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The federal and state court systems (this is not limited to the Judicial Branch in federal cases).
The Judicial Branch of Government is the branch that tries case.
It is the Judaical Branch made up by the Supreme Court as well as other federal courts.
I believe that is the Judicial Branch.
The Federal Courts try issues dealing with violations of Federal law. They also take appeals from state courts. There are four basic branches of the Federal Judiciary: U.S. Bankruptcy Court, U.S. District Court, U.S. Courts of Appeal and the U.S. Supreme Court. There are a number of specialty courts operated by the U.S. Government, too. Links are provided to the U.S. Judiciary website and to the Wikipedia article.
district attorney
Original intent
The Justice Department tries cases of treason.
The main duty of the US Supreme Court is to interpret law and the Constitution.While the Court is head of the Judicial Branch of government, it doesn't typically play a direct, day-to-day leadership role within the federal court system.The Supreme Court may exercise original jurisdiction in cases affecting ambassadors and other diplomats, and in cases in which a state is a party.* However, in all other cases, except those expressly prohibited by Congress, the Court has only appellate jurisdiction.[* While the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction over cases involving ambassadors and other foreign dignitaries, the jurisdiction is shared with the US District Courts, which tries these cases. The Court has original and exclusive jurisdiction over disputes between the states.]
The New York Supreme Court is a state court of general jurisdiction that tries both civil and criminal cases under New York law. New York's highest appellate court (equivalent to the Supreme Court in most states) is the New York Court of Appeals.
That would be the lowest level court in the state judicial system usually known as Circuit Courts.
The primary responsibility of each of the three branches of the U.S. government is: Legislative branch, to make laws; Judicial branch, to interpret laws; Executive branch, to enforce laws.The 3 branches of the government are the Executive, Judicial, and Legislative. The Executive Branch contains the president. The Judicial Branch contains the supreme court. The Legislative Branch contains the House of Representatives and the Congress. The Executive Branch veto's laws and backs up the laws. The Judicial Branch tries anybody who defies the laws. The Legislative Branch makes the laws and votes on which laws should go to the president.in outher words, the the legislative branchThe three branches of government are Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branch.- FUNCTIONSLegislative Branch - Consists of the Senate, House of Representatives, and Senate. This branch makes laws, controls government spending, declare war, and raise and support armies.Executive Branch - Established by Article II of the Constitution. The Chief Executive (President) carries out the nation's laws. The Chief Diplomat (President) directs foreign policies, appoints ambassadors, and negotiates treaties. Also the President can nominate Supreme Court Justices and can use military intervene or offer assistance, but cannot declare war (only Congress can do that).Judicial Branch - Established by Amendment III of the Constitution. The Supreme Court Decide wether to hear cases or not and their decisions are based on their interpretation of the Constitution. To get this job you are nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The Supreme Court is the highest in all of the United States of America. In Retrospect, the Supreme Court term is a lifetime, or if the person that was nominated resigns.Legislative, Judical, and ExcutiveLegislative, Executive, judicial