judges have the power of judicial review
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- 1. State courts are more deeply
and more often involved in the affairs of their legislative and
executive branches than the U.S. Supreme Court is with Congress and
president
- 2. State judges are unconstrained
by the doctrine of federalism in dealing with local units of government
- 3. State judges are much less
constrained than federal courts from hearing cases brought by taxpayers
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- 4. In nine states, supreme court
can give advisory opinions upon request
- 5. State judges feel much less
need than do most federal judges to exercise restraint or to argue that
they are doing so—they are elected and their opinions can be set aside
more easily
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- A. Appointment by the governor and election by
the legislature
- 1. Variations of this process in
about a dozen states
- 2. Even in elective states, most
judges first reach bench by appointment to fill vacancies
- 3. There is also an informal
process; e.g., a lawyer who is interested in becoming a judge makes his
or her interest known to party officials
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- 1. In nearly half the states,
judges are chosen by popular election
- a. Some hold nonpartisan primaries for nominating
judicial candidates and elect them on nonpartisan ballots
- a. In at least half the states holding nonpartisan
elections, parties actively campaign on behalf of candidates
- 2. Most states have adopted
provisions like the American Bar Association’s code of judicial conduct,
banning judicial candidates from telling the electorate anything about
their views on legal and political matters; candidates have challenged these laws
as limiting their constitutional right to speak and restricting voters’
right to know about candidates’ stands
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- 3. Judicial elections are
becoming increasingly contested, but still attract little voter
attention
- 4. Although the Supreme Court has
not yet ruled directly on the issue of at-large judicial districts, it
did hold in a 1991 case that the Voting Rights Act applies to judicial
elections and thereby called into question the use of at-large elections
for the selection of judges
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- 1. Purpose is to screen
candidates before selection to ensure merit
- 2. Whenever a judicial vacancy
occurs, a special nominating commission nominates three candidates and
the governor selects one, who then serves as a judge for at least a
year; at the next general
election the voters are asked:
“Shall Judge X be retained in office?”
- 3. These uncontested elections
are called retention elections
- a. Usually they generate little interest and have low
voter turnout
- b. Occasionally, state supreme court judges are
vigorously challenged in retention elections, especially when their
decisions differ appreciably from
public opinion
- c. Some states have evaluation committees to recommend
retention or not to the voters
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- 1. Arguments of those who favor
the appointive system
- a. Contend voters are generally uninformed about candidates and are not
competent to assess legal learning and judicial abilities
- b. Contend that the elective process conceals what is really going
on
- c. Because many vacancies are
created by retirement and death, it is often the governor who selects
the judges; the governor makes an interim appointment until the next
election, and the individual appointed usually wins the election
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- 2. Arguments of those who favor
the elective method
- a. Judges should be directly accountable to the people; when judges are
appointed they are apt to lose touch with the general currents of
opinion of the electorate
- b. The appointive process gives governors too much power over judges
- c. Elections serve to foster accountability because judges do not want
to be defeated and will try to maintain popular support
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- 1. Most state judges are selected
for fixed terms, typically 6 to 12 years
- 2. Today each of the 50 states
has a board, commission, or court to handle allegations of judicial
misbehavior
- a. These commissions are most
often composed of both non lawyers and lawyers who investigate
complaints and hold hearings for judges who have been charged with
improper performance of their duties or unethical or unfair conduct
- b. The commissions appear to have restored some public
confidence in the judicial system
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- A. Reforms for improving the administration of justice include:
- 1. Judges should be selected by
some kind of merit system
- 2. Judges should be paid
adequately to be financially independent
- 3. Judges should serve for long
terms so that they can make decisions without fear of losing their jobs
- 4. Rule-making powers should be
given to the state supreme court or its chief justice
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- 5. Alternative dispute resolution
(ADR): the collective term for alternatives to traditional trial
- adjudication
- a. These processes include mediation, arbitration,
conciliation, private judging, and advisory settlement conferences
- b. Some claim that this is “rent-a-judge,” justice for
the wealthy
- 6. Although no person should be
appointed or elected to a court solely because of race or sex or ethnic
background, our courts need to become more representative of the
communities they serve
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- A. The jury
- 1. Jury trials are actually held in only a small
percentage of cases; still, a key feature of the justice system
- 2. A jury system is the responsibility of all adult
citizens, but many try to avoid it
- 3. Reforms to reduce time and cost: fewer than 12 on a jury, less than
unanimity
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- 1. They are elected locally and
have great power
- 2. When presented with a case by
the police, the prosecutor must decide first whether to file formal
- charges by one of the
following ways
- a. Divert the matter out of the criminal justice
system and turn it over to a social welfare agency
- b. Dismiss the charges
- c. Take the matter before a grand jury
- d. File an information affidavit, which serves the
same function as a grand jury indictment
- 3. The decision to charge or not
to charge is up to the prosecutor, who is subject to political pressures
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- 1. The assigned counsel system is
the oldest system to provide defendants who cannot afford the legal
counsel to which they are constitutionally entitled
- 2. Under the public defender
system, the government provides a staff of lawyers whose full time job
is to defend those who cannot pay
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- 1. More than 30 states and
Congress have adopted “Son of Sam” laws to prevent convicted criminals
from financial gain by selling their stories
- 2. Defendants are likely to be
younger, male, black, less educated, seldom fully employed, and
unmarried; and victims tend to be similar
- 3. The system for prosecuting
criminals is strictly between the state, represented by the prosecutor;
and the accused, represented by an attorney; no role for the victim
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- 4. The 1984 Victims of Crime Act
authorized federal funds which are distributed by the Office of Crime
Victims in the Department of Justice to support state programs
compensating victims and providing
funds to some victims of federal crimes as well
- 5. About thirty states have
amended their constitutions to provide for a “victim’s bill of rights”
- 6. Congress is considering a Victim Rights Amendment
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- 1. Plea bargaining: the practice
in which the prosecution offers to reduce the seriousness of the charge
if a defendant will enter a plea of guilty to a lesser crime
- 2. It is controversial, but many
of the several commissions of experts and investigators who have
recently evaluated plea bargaining have endorsed it
- 3. Plea bargaining offers
something to all involved: lighter sentence for defendant, faster and
surer conviction for prosecution
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- 1. Due process must be observed
in sentencing, which takes place in open court
- 2. Judicial discretion remains
broad; penal codes do not set very specific terms of punishment
- 3. To reduce disparities, several
reforms have been proposed
- a. Establishing more precise legislative standards
- b. Creating advisory sentencing councils
- c. Adopting the British practice of allowing appellate courts to modify
sentences
- 4. Many states have adopted
mandatory prison-term statuses for more and more crimes, such as the
“three-strikes” provision
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- 1. Prison populations in the United States are skyrocketing
- a. Now more than 2 million in prisons and jails
- b. About 4.5 million in probation or parole
- 2. The increase in prison
population has resulted in serious overcrowding
- 3. One out of every three persons
let out of prison returns in three years
- 4. Some cities and counties have
resorted to privatization, turning over the responsibility for operating
jails to private firms on a contractual basis
- 5. High cost of corrections has
led some states to rethink mandatory sentencing and to consider
alternatives
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- A. Public concern about crime is a national issue confronting all those
involved in the criminal justice system in America
- B. There is widespread agreement that our justice system is in crisis,
but each “reform” has costs and benefits
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