The Central Scrutinizer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2001
- Messages
- 53,097
Question- does a grand jury come under double jeopardy clause? If the finding is 'no bill' can somebody like Rev Al get a special prosecutor involved, and try for a trail? Or will the 'no bill' end it? I'm sure new evidence can re-open, but otherwise?
Prosecutors can charge without a grand jury indictment; happens all the time.
Without fersure. But after a 'no bill', and with no new evidence?
In St. Louis County:
The Grand Jury's function is to make an important preliminary decision about a criminal charge: whether or not probable cause exists that a crime has been committed and that the accused committed it. All felony charges must be presented for consideration either by the Grand Jury or by an associate circuit judge at a preliminary examination, and a little less than half of the cases prosecuted in St. Louis County are presented to the Grand Jury. If probable cause is found in either of these equivalent proceedings, a "True Bill" is found, an indictment is filed, and the criminal charge against the accused may continue on to trial or plea of guilty. If probable cause is not found, a "No True Bill" is found, and prosecution of the case ceases. The Grand Jury, thus, determines the future of all criminal cases brought before it.
