Types of Law & Types of Crime
Criminal Law Process
Civil Law Process
Juvenile Law
100

A landlord suing a tenant for money is an example of what kind of case?

Civil

100

What are the two opposing sides of a criminal case?

Prosecutor and defense

100

What are the two opposing sides of a civil case?

Plaintiff and defendant

100

Within the juvenile justice system what is a mandatory waiver?

 If the defendant allegedly committed a Class A felony (first-degree murder) they must be tried as an adult

200

What type of laws are statutory laws?

Everything besides the Constitution

200

When does a defendant plead guilty or not guilty?

Arraignment

200

What are the two ways civil cases are handled outside of the courtroom?

Arbitration and mediation

200

What are three types of juvenile delinquency?

Delinquent offender, status offender, and neglected/ abused children

300

What is being defined below? 

Crimes that violate basic human rights

War Crimes /Crimes Against Humanity

300

What is being defined below? 

Strong chance that someone has broken a law BUT Innocent until proven guilty

Probable Cause

300

What is being defined below? 

Plaintiff issues a formal request for the defendant to come to court and settle the dispute

Summons

300

Who is teen court for and what does it do?

For first-time offenders; addresses community/social skills, attitudes, & self-regulation strategies

400

What is being defined below? 

You have the right to an unbiased group of people during the judicial process

Impartial Tribunal

400

What is the difference between indeterminate and mandatory sentencing?

Indeterminate sentencing has wiggle room and mandatory sentencing does not.

400

What are four different kinds of civil cases?

Divorce, custody disputes, tort, and money issues

400

What are the consequences for juvenile offenders (5)?

Probation, counseling, rehabilitative services, teen court, and juvenile court

500

Why is disagreeing with a trial verdict and appealing it two different things?

When appealing a trial decision there must be reasonable evidence that the first trial had elements that interfered with its integrity such as a biased juror or was missing certain elements such as new evidence.

500

What is the difference between parole and probation?

Parole - prisoner is released to serve rest of sentence out in the community

Probation - prisoner is supervised in the community instead of going to jail

500

What is defined below?

Two parties decide to have one or more people, who are not their personal lawyers, to settle the dispute in private

Arbitration

500

What are six factors for juvenile delinquency?

Home environment, neighborhood environment, peer pressure/ immaturity, addiction, dropping out of school, and gang membership