The United States District Courts use juries.
a popular election for retention
every one
Judges and justices are appointed to all Article III federal courts, such as the US District Courts, US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts, US Court of International Trade, and the Supreme Court of the United States. Some states use a Gubernatorial or Legislative appointment process, too, although most use popular election or a combination of appointment and election.
In the federal Judicial Branch, the intermediate appellate courts are the thirteen US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts. The states use different naming conventions for their intermediate appellate courts.
Only trial courts use juries.
there are about 1000 to 1500 teens using meth
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The answer depends on whether you're asking about United States District Courts (Federal courts) or state courts. If you're asking about US District Courts, the answer is 1, no matter where you live. Many states have more than one US District Court, but it's unlikely that the boundaries between their jurisdictions will split a county. If you're asking about a state's District Courts, then the answer depends on which state your Henderson County is in. There are 5 states with a Henderson County. If it's in Illinois or Tennessee, the answer is zero; neither state has a court named "district court" (different states use different names for their various levels of courts). If it's in Kentucky or North Carolina, the answer is 1: Henderson County District Court. If it's in Texas, the answer is 3: 3rd District Court, 173rd Distict Court, and 392nd District Court I got this info from the related link below, which has information (all free) about every state court in every state. Just select your state, then select your county.
use a jury
Im a teen myself and to be real honest with you there is a really low ercentage of teenages who use drugs , Many will say they do and pretend that they use them on a regular basis so their friends wont judge them , And even those teens dont use them .
Both Article I and Article III courts and tribunals fit this description.Article III courts (courts created or authorized under Article III of the Constitution), such as US District Court, US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, and the Supreme Court of the United States are the three most people think of.Article III examples include:US Supreme CourtUS Courts of Appeals Circuit CourtsUS District CourtsCourt of ClaimsUS Court of International TradeArticle I tribunals are created by Congress under Article I, and primarily regulate interaction between citizens and various functions or departments of government.Article I examples include:Administrative Law Courts, such as Social Security DisabilityUS Bankruptcy Court (commonly considered part of the District Courts)US Tax Court (commonly considered part of the District Courts)United States Court of Appeals for Veterans ClaimsUnited States Court of Appeals for the Armed ForcesUnited States Court of Federal Claims