Want this question answered?
In a criminal law case there are 6 parties involved. These parties include the victim, the defendant or suspect, the defense attorney, the prosecutor, the judge, and the jury.
The judge is NOT required to abide by any deal the prosecutor may make with you. Whatever deal you made with the prosecutor is NOT binding on the court. The judge can accept the plea deal that prosecutor made with you, or he can reject it.
That is the judge's position within the judicial system - to rule on all cases coming before him. ADDITIONALLY - the prosecutor is not part of the judicial system, therefore he can never be "higher" than a judge. The prosecutor is part of the executive branch of the government.
The prosecutor and the Judge are supposed to carry themselves in a professional manner. In a court of law, the prosecutor is only supposed to argue his case for prosecution. The judge holds the final word. The prosecutor decisions does not affect the judge judgment of a case.
Prosecutor.
Can be but they have to be signed by a judge
prosecutor judge lawyer
The prosecutor may recommend it to the judge, and the judge makes the decision.
Generally, one can either be a judge or a prosecutor. No person is going to hold both of these positions at the same time. Even if it were possible, having someone in both positions is a conflict of interest, and a new judge would be appointed.
Not during the same case. They are separate and distinct roles.
Judge, Prosecutor, and Defense Attorney
No. She was a court prosecutor, but she is now a television personality.