Not necessarily.
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.
Criminal charges can be dismissed but generally, that would only happen after some action by your attorney or/and the prosecutor.One of the responsibilities of a defense attorney is to review the charges and the details to determine if there are grounds for dismissal of any or all of the charges. Also, the prosecutor may dismiss charges at her own discretion or for any of the following reasons:lack of evidenceillegal stop or searchlack of probable cause to arrestunavailable witnessloss of evidencean error in the criminal complaint
its evidence. it doesn't mean everything but what is collected during a criminal investigation that helps prove the suspect/prosecutor committed the crime. Much of it is collected at the crime scene, if there is one.
In America if a criminal suspect is arrested then yes, they have to be informed of their Miranda Rights. If the criminal suspect is not arrested, then no.
When they're formally charged.
An Indictment, an Accusation, or an Information.
Criminal Minds has 13 million viewers and a higher rating than Criminal Minds: Suspect Behaviour, which has 9 million viewers.
The suspect in the same case he is prosecuting? It might make a good plot for a fiction book and technically it IS possible, but I seriously doubt it.
Criminal Minds Suspect Behavior - 2011 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:12
"No Bill" typically means the grand jury refused to indict a suspect for a felony charge. I don't know if the district attorney, or federal prosecutor can continue to grand jury shop the indictment or not after this. A competent attorney in your area could tell you for certain what the likely outcome is of the return of a "no bill".
The opposite of "victim" is "perpetrator" or "aggressor."
A grand jury indictment is a charge issued by a grand jury in a criminal case. Typically, the jury determines whether enough evidence exists to formally charge the suspect with a criminal crime. Grand jury indictments are not dismissed by the court but in a formal hearing, a defense team can argue against any bias.