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The 25th District Court was established on December 1, 1977, replacing the Lincoln Park Municipal Court. [23] The 26th District Court commenced operations on December 1, 1979, with the consolidation of the Ecorse and River Rouge Municipal Courts [24] and merged with the 25th District Court effective April 1, 2012 [25] 27th District Court
The 36th District Court, with judges elected citywide, handles civil disputes where less than $25,000 is in dispute, landlord-tenant matters, misdemeanors, and preliminary examinations of criminal defendants charged with felonies prior to being bound over to circuit court. The 36th District Court incorporated the city's common pleas, traffic ...
A Detroit judge has been removed from the docket days after he placed a 15-year-old girl in handcuffs after she fell asleep in his courtroom during a summer field trip.
The program, which also ran in 2020 during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, allows individuals to save, on average, about $100 per ticket, according to 36th District Court Chief Judge William ...
Located in the Greektown district, the twelve-story Brutalist architecture building, designed by Eberle M. Smith, was completed in 1970 and is named for jurist and politician Frank Murphy, who was a Recorder's Court judge, Mayor of Detroit, Governor of Michigan, United States Attorney General and Associate Justice of the United States Supreme ...
The 16-year-old girl was visiting the 36th District Court in Detroit on Aug. 14 when she dozed off in the courtroom of Judge Kenneth King Girl, 16, Put in Handcuffs and Jail Uniform After Falling ...
"The 36th District Court, known as 'the people's court,' remains deeply committed to providing access to justice in an environment free from intimidation or disrespect.
As of 2023, there are 57 judicial circuits that are set by the legislature. [1] [2] The number of judges in each circuit is set by the legislature. [2]Since Michigan has 83 counties, some circuit courts cover several counties; judges elected in multi-county circuits must travel from one county to another to hold court.