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There are no advantages or disadvantages. Civil court is where alleged violations of civil law are heard, and criminal court is where alleged violations of criminal law are heard. Each court is segregated into hearing their particular assigned areas of the law.
If you are found guilty of breaking a criminal law it certainly can be contradictory to YOUR liberty.
Court sentencing is when the judge is handing down the sentence to be served by the defendant. A court hearing can mean anything -- the court has scheduled a public forum to hear both sides of some type of a dispute (civil or criminal)
File a "motion" and a "request to appear" with the Clerk Of Court's office in the branch of the court you wish to have your matter heard in (civil or criminal). CAUTION: The case will have to have "legal merit" in order to be considered for a hearing.
In neither civil nor criminal court will the same case be heard twice, unless it can be shown that the decision was faulty, in which case you need to choose a new court (civil) or move up to a higher court like Appellate court (criminal) or Supreme court (criminal)
The criminal contraditory with his police statement
A criminal sentencing hearing is a court proceeding where a judge determines and imposes the punishment or sentence for a person convicted of a crime. It involves considering factors such as the nature of the crime, the defendant's criminal history, and any mitigating or aggravating circumstances before deciding on an appropriate sentence.
It depends on the purpose of the hearing and whether the issue is criminal or civil. Generally, evidence is required at a trial or when you are asking the court to issue an order on your behalf.
It depends on what you mean by "hearing phase". This is not a part of criminal procedure.
If there is a court hearing it is because there is an unresoved court case to be heard.
It depends on what you mean by "hearing phase". This is not a part of criminal procedure.
The Crown Court is a type of Criminal Court.