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Pre-trial detention, also known as jail, preventive detention, provisional detention, or remand, is the process of detaining a person until their trial after they have been arrested and charged with an offence. A person who is on remand is held in a prison or detention centre or held under house arrest.
Maryland v. King, 569 U.S. 435 (2013), was a decision of the United States Supreme Court which held that a cheek swab of an arrestee's DNA is comparable to fingerprinting and therefore, a legal police booking procedure that is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment.
The detention decision directly made by the people's court is a judicial compulsory measure, based on the Civil Procedure Law or the Administrative Procedure Law. The maximum period is 20 days, and the court will deliver the detainee to the administrative detention facility of the public security department for execute.
In November, the King County jail resumed booking low-level and non-violent crime offenders as part of an agreement with the city of Seattle after a four-year halt. The booking restrictions were ...
The United States Constitution, including the United States Bill of Rights and subsequent amendments, contains the following provisions regarding criminal procedure. Due to the incorporation of the Bill of Rights, all of these provisions apply equally to criminal proceedings in state courts, with the exception of the Grand Jury Clause of the Fifth Amendment, the Vicinage Clause of the Sixth ...
The Milwaukee Fire and Police Commission approved new standards for booking prisoners with various health concerns into police district holding cells.
1905 mugshot of communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky Mugshot of American gangster Al Capone. A mug shot or mugshot (an informal term for police photograph or booking photograph) is a photographic portrait of a person from the shoulders up, typically taken after a person is placed under arrest.
For example, weekend inmates in Virginia Beach Jail are held separately from the general population of the jail but in the same facility. Intermittent Confinement can consist of community service work or other labor under supervision, as opposed to being confined within a correctional facility.