See below link for the legal definition of 'Nolle Prosequi.' I'm not certain that the term is used in the military justice system.
prossed foods
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.
This is an opinionated question. Any charges can be nolle prossed for many reasons by the state attorney (prosecutor).
depends on your processor type and the workload on it.
It sounds very much like the case was "Nolled." (i.e.- a 'Nolle Prosequi' was entered by the prosecutor after making the decision to not pursue the charge. It was therefore - dropped/abandoned.)
Nolle Prossed ("Nolo Prosequi") means not prosecuted, meaning the prosecutor declined to prosecute the case. While this means that the case CANNOT be reopened once it's closed, charges can be refiled if later there is enough evidence to proceed. If the case was nolle prossed in exchange for a pretrial offer (Pre-trial intervention, or restitution for a bad check, etc.), then once the conditions of the pre-trial offer is met within a certain period of time without any arrests, the case is closed forever.
dole bananas are prossed by slaves in Africa that wash them and put stickers on them
The terms are NOT synomymous.A 'dismissal" is issued by a judge and is exactly what the word implies - the charge is dismissed.WHEREAS when a charge is Nolle Prossed it means that the prosecutor (for whatever reason) declines to present it to the court or prosecute it. The charge does not 'go away' and the 'Nolle' is entered in the records as the disposition of the charge.
Nolle prossed (NOLE pross'ed) means DISMISSED. Nolle prossed means nolle prosequi, or no prosecuting. This means that the prosecutor decided not to prosecute the case, either because he's not likely to win or because the Defendant completed a pre-trial intervention program. So the case is dismissed.
its a kids show so they cant really show miltank being killed and prossed but i will bet they do that exactly that
no longer of the military services
A military helicopter