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I was victim of an armed robbery in may of 06 and still have no court date set for trial, how long does it usually take for a case to reach court?

2007-01-03 06:15:55 · 6 answers · asked by urangel4life2006 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

6 answers

depends if the suspect will take it to trial also depends on the court calender and if it is full or not

2007-01-03 06:21:04 · answer #1 · answered by C live 5 · 0 0

It could take a very long time, or it could take no time at all. The time it takes to get something to trial depends on a few factors. If the court docket is full with a lot of other cases that it has scheduled, then that could take a while.

If the presecution feels that they need to continue building a case on the suspect, then it could take a while. Even an officer totally witnessed the crime happen in front of him, the prosecution still needs to build a solid case against the suspect. They do not like to show up in court with just the bare minimal stuff and go to trial. They know they will get eaten alive by it.

Things being handed to gran jury could take a while. Gran jury usually don't take long itself, but what does is the DA's office making sure there is somtehing there worth handing to the gran jury for an indictment.

The part that takes the long is the defendant's attorney. Attorney's will fill for resetting after resetting after resetting after resetting. Basically they are trying to find some other stuff out there that could help with thier case, and also they sometimes do this to push this particular charge to the back of the DA's mind. Kinda the whole thing of "out of sight, out of mind". Another thing that happens during these resettings is the attorner and the defendant are talking with the DA's office to make a possible plea bargain. Your case may never reach trial.

And there is another thing to it. It depends on your state's statute of limitations and all that is. In Texas, there are a lot of crimes that have a two year statute of limitations. Basically, if the guy was arrested on the charge, he has two years to be indicted by the gran jury, otherwise the charge has to be dropped. So that is another reason why your case may never be heard in court.

Good luck with it all...

2007-01-03 06:26:18 · answer #2 · answered by deftonehead778 4 · 0 0

adequate data that a jury or the decide believes that the defendant dedicated the crime. quite lots something could be used as data for a offender trial. data can are available the form of witness testimony, video surveillance, possession of the stolen products and an entire host of different issues. there's no optimal volume of information which could be presented in a case to win a conviction. there's no rule that announces you may have 3 products of information. The DA merely has to place jointly a solid adequate case with the data he / she has on the time and do away with maximum doubt that the defendant isn't in charge to win a conviction. Convictions would be gained on very flimsy pretexts and lost with rock difficult data. definite, situations do often times get dropped earlier trial. even nonetheless, in my adventure, as quickly as the DA has long previous in the path of the hassle of empaneling a jury, they gained't merely drop the case without a conviction. frequently, they're going to artwork out a plea settlement with the protection earlier trial.

2016-10-19 10:08:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it depend on the DA office usually they like to have a strong case against them before court .or maybe they have a bottle neck full of cases to get settle and your haven't came up yet .but you can call and find out how much longer it will take

2007-01-03 06:20:40 · answer #4 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

depends on the case load

2007-01-03 06:17:49 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

not long

2007-01-03 06:16:53 · answer #6 · answered by iEdwin 2 · 0 0

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