Bristol RICO Act Lawyer, Illinois

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Don Zuelke

Traffic, Sexual Harassment, DUI-DWI, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           

Teresa Ann McAdams

Real Estate, Motor Vehicle, Divorce & Family Law, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  27 Years

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Christopher V. Russelburg

Traffic, Family Law, Divorce, DUI-DWI
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  24 Years

Mark Nickel

Family Law, Divorce, Divorce & Family Law, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           

Mark Andrew Nickel

Family Law, Divorce, Divorce & Family Law, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           

Nicole Sartori

Traffic, Divorce & Family Law, DUI-DWI, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  20 Years

Nicole Renee Sartori

Traffic, Divorce & Family Law, DUI-DWI, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  20 Years

David Edward Camic

Litigation, Felony, DUI-DWI, Criminal
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  38 Years

Christopher Russelburg

Traffic, Family Law, Divorce, DUI-DWI
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  24 Years

Boyd Ingemunson

Divorce & Family Law, Criminal, Traffic
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  27 Years

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LEGAL TERMS

VENIREMEN

People who are summoned to the courthouse so that they may be questioned and perhaps chosen as jurors in trials of civil or criminal cases.

CONVICTION

A finding by a judge or jury that the defendant is guilty of a crime.

GRAND JURY

In criminal cases, a group that decides whether there is enough evidence to justify an indictment (formal charges) and a trial. A grand jury indictment is the f... (more...)
In criminal cases, a group that decides whether there is enough evidence to justify an indictment (formal charges) and a trial. A grand jury indictment is the first step, after arrest, in any formal prosecution of a felony.

CRIMINAL CASE

A lawsuit brought by a prosecutor employed by the federal, state or local government that charges a person with the commission of a crime.

ACCESSORY

Someone who intentionally helps another person commit a felony by giving advice before the crime or helping to conceal the evidence or the perpetrator. An acces... (more...)
Someone who intentionally helps another person commit a felony by giving advice before the crime or helping to conceal the evidence or the perpetrator. An accessory is usually not physically present during the crime. For example, hiding a robber who is being sought by the police might make you an 'accessory after the fact' to a robbery. Compare accomplice.

CORPUS DELECTI

Latin for the 'body of the crime.' Used to describe physical evidence, such as the corpse of a murder victim or the charred frame of a torched building.

LINEUP

A procedure in which the police place a suspect in a line with a group of other people and ask an eyewitness to the crime to identify the person he saw at the c... (more...)
A procedure in which the police place a suspect in a line with a group of other people and ask an eyewitness to the crime to identify the person he saw at the crime scene. The police are supposed to choose similar-looking people to appear with the suspect. If the suspect alone matches the physical description of the perpetrator, evidence of the identification can be attacked at trial. For example, if the robber is described as a Latino male, and the suspect, a Latino male, is placed in a lineup with ten white males, a witness' identification of him as the robber will be challenged by the defense attorney.

EXPUNGE

To intentionally destroy, obliterate or strike out records or information in files, computers and other depositories. For example, state law may allow the crimi... (more...)
To intentionally destroy, obliterate or strike out records or information in files, computers and other depositories. For example, state law may allow the criminal records of a juvenile offender to be expunged when he reaches the age of majority, to allow him to begin his adult life with a clean record. Or, a company or government agency may routinely expunge out-of-date records to save storage space.

JURY NULLIFICATION

A decision by the jury to acquit a defendant who has violated a law that the jury believes is unjust or wrong. Jury nullification has always been an option for ... (more...)
A decision by the jury to acquit a defendant who has violated a law that the jury believes is unjust or wrong. Jury nullification has always been an option for juries in England and the United States, although judges will prevent a defense lawyer from urging the jury to acquit on this basis. Nullification was evident during the Vietnam war (when selective service protesters were acquitted by juries opposed to the war) and currently appears in criminal cases when the jury disagrees with the punishment--for example, in 'three strikes' cases when the jury realizes that conviction of a relatively minor offense will result in lifetime imprisonment.