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Arizona is in the District of Arizona. The trial court is the US District Court for the District of Arizona, which sits in Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff, Yuma and Prescott. Arizona is under the jurisdiction of the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

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What are three levels of the Arizona state judicial systemncourt system?

The Congress of the United States originally established the Arizona territorial courts in the Organic Act of 1863. They organized the courts on three levels. They were justice of the peace courts, probate and district courts, and a supreme court. The district courts made up the main judicial body and tried the majority of cases. The transition from territorial to state status was smooth for the Arizona Courts. The state provided immediate judicial courts with the JP courts, superior courts, a supreme court and a federal district court.


What are trial federal courts called?

Federal trial courts are the United States District Courts.


What state does the Grand Canyon belong to?

The Grand Canyon National Park is in Arizona.


What is the difference between district courts circuit court?

It really depends what kind of courts you are talking about and where the courts are. If the courts are federal, then a district court is a trial court and a circuit court is an appeals court, which may review a trial decision from a district court. For state courts, the difference between a district court and a circuit court will depend on what state the courts are in. Many states have courts called "district court" and "circuit court," but what kinds of cases these courts handle differs state to state.


To who did Arizona belong to before it became a state?

It was a US Territory.


If you are first tried in a district court then you have been accused of breaking a?

If you are referring to a STATE district court - you would have broken a state law. If you are referring to a FEDERAL dIstrict court, you would have broken a federal law.


What is the difference between a district court and state court?

A district court is only for a certain district in a state, and a state court is for the state itself. The greater the crime depends on where you go to. A small crime, such as breaking into a grocery store would go to the district court. A large crime, such as committing perjury would land you in the state court.


Does each state have its own federal court?

Yes, each state has at least one US District Court and one US Bankruptcy Court. District Courts are divided into 94 federal judicial districts, each with its own district court. These are the courts where cases are tried. Every state has at least one District Court.


What Is the process for appealing a case?

For state prosecuted offenses: Circuit (or District) Court > Court of Appeals > State Supreme Court (and if a Constitutional question is involved) > US District Court > US Court of Appeals > US Supreme Court.


A US District Court or a state trial court has?

Original jurisdiction


What courts are not state court in judicial branch?

U.S. District court


Is Court of Appeals the newest level of court in Arizona?

No.

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