YOU don't Nolle Prosse a case, the prosecutors office makes that decision. Nolle Prosse, means, "I decline to prosecute." The reason the prosecutor may decline to prosecute may be due to some legal deficiency he sees in the case that might cause it to be thrown out or lost. If the police can, later, deliver more evidence or otherwise strengthen the original case, the prosecutor CAN re-institute the nolle prossed case and indict you.
No, only the prosecutor can issue a Nolle Prossequi (I decline to prosecute) - and only a judgecan issue a dismissal.
No. But if the crime is both a state and a federal crime, the US attorney can begin their own prosecution for the same crime.Another View: Disagree with the above answer.A Nolle Prosequi is no guarantee that the defendant either will not, or can not be re-indicted, whether by the state OR the feds;" Nolle prosequi is a Latin term meaning "we shall no longer prosecute". It is a declaration made by a prosecutor in a criminal case or by a plaintiff in a civil lawsuit either before or during trial, meaning the case against the defendant is being dropped. The declaration may be made because the charges cannot be proved, the evidence has demonstrated either innocence or a fatal flaw in the prosecution's claim, or the prosecutor no longer thinks the accused is guilty. It is generally made after indictment, but is not a guarantee that the person won't be reindicted."See the below link for citation:
Yes. A prosecutor may Nolle Prosequi (decline to prosecute) a case if they believe the facts or evidence in the case do not (or are insufficient to) support a successful prosecution or, to do so, would result in a miscarriage of justice.A Nolle Prosequi does not necessarily mean that they will NEVER consider prosecuting the alleged offense, it only means that the facts or evidence currently available are insufficient to carry out a prosecution.Further: It is not a permanent ruling, and it does NOT trigger 'double jeopardy"If additional information becomes available with which to bolster the case, it does not rule out the possibility that the same charges may be re-instituted against the defendant for the same offense.
If a Grand Jury hands down a "No Bill" there is very little, if anything, that can be done other than the prosecutor Nolle Prossing the case or asking law enforcement to reinforce their case with more evidence or probable cause. If that does, in fact, happen then the same, or enhanced, charges can once again be presented to the GJ.
The same laws for those who are indicted anywhere else.
If the investigation disclosed that the two were part and parcel of the same continuing offense, yes.
The effect is the same with regard to the defendant, but these events take place at different parts of the process. If the state decides not to prosecute (called a nolle prosequi), the case never reaches the court. A case is dismissed by the court after someone has been charged and the court either finds there is insufficient evidence to prove the charge, or on a motion from one of the parties to the case.
Sure - if the defendant is charged with more than one offense, he may be indicted on more than one charge by the same Grand Jury during the same session. (Think the Bernie Madoff case.)
Only once, it is illegal to be tried for the same thing.Another View: If the jury rendered a verdict of not guilty in the initial court case, OR the case was Dismissed WITH Prejudice, the defendant can NOT be re-tried.However, if the case was Nolle Prossed, or Dismissed WITHOUT Prejudice, or the jury in the first trial was deadlocked and/or a mistrial was declared - THEN the defendant MAY be re-tried.
Technically, one cannot be arrested when a case is nol prossed (nolled, nollied). Actually, though, one COULD be arrested again, if the proper paperwork has not arrived where it should (the clerk's office, the sheriff's office, the probation office, etc.).If a new case has been filed on the same incident, one can be arrested again.Additional: The final sentence of the first answer is absolutely correct.Just because the prosecutor declines to prosecute the offense you were charged with (Nolle Prosequi), does not make it 'go away.' A Nolle is NOT a court dismissal of the case, and in the event subsequent information or evidence comes to light, you can be re-arrested on that same charge. This is NOT double jeapordy.
It means that the judge dismissed your charges. The prosecution will dismiss the charges when they cannot proceed in good faith or they cannot prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt at trial. Usually because there was a problem with a piece of evidence or the availability of a witness. Sometimes cases are dismissed during plea negotiations when a person will plead to one case in exchange for the dismissal of another. Sometimes the evidence unfolds and there is doubt that the person charged is really the one that committed the crime. Be carefeul, just because the judge dismissed your case doesn't mean they can't re-file charges against you, but that rarely happens.Added; Judges DISMISS charges - Prosecutors NOLLE PROSEQUI charges.
An indictment is a charging document. If a person was already out on bail and then indicted, the indictment would be for new charges.