ALL bankruptcy courts are Federal Courts. There are many different districts and their names only use the areas the service, like "Bankruptcy court of Iowa" or such and is actually correctly the "US Federal Bankruptcy Court of the District of Iowa" While all courts follow the federal law, for convenience if nothing else, some of these courts use rules that work best for the areas they generally service - like what is a definition of real vs personal property, things concerning community property, etc. But realy, these aren't matters of overwhelming importance tot he average filer, just things to make the process work more smoothly.
bankruptcy
federal court
It would be a Federal crime and would be tried in a United States District Court.
When a case is remanded it goes back to the court where it was originally tried. In the federal court system, that would usually be a US District Court.
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.
If he had been re-tried in federal court for exactly the same charge it would have been double jeapordy. If he was tired in another court system for even a a slightly altered charge it would not.
Cases involving federal laws, the U.S. Constitution, or disputes between states are tried in federal court. Federal court cases differ from state court cases in that they involve federal laws and are heard by judges appointed by the President, while state court cases involve state laws and are heard by judges appointed by state governments.
The federal courts here numerous types of court cases. A few of the cases are maritime law, copyright cases, patent cases, and bankruptcy.
Generally, federal criminal cases are tried in US District Court.
Most federal criminal cases are tried in US District Court.
District Court
Crimes that violate both state and federal laws can be tried in either state or federal court. Frequently, they are tried in both.