In the US government, only the Article III (constitutional courts) are part of the Judicial Branch. Each state government has its own system of courts and rules about which are properly considered part of their Judicial Branch and which are not.
Federal Judicial Branch
The Judicial Branch includes not only the courts, but all the justices, judges, federally employed prosecutors, public defenders and other attorneys, support staff, clerks of court, and many other people.
There are many many federal courts that were created under Congress' authority in Article I of the Constitution. These serve an important function in the federal court system, but are actually part of the Legislative Branch, not the Judicial Branch.
Article I Courts (examples)
The other courts that are included in the Judicial Branch besides the Supreme Court is the Lower Federal Courts.
The Judicial branch consists of all of the courts, the supreme court included.
Judicial Branch
No. The Supreme Court of the United States is head of the Judicial branch, but there are lower courts and tribunals that are also included, such as the US District Courts and the US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, among others.
No. The Supreme Court of the United States is head of the Judicial branch, but there are lower courts and tribunals that are also included, such as the US District Courts and the US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, among others.
The Judicial Branch of the U.S. government is made up of the federal courts and led by the Supreme Court.
The judicial branch is all courts.
State supreme courts (or their equivalent) are part of each State's Judicial branch.
The Judicial Branch
All courts are part of the judicial branch.
judicial
Judicial