Anyone other than the House of Representatives and the Senate, through constitutional impeachment proceedings.
A judge cannot be "dismissed" by the President, Supreme Court justices, the House or Senate Judiciary Committee, other judges, etc.
Federal Judge David O. Carter of US District Court for the Central District of California dismissed Captain Pamela Barnett v. Barack Hussein Obama on October 29, 2009 for lack of standing (the same reason all the other courts have dismissed Birther suits). Further, in his decision, the judge criticized the plaintiffs for what he called their "attacks on the judiciary" and for trying to use the courts to overthrow the will of the people, the majority of the population that had elected President Obama. In addition, Judge Carter criticized the unprofessional conduct of Orly Taitz during the hearing. A subsequent effort by Taitz to bring forward another challenge to Mr. Obama's citizenship was also dismissed by the same judge in mid-March 2010.
A trial cannot be dismissed. A case can be dismissed before it goes to trial. A judge can allow testimony if it is within the bounds of admissible evidence, regardless of whether or not that evidence was presented at a prior hearing or trial.
A Federal District Judge has a lifetime appointment.
i dont know this either
The judge retires.
the re issue is for the same ticket after the judge dismissed it for not being filled out properly
Not really enough information given in order to answer. Sign an order for what? Affecting who? Who 'dismissed' the judge from the case? If you think the judge issued an improper order AFTER she no longer had jurisdiction over the case, take the order to the judge presently presiding over the case and ask him to "stay" the other judge's order.
It is unethical and illegal for a judge to kill a case. Judges are expected to preside over cases impartially and fairly, and any attempt to manipulate the outcome of a case is a violation of judicial ethics and can lead to severe consequences, including removal from the bench. If there are concerns about a judge's behavior in a case, it should be addressed through appropriate legal channels.
A judge can serve as a lifetime
it is a lifetime appointment.. meaning you would have to be impeached or retire from the bench to no longer be a federal judge
It all depends on the manner in which the original case was "dismissed." If it was Dismissed WITHOUTprejudice, that means that the judge found some legal deficiency with the case but did not bar the prosecution from re-filing it after the deficiency was corrected. If it was Dismissed WITH prejudice that means that the judge threw it out entirely and barred the prosecutor from bringing the exact same charge for the exact same offense again. It sounds like your 'dismissal" may have been the first type.
If the case was dismissed WITHOUT prejudice he could open it whenever the deficiencies cited by the dismissing judge were corrected.