Kidnapping
The Supreme Court hears any cases that involve the interpretation of the Constitution.
None.
The majority of cases handled by the Supreme Court are ones with which there was a split in circuit courts
The Supreme Court is the highest appellate court in the United States. It does not try cases, in the standard sense of the word, but only reviews lower court decisions. Usually, cases heard by the Supreme Court involve issues of Constitutional law or federal legislation.
The Supreme Court hears any cases that involve the interpretation of the Constitution.
The types of cases the Supreme Court sees involve constitutional issues or federal laws. The Supreme Court gets approximately 7,000 requests to hear cases each and every year.
It depends. If they involve a federal question, they can request review by the US Supreme Court. If they only involve state law, the State's highest court is the end of the line.
No, the Supreme Court does not have original jurisdiction in impeachment cases. According to the U.S. Constitution, impeachment is a process primarily handled by Congress, with the House of Representatives responsible for impeachment and the Senate conducting the trial. The Supreme Court's role is limited to interpreting laws and the Constitution, not adjudicating impeachment proceedings. Thus, impeachment cases are outside the Court's original jurisdiction.
The Supreme Court justices hear cases in the courtroom of the Supreme Court Building in Washington, DC.
The Supreme Court decides cases that are appealed by a lower court; a lower court has made a decision and one of the parties feels strongly enough that the decision was wrong that they make an appeal to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court reviews the cases and determines which ones they will hear, they have the ability to decline to review a case. The Supreme Court doesn't hear only appeals, there are situations where it is the court of original jurisdiction. In situations where there is a disagreement between states, the Supreme Court has the authority to decide.
Hearing cases from state courts if they don't involve federal law
Tens of thousands of them. Please be more specific.