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Grand Jury proceedings and deliberations are secret and are not revealed. Basically - a group of ordinary citizens are empanelled - an attorney from the prosecutors office presents to them the results of a law enforcement investigation, including (but not limited to) verbal testimony by investigating officers, circumstances, events, and the name of the identified suspect, and the grand jury decides whether sufficient cause exists to charge the suspect with the crime and bind them over for prosecution.

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Q: How and what method do the grand jury use to indict?
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A Grand Jury was never called in my felony case?

More information is needed - some states do not use the Grand Jury system to indict you of an offense.


Use indict in a sentence?

An indictment is, essentially, to be formally accused of something. An example sentence is: The indictment was absolutely humiliating for him.


Do you have to have a jury to indict someone?

It depends on the system used in your particular state. Some states still use the Grand Jury Indictment system - others use the Preliminary Judicial Hearing type of system.


Why would a criminal court case go to a grand jury?

Some states still use the Grand Jury system to indict the accused. This is a necessary step in the criminal tral process in their states. Other states (most?) now accomplish the same thing by holding a Preliminary Hearing.


How do you use the word indite in a sentence?

This is not the word "indict" (legally accuse) which is pronounced the same way. The rarely used, practically archaic word indite is a transitive verb meaning to form a literary composition.This is the likely use:"The grand jury decided to indict the governor for his corrupt actions.""He chose to indict others for his own failings."The other word:"He would often stop in the rain to indite a poem or two.""The writer sought to indite his experiences by writing a diary reflecting his thoughts and feelings."


A complaint filed by the prosecutor when a grand jury is not used?

In states which do not use the Grand Jury system there is no "indictment," the defendant is simply "formally charged" with the offense by the prosecutor. .


Which states still use Grand Jury indictments for every day-to-day criminal offenses?

Does every jurisdiction use a grand jury?The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution requires a grand jury indictment for federal criminal charges. Only about half the states now use grand juries for their own indictments.If this information is too indefinite, or insufficient, more research can be conducted which will disclose exactly which states still use local Grand Juries.


What purpose does a grand jury or preliminary hearing serve?

Depending on the state you are in (some use the Grand Jury System and others use the Preliminary Hearing system) it is the hearing at which the defendant is formally charged with the offense he was arrested for.


Must all felonies in Pennsylvania be indicted by a grand jury?

If the amount in question is over $20, the person has a right to a grand jury in any state of the US. However, they can waive that right and go straight to a judge. Note: This might not apply if there is a war at hand, because a military court does not need to use a grand jury.


How do you use the word jury in a sentence?

The Grand Jury, which is composed of five men and seven women, were only out twenty minutes during their deliberations.


Is a grand jury nessesary for only political and murder?

No. Some states customarily use the Grand Jury for all felony indictments - procedurally, other states have a Preliminary Hearing-typ process where the probable cause is presented to a judge who decides if the arrestee is to be charged.


How is a preliminary hearing different from a grand jury?

Although grand juries and trial juries are both made up of average people who were called for jury duty, they serve entirely different purposes. A grand jury helps determine whether charges should be brought against a suspect, while a trial jury renders a verdict at the criminal trial itself. Put differently, a grand jury hands down an indictment at the beginning of a case, while a trial jury decides guilt or innocence at the very end (not counting the appeal process).