Nolle Prosequi is a legal term which means to drop the case. This occurs when the prosecuting authority determines it can not prove its case at trial.
can a nolle prosequi be brought back up later
If a case is "Nolle Prosequied" by a prosecutor, that is considered a "dropped" case. A dropped case is different from a dismissed case. Only a judge can 'Dismiss" a case.
Technically, a case that is "Nolle Prosequied" is not 'dismissed.' It is not a finding by the prosecutor that the crime never took place. A Nolle Prosequi" is a decision by the prosecutor that (for whatever reason) they choose not to go forward with the prosecution of the offense and the case, therefore, is simply dropped. See: http://definitions.uslegal.com/n/nolle-prosequi/ ". . . . .the entry of a nolle prosequi is not an adjudication on the merits of the prosecution, and the legal protection against double jeopardy will not automatically bar the charges from being brought again in some fashion."
Thomas Nolle goes by Tom.
If by "nolle" you are implying "nolle contendre" then likely as not, no, especially if that charge was a felony. Your best course of action is to attempt to get it expunged and then try.
Nolle Versyp's birth name is Arnold Versyp.
The prosecutor decided to enter a nolle prosequi, meaning they would not pursue the charges against the defendant.
"Nolle prosequi" is a legal term meaning the prosecution will not pursue the case.
Nolle Versyp was born on May 31, 1936, in Gent, Belgium.
Nolle Versyp died on October 5, 2006, in Belgium of natural causes.
Nolle prossed (NOLE pross'ed) means DISMISSED. Nolle prossed means nolle prosequi, or no prosecuting. This means that the prosecutor decided not to prosecute the case, either because he's not likely to win or because the Defendant completed a pre-trial intervention program. So the case is dismissed.
Nolle prosse is the disposition of a case after a declaration by the prosecution of nolle prosequi. This means that the prosecution has declined to pursue charges against the defendant, although they may retry at a later date.
Lambert Nolle has written: 'The catechist in the infant school and in the nursery' -- subject(s): Catechetics, Religious life, Children