Amending the U.S. Constitution & Lawmaking process
The Dual Court System
Sources & Types of Law
Bill of Rights
Juries
100

How can an amendment be proposed to the U.S Constitution?

-proposed by Congress by a 2/3 vote in both houses

-proposed at a national convention called by congress when requested by 2/3 (34) of the state legislatures

100

Highest court in the U.S & Highest court in FL

(Name # of justices)

U.S: Supreme Court, 9 Justices

FL: Florida Supreme Court, 7 justices

100

Civil VS Criminal law (Types of law)

-Civil: Disputes between people and organizations

-Criminal: relates to crime, defines and punishes crimes

100

Bill of Rights: Amendments 1 & 2

Amendment 1: Freedoms of speech, religion, press, assembly, petition

Amendment 2: Right to Bear Arms

100

Grand VS Petite Juries

Grand Juries determine probable cause for criminal charges and issue indictments

Petite Juries determine verdicts of criminal and civil trials

200

How can an amendment be ratified in the U.S Constitution?

-Ratified by the State legislatures of 3/4 (38) of the states

-Ratified by conventions held in 3/4 (38) of the states

200

Appellate Courts

-hear cases on "appeal" to review trial court decisions for errors

-13 U.S appellate courts

200

Juvenile Law & Military Law (types of law)

Juvenile- Deals with people who are under the age of 18, considered too young to be fully responsible for crimes

Military- Laws governing the armed forces

200

Bill of Rights: Amendments 3 & 4

Amendment 3: No quartering of soldiers

Amendment 4: No unreasonable searches or seizures

200

Voir Dire

-process of determining whether a juror can serve fairly and impartially in a given case by asking the juror various questions

300

How can a president's veto be overridden?

By congress with a 2/3 majority in favor of the bill

300

Trial courts

-typically 1st to hear cases, establish facts, and apply the law

-94 in US

300

Sources of law: Constitutional & Natural law

-Natural law: system of right or justice held to be common to all humans and derived from nature rather than from the rules of society 

-Constitutional law: How U.S Constitution is interpreted & applied

300

Bill of Rights: Amendments 5 & 6

Amendment 5: Right to Due Process, no Self-Incrimination, no Double Jeopardy, Eminent Domain

Amendment 6: Right to fair, speedy, public trial and counsel

300

What do juries do?

They listen to case facts, review evidence, and deliberate

400

A ________ committee. Made up of members of both chambers. Meets to resolve any differences between the House & Senate versions of the bill

Conference

400

FL Circuit Courts

-felonies

-civil cases over 30k

-lowest appellate court in FL 

400

Sources of law: Statutory Law

Laws passed by a legislative body (Congress or state legislature)

400

Bill of Rights: Amendments 7 & 8

Amendment 7: Right to trial by jury in civil cases

Amendment 8: No cruel or unusual punishment or excessive bail

400
What is the purpose of juries?

To protect the right to due process and to uphold rule of law

500

A bill is introduced by a member of the House/Senate and assigned to a ________ for review. (Most bills die here)

committee

500

FL county courts

-civil cases under 30k, misdemeanors, traffic offenses, disputes between people

500

Sources of law: Case & Common Law

-a body of unwritten laws based on legal precedents established by the courts

500

Bill of Rights: Amendments 9 & 10

Amendment 9: Rights retained by the people

Amendment 10: Powers Reserved for the States

500

Jury Duty is a Civic __________

Obligation

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