psychological therapy and communication skills, also creative studies...
false
No, arrestees are 'booked' at the law enforcement agency which arrested them.
fire water stoning
If the state requesting the extradition does not obtain the necessary orders (such as a Governor's Warrant) or does not send officers to bring the accused person back within the time set by the court hearing the request for extradition, the accused person must be released (assuming they're not being held on other charges). The accused person can be re-arrested when the agency with original jurisdiction says they are prepared to bring the accused person back.
Yes. Possession of stolen property is a lesser included charge to most theft or burglary crimes. YOushould also remember that prosecution is not conviction.
That would be a subpoena. This instrument requires a accused or witness to come to court. Generally it is used for witnesses more than for an accused. Once they are indicted they know when they have to come to court.
Perpetrator means "the person that did the deed." You are being accused of being the person that did "it."
Yes, you can sue the person who accused you if you were arrested because someone chose your photo from a photo array. If the case was dropped and you did not experience undue stress, the judge may simply throw the civil case out of court. If the experience effected your life adversely, you might be able to obtain reparation for damages in a civil court.
Wait until that person you accused is either arrested or served with a summons to court. As the complaining witness (CW) you will be subpoena'd to attend their hearing and testify and give evidence.
Very... normal. A person was accused, they were arrested and they were tried in a civil court. Only the crime, using witchcraft to hurt someone, is different from modern court preceedings.
accused - yes; convicted - no
how did roman law protect the rights of an accused person?