Perhaps, if the judge chooses to make his/her email address available to you. However, communication outside of court proceedings cannot be used in your favor at a trial (whether or not you are the defendant), and if it's related to an ongoing case it could actually get you in trouble.
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If this is in regards to your own case, you should have your attorney handle all communication relating to the case.
If you're appearing pro se, you should be sending a copy of any communication you send to the judge to the prosecutor as well (and include the fact that you are doing so at the bottom of the e-mail / letter, so that the judge knows that the communication meets ethics standards).
If this is in regards to a friend/family member's case, you should talk to their attorney and find out if you e-mailing the judge is wise/appropriate (the attorney may offer to hand deliver a letter to the judge for you if he thinks it will be helpful).
If this is in regards to a case in which you are the victim or know the victim, you should leave a short message for the prosecutor handling the case that includes the case name, your name, your phone number, and what you'd like to tell the judge.
If you aren't involved, but just have an opinion about a case, you should know that the judge will likely be barred from discussing the case with you.
You can address the letter with "Dear Judge [Court Name]" or "To Whom It May Concern." Be sure to include the court's address on the envelope and in the letter itself.
The judge is the voice of the court; his judgment is the court's judgment.
The judge presides over the court and passes judgment, just like a judge in any other court does.
The answer depends on the the jurisdiction - and of course, the judge. Usually you must show the judge sufficient proof that the work email contains critical information relevant to your divorce. Although it is not the same as a search warrant, if you think in terms of what is required for a search warrant, you won't be that far off from what would be expected if you wanted to subpoena a spouse's work email. It may be simpler to approach the employer who actually owns the work email (in most jurisdictions employers own the email, not the employee).
Judge jeanine for president
IGBAL he is head judge of high court in chennai
I believe the question refers to a judge who happens to sit on the bench of a Superior Court - hence a Superior Court Judge.
Family Court with Judge Penny was created in 2008.
Judge Wapner's Animal Court was created in 1998.
the judge
Edmund Barton never became a High Court judge. He was a politician and served as Australia's first Prime Minister. After his political career, he did work as a judge but not in the High Court.
If a judge has not signed court documents yet, they are not legally in use yet. Court documents are not legal until all parties and the judge have signed off on them.