7 posts tagged “pro se”
A
acquit - To find a defendant not guilty in a criminal trial.
adjudication - A judgment or decree.
affidavit - A written or printed declaration or statement under oath.
appeal - Review of a case by a higher court.
appellant - Party appealing a decision or judgment to a higher court.
appellee - The party against whom an appeal is filed.
B
bench trial - Trial held before judge sitting without a jury; jury waived trial.
C
caseload - The number of cases a judge handles.
cause of action - A legal claim.
certiorari - A procedure for removing a case from a lower court to a higher court for review.
change of venue - Moving a case from one court, or location, to another.
civil law - All law that is not criminal law.
code - A collection of laws promulgated by legislative authority.
common law - A system of jurisprudence based on precedent rather than statutory laws.
D
de novo - “Anew.” A trial de novo is a completely new trial.
declaratory judgment - A judgment declaring the rights of the parties on a question of law.
defendant - A person charged with a crime or a person against whom a civil action is brought.
deposition - Sworn testimony taken outside the courtroom according to the rules of the court.
docket - Book containing entries of all proceedings in a court.
double jeopardy - Prohibition against more than one prosecution for the same crime.
due process - Constitutional guarantee that an accused person receives a fair and impartial trial.
E
en banc - “On the bench.” All judges of a court sitting together to hear a case.
et al. - Abbreviation of the Latin "et alter", meaning: “and others.”
F
felony - A serious criminal offense for which the minimum sentence is one year.
G
H
I
indictment - Written accusation of a grand jury charging a crime.
injunction - Court orders prohibiting specific actions from being carried out.
interrogatories - Written questions which must be answered under oath.
J
judgment - Final determination by a court.
judgment document - Document that explains the sentence an offender receives from a trial court.
jurisprudence - The science of law.
L
limited jurisdiction - Courts limited in the types of criminal and civil cases they may hear.
litigant - Person or group engaged in a lawsuit.
M
moot - Unsettled or undecided.
N
negligence - The absence of ordinary care.
O
P
probate - The legal process of establishing the validity of a will and settling an estate.
pro bono - Legal services provided without attorney fees.
pro se - Legal representation of oneself
R
recess - A short interval during which court suspends business, but without adjourning.
S
sentence, concurrent - Two or more sentences which run at the same time.
sentence, consecutive - Two or more sentences which run one after another.
sentence, determinate - A sentence that states exactly the time to be served or money to be paid.
statute - A law created by the Legislature.
stay - Halting a judicial proceeding by order of the court.
T
tort - An injury or wrong committed with or without force to the person or property of another giving rise to a claim for damages.
V
venue - The specific county, city or geographical area in which a court has jurisdiction.
W

A
acquit - To find a defendant not guilty in a criminal trial.
adjudication - A judgment or decree.
affidavit - A written or printed declaration or statement under oath.
appeal - Review of a case by a higher court.
appellant - Party appealing a decision or judgment to a higher court.
appellee - The party against whom an appeal is filed.
B
bench trial - Trial held before judge sitting without a jury; jury waived trial.
C
caseload - The number of cases a judge handles.
cause of action - A legal claim.
certiorari - A procedure for removing a case from a lower court to a higher court for review.
change of venue - Moving a case from one court, or location, to another.
civil law - All law that is not criminal law.
code - A collection of laws promulgated by legislative authority.
common law - A system of jurisprudence based on precedent rather than statutory laws.
D
de novo - “Anew.” A trial de novo is a completely new trial.
declaratory judgment - A judgment declaring the rights of the parties on a question of law.
defendant - A person charged with a crime or a person against whom a civil action is brought.
deposition - Sworn testimony taken outside the courtroom according to the rules of the court.
docket - Book containing entries of all proceedings in a court.
double jeopardy - Prohibition against more than one prosecution for the same crime.
due process - Constitutional guarantee that an accused person receives a fair and impartial trial.
E
en banc - “On the bench.” All judges of a court sitting together to hear a case.
et al. - Abbreviation of the Latin "et alter", meaning: “and others.”
F
felony - A serious criminal offense for which the minimum sentence is one year.
G
H
I
indictment - Written accusation of a grand jury charging a crime.
injunction - Court orders prohibiting specific actions from being carried out.
interrogatories - Written questions which must be answered under oath.
J
judgment - Final determination by a court.
judgment document - Document that explains the sentence an offender receives from a trial court.
jurisprudence - The science of law.
L
limited jurisdiction - Courts limited in the types of criminal and civil cases they may hear.
litigant - Person or group engaged in a lawsuit.
M
moot - Unsettled or undecided.
N
negligence - The absence of ordinary care.
O
P
probate - The legal process of establishing the validity of a will and settling an estate.
pro bono - Legal services provided without attorney fees.
pro se - Legal representation of oneself
R
recess - A short interval during which court suspends business, but without adjourning.
S
sentence, concurrent - Two or more sentences which run at the same time.
sentence, consecutive - Two or more sentences which run one after another.
sentence, determinate - A sentence that states exactly the time to be served or money to be paid.
statute - A law created by the Legislature.
stay - Halting a judicial proceeding by order of the court.
T
tort - An injury or wrong committed with or without force to the person or property of another giving rise to a claim for damages.
V
venue - The specific county, city or geographical area in which a court has jurisdiction.
W

http://www.pro-selaw.org/pro-selaw/index.asp
This
website is designed as a resource center on self-representation in
civil legal matters. Our purpose is to provide a collection of
materials and resources that can be used to create legal service
delivery systems that are based on the concept of "pro se" or "self"
representation within federally funded legal services programs, courts,
pro bono programs, and other community-based programs.
Pro Se means "on one's own behalf." A 1991 American Bar Association study of self-represented litigants showed:
- Persons with incomes less than $50,000 are more likely to represent themselves.
- About 20% of self-represented litigants report they can afford an attorney but do not want one.
- Self-represented persons are more likely to be satisfied with the judicial process than those who are represented by attorneys.
- Almost 75% of those who represented themselves in court said they would do it again.
Self-representation,
when combined with the power of modern information technology can be an
important means of providing increased access to the legal system.
This resource center contains:
-
A searchable Directory of Pro Se Programs operated by legal service providers;
-
White papers and research on the research concept;
-
A Discussion space where organizations that want to design and operate pro se assistance programs can post questions and receive answers from other
professionals who are engaged in operating pro se programs.
By SARAH KARUSH, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 37 minutes ago
The decomposing bodies of four young people were found Wednesday by U.S. marshals delivering an eviction notice, and a woman who answered the door was taken into custody for questioning.
Investigators were trying to determine whether the woman was related to the four victims, who had been dead at least two weeks, authorities said. Her name was not released.
"She was apparently calm throughout," U.S. Marshals Service spokesman Cole Barnhart said.
Mayor Adrian Fenty said the condition of the bodies made it difficult to identify them. "It is going to take scientific tests run by the chief medical examiner's office," he said.
Police Chief Cathy Lanier said the bodies appeared to be of females ranging in age from 5 to 18. Authorities were investigating how and when they died.
The case may not be ruled a homicide until the medical examiner determines the cause of death, police said. Lanier said there were no signs of forced entry into the home.
The bodies were found upstairs in the southeast Washington apartment, part of a block of virtually identical apartment houses near Bolling Air Force Base in one of this city's poorest areas, authorities said.
Larry Jones, who lives next door, said that a woman and two or three children live at the home but that he had not seen them since the summer. The children appeared healthy at the time, he said.
Jones added that in recent months he had noticed a "strange odor" coming through his vent.
"We thought it was probably dead mice in the vent or something," he said, adding that he had talked to the landlord about it.
D.C. Council member Marion Barry, who represents the neighborhood where the bodies were found, questioned why no one had reported the four missing.
"Somebody should have known that some people were not in school," said Barry, the former mayor.
D.C. schools spokeswoman Mafara Hobson said none of the children thought to be living in the home was currently enrolled in the school system. One child at that address had attended Stuart-Hobson Elementary School but withdrew in 2006 as a fifth-grader, she said.
Mindy Good, a spokeswoman for the D.C. Child and Family Services agency, said it had received one report about a family at that address in April through the city's child abuse and neglect reporting hot line.
"We made several attempts to make contact with these people. We were unable to have any face-to-face contact with them," Good said. "On the last attempt (in early May), it appeared they were no longer living at the address."
Investigators later found a new address for the family in Maryland and alerted county authorities there of the report on the family, Good said. She would not say where the family was believed to be living.
"This is a sickmaking situation. It's a horrible thing," she said.
Area resident Rowand Simpkins said that her neighbors tend to keep to themselves and that she never saw the woman or children.
"It's really a mystery," she said of the youths' deaths. "It's a sad situation."
___
Associated Press writers Karen Mahabir and Brett Zongker contributed to this report.
this was in my local paper, out of the 1200 who were adopted, how many do you think were legal?
Please respond to this, contact the editor at the link I provided. Let them know I am not the only person concerned with this, they will do a story if people get off their butts and let them know there is a problem.
Some recent events in the news that pleased us …
http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2007/dec/22/adoptions-growing-grinch-cuts-trees/
WHAT A CELEBRATION: More than 1,200 children in the state have been moved to permanent homes this year, and 122 were in Knox County, according to the state Department of Children's Services. Ten years ago, only 195 children in state custody were adopted. "Every child deserves to grow up in a family that loves them unconditionally," said Dr. Viola Miller, commissioner of DCS, in a statement. Permanent placements have been a top priority for her.
here is the Editors email addy, jump on this and lets get them to do a story on CPS, we keep missing oppurtunities, it doesnt matter if you dont live here either. Let them know there is a problem, its not so rosy.
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