You can only be tried once for a crime however if you think there was something that went wrong then you can appeal until your state's supreme court and then THE Supreme Court
In the United States, the criminal trial comes first, then comes the civil trial. (In some states, such as North Carolina, civil penalties can be accessed at the criminal trial.)
civil trial is a settlement criminal trial is a plea agreement
My Trial as a War Criminal was created in 1949.
The sides in a civil trial are the same as a criminal trial. There is a plaintiff and a defendant. In a criminal trial the plaintiff is usually the jurisdictioni charging the defendant.
Barabbas was the criminal that was released at the trial of Jesus.
pre-trial diversion
Yes, in a criminal trial it is always the government against the defendant.
The 6th amendment in a criminal trial, and 7th in a civil trial.
That is a question that you should be addressing to your legal counsel (public defender(?). To comply with the legal requirement of "speedy trial" both sides have to agree to a waiver of the "speedy trial" provisions before the judge will grant a continuance. OBVIOUSLY both your attorney and the prosecutor are AGREEING to postpone it.
Yes, but only if the history is deemed relevant to the current case. The barristers will argue this out before the jury is brought into the case.
Interim bail is bail that has been posted after a release from jail. This bail is posted as a continuance until trial.
The Constitution