When it's someone's title (District Attorney Smith). Otherwise, it's not necessary.
Because all TLAs must have three letters. Because "DA" is too common an acronym, and could mean "District Attorney".
If you do not yet have an attorney, you shold get one. Though what happens in the grand jury room is secret and not disclosed to the public, your attorney should be able to get a copy of what was said because of full disclosure laws in order to defend you properly. If you can't afford an attorney, you should ask the court to appoint one for you. In short, the state can't withhold evidence revealed to the grand jury if that evidence will be ued against you for prosecution by the state. Again, get an attorney.
Are you asking if YOU (the defendant) need evidence? If you DO have any it would be a good idea to let your attorney about it, because, if you're actually about to go to trial obviously the prosecutor believes that HE has enough evidence to seek a conviction.
In an action on a promissory note, the promissory note itself is evidence. Give it to your attorney, who is filing the suit, because he will need all the relevant evidence to pursue the lawsuit.
"Bungled" is a slang expression for messing something up badly or making a situation worse. Because several detectives bungled the original investigation, the district attorney had to delay the trial and seek out new evidence.
It is theoretically possible in some states, but it is not the primary role of the district attorney. In most places, it is the police (whether local or state or federal) who make the actual arrests. The district attorney is the chief prosecutor-- he or she will be in charge of handling the court case and trying to convict the person who has been arrested and charged with the crime.
It depends on how long it takes the District Attorney to issue a warrant for arrest, if it an arrestable offense. Just because you were indicted, doesn't mean you will be arrested.
If your attorney can no longer work with you due to you not paying the bill, he still should turn over the papers associated with the case. Please tread carefully, though. You should not be angry with the attorney. He can, after all, just throw out those papers and deny having got them. Or swear that he got them and already gave them to you. Just ask for them kindly and leave it at that. If he refuses, you can just send a note to the District Attorney, advising him that you are now representing yourself, and that you need copies of whatever he had sent to your old attorney. ONLY if this is a pending case must the DA comply, but if the case is still active, he'll should get you those copies.
In the United States, Attorney-at-law means a lawyer. The distinction is made because people can have "power of attorney" or "letter of attorney", which is referred to as Attorney-in-fact.
If your attorney can no longer work with you due to you not paying the bill, he still should turn over the papers associated with the case. Please tread carefully, though. You should not be angry with the attorney. He can, after all, just throw out those papers and deny having got them. Or swear that he got them and already gave them to you. Just ask for them kindly and leave it at that. If he refuses, you can just send a note to the District Attorney, advising him that you are now representing yourself, and that you need copies of whatever he had sent to your old attorney. ONLY if this is a pending case must the DA comply, but if the case is still active, he'll should get you those copies.
kind of ironic because that in it self is a tricky question,if you're not guilty than by all means exaunerate yourself and get it over with and on to the search for the real person that committed the crime,usually when you're guilty you've got something to hide,and when you're hunting for criminals just about anything goes,dna evidence is the hand of God coming down and saying without a doubt this is the person that did this! whether trickery is involved or not if they can match DNA evidence to a person the case is solved...