Yes, the charge would be Contempt of Court
A 'preliminary hearing.' aka. a probable cause hearing.
Generally, yes. Any hearings relating to the case are heard in the court that has jurisdiction over the case. If the parties have moved they can visit the court in their new jurisdiction to see if the case can be transferred.
Auricular (relating to the sense of hearing) Phonics (or phonetics) I think...
Aural means of or relating to the sense of hearing.
acoustic
No. The person that has been arrested must be present.
yes
Original jurisdiction - the court can hear the trialAppellate jurisdiction - the court can review the trial held by the original jurisdiction court.Original jurisdiction involves the initial hearing and decision of a case. Appellate jurisdiction involves rehearing a case to make a determination on the original decision.
Original jurisdiction - the court can hear the trialAppellate jurisdiction - the court can review the trial held by the original jurisdiction court.Original jurisdiction involves the initial hearing and decision of a case. Appellate jurisdiction involves rehearing a case to make a determination on the original decision.
It is called remand
Depending on the state you are in (some use the Grand Jury System and others use the Preliminary Hearing system) it is the hearing at which the defendant is formally charged with the offense he was arrested for.
The question is not worded clearly -HOWEVER- If the teacher is responding to a subpoena - all that should be necessary is to produce a copy of the subpoena for the school's time and attendance records. If the the teacher is subpoena'd to a hearing they have no choice as to whether they will attend or not. Whether the teacher's contract calls for them to be paid while attending the hearing is another matter entirely.