Actually there are THREE levels of federal courts. US District Courts - US Courts of Appeal - US Supreme Court.
The US District Courts (trial courts), because they handle the majority of federal cases.
All I can say is it is not State Courts (Sorry GradPoint users)
Yes, there are special courts that deal with bankruptcy, the District of Columbia and other US territorial courts, federal trade, and federal taxes
The US District Courts hold 80% of federal trials; the US Court of International Trade and US Special Courts, combined, hold the other 20%. Cases of general jurisdiction enter the federal judiciary through the US District Courts.
There are 94 district courts in the US.
(in the US) No. No traffic courts or juvenile courts exist at the federal level.
US District Courts.
The federal court system comprises the Supreme Court, circuit courts of appeal, and district courts. There are also specialized federal courts.
Appellate courts. In the federal court system, the appellate courts are the US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts and the Supreme Court of the United States (aka US Supreme Court).
The US District Courts
Imperial Courts was created in 1944.