Chapter 3: The prosecution Flashcards

1
Q

Adversary System

A

legal system involving a contest b/w 2 opposing parties under a judge

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2
Q

prosecutor

A

aims to prove the defendant committed a crime

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3
Q

defense attorney

A

seeks to show the defendant did not do it

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4
Q

rules of criminal procedure

A

rules established by which a criminal case is conducted

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5
Q

ethical code

A

canons of professional responsibility by professional associations

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6
Q

witnesses

A

eyewitnesses who are examined and cross examined

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7
Q

inculpatory evidence

A

tends to show the guilt of the defendant

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8
Q

exculpatory evidence

A

tends to show the defendants innocence

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9
Q

district attorney

A

city, county, and state prosecutor who are charged with bringing offenders to justice enforcing the laws of the state

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10
Q

state’s attorneys

A

government prosecutors

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11
Q

county prosecutor

A

district attorney of the county level

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12
Q

U.S. attorney’s office

A

chief prosecuting body affiliated with U.S. district court in the federal court system

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13
Q

U.S. attorney

A

official responsible for prosecution of crimes that violate laws of the U.S. Appointed by the President

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14
Q

Attorney General

A

senior U.S. prosecutor in each federal district court

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15
Q

Assistant U.S. attorneys (AUSAs)

A

government prosecutor who are subordinates to the U.S. attorney who heads the prosecutors office for each federal district

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16
Q

deponents

A

Persons who give testimony through a deposition

17
Q

venue

A

area over which a judge exercises authority to act in an official capacity. Place where a trial is held

18
Q

true bills

A

grand jury decisions that sufficient evidence exists that a crime has been committed and that a specific suspect committed to it

19
Q

indictments

A

charges or written accusations found and presented by a grand jury that a particular defendant probably committed a crime

20
Q

criminal informations

A

written accusations made by a public prosecutor against a person for some criminal offense without an indictment

21
Q

prosecutorial bluffing

A

attempt by prosecution to bluff the defendant into believing the case is stronger than it really is. Used to elicit a guilty plea from a defendant to avoid trial

22
Q

backdooring hearsay evidence

A

action by prosecutor where prosecutor comments about or mentions information to the jury is inadmissible in court

23
Q

malicious prosecution

A

when prosecutors bring charges against the accused with the full knowledge that the accused is innocent of the crime alleged

24
Q

Prosecutorial misconduct

A

any deliberate action that violates ethical codes or standards governing the role of prosecutors

25
Q

harmless error doctrine

A

appellate court can affirm the conviction as long as prosecutorial error did not harm the defendant

26
Q
A