District attorneys are responsible for handling criminal cases. They don't handle federal cases, but act as the prosecutor for a state case.
Most criminal cases are heard in state courts because criminal law is primarily under the jurisdiction of state governments. States have their own criminal codes and court systems to handle cases involving violations of state laws. Federal courts typically only hear criminal cases involving violations of federal laws.
As with all types of criminal cases, there are indeed attorneys that specialize in arson cases. Of course, these are defense attorneys as prosecutors are employed by the government to handle these cases.
some lawyers do work for free, these cases are called probono cases. It depends what the situation is. some lawyers do work for free, these cases are called probono cases. It depends what the situation is.
Federal courts of general jurisdiction (US District Courts, etc.) handle both civil and criminal cases.
they have original jurisdiction over most federal cases
State courts handle civil and criminal matters that arise under state law.
In which courts are criminal cases dealt with?
criminal court cases are just specific court cases which deal with the conviction of a criminal...or release.
The percentage of cases heard in state courts varies by jurisdiction, but on average, state courts handle the majority of cases in the United States. State courts typically oversee civil, criminal, family, probate, and traffic cases, among others. Each state has its own court system to handle these matters.
. . . . ANY violations of federal laws and regulations, both civil and criminal, including the tax codes.
All misdemeanor and felony offenses enacted into that state's laws by legislatures both past and present.