court records search georgia

Posted in court records by admin on January 25, 2008 No Comments yet

court records search georgia
court records search georgia
I live in georgia, penalty for possesion of schedule II drug?

Ok, so i live in georgia, and i was arrested for possesion of Schedule II (Morphine, and Ritalin) possesion of Schedule IV (marijuana) I have not admitted that any of it was mine, it was found in my car after my uncle was arrested in the passenger’s seat during a traffic stop because he had a warrant. Someone please tell me what i should do, I bonded out today and I am admitting myself to rehab tomorrow.
A little background info on me. I am 18 years old and have no criminal record.

What do you think may be the possible penalty for this in court?
How should i plead?

When asked for permission to search the car i responded “how long will it take, i have to be at work in 30 mins?) and the officer said “not long, please step out of the vehicle”.. Would that count as consent?

Thanks.

You’ll probably get probation.Plead innocent and say you have no knowledge how it got in a car a good lawyer would win this case for, you.

To understand the process of achieving "real" background criminal record checks, it is necessary to have a rudimentary understanding the structure of the judiciary in the State where the research is conducted, especially regarding the criminal courts consolidated and how the documents are conserved and dispersed.

The definition is very simple (for me) a consolidated basis where the Court is the Superior Court or District or with the clerk of the circuit court retains and disperses the court records and related in all courts of this province (and only that county or district). What This means that, for purposes of seeking judicial record, it must look in one location per county. Before the consolidation of the courts if we wanted to search for criminals records of a person and they did not know precisely where to research, the researcher must consult all more or less distant courts in a county or judicial district for these records.

For Example: By my count, Los Angeles County has 40 + courts on the island of Catalina Pomona and Santa Clarita to Long Beach. Before the court building you could get information to the criminal case the Superior Court in downtown Los Angeles but if you want offense or offense, the information you had not guessed that the lower court to verify or check all, and this would involve physically going to each court to conduct the search. As you can imagine very little offense and offense records are found in a system like this.

However, since the courts were consolidated in 2000, a researcher at the yard in search of a criminal record should look in one place, the Superior Court in downtown LA, not 40 different locations in the same county. In fact, a researcher court may go to one of 40 + courts and view records of all courts and obtain all the information including criminal offenses such as traffic tickets, offenses and crimes.

Some states are not consolidated. In several states such as Mississippi, Massachusetts, Montana and Wyoming, the courts are not consolidated. The result is that searching for documents you are, in most cases, will only retrieve information on felony cases only because the research is conducted to the highest court in the county records are only for that court. Most of lesser crimes such as trafficking offenses and offenses are tried before the lower courts. These municipal, justice or Chancery courts also handle things like Small Claims and other small civil cases.

Remember the following records concerning the search:

1. The records of juvenile courts are almost always sealed and unavailable.

2. In states where records are searched by county and not the whole state (like California) each County Superior Court records of that county only. The subject of your inquiry could be a hatchet to kill the next county, but your County Court did not trace.

3. Some states like New York are convinced that statewide databases of background criminals.

4. Other states like Georgia and Michigan and even felony convictions were more restrictive databases only. (It the kind of information you receive these "Instant Nationwide" background checks "of data).

5. Different states have different names for their main county courts. In most states, it is called the Superior Court. In some remote areas of the country, a Circuit Court in May the highest court in a district that includes most of May in a county. The name is a holdover from the days when a judge traveled on horseback for the courts each territory.

About the Author:

Kit Fremin is the owner and founder of Background Check International. Since 1994 BCI has served clients as varied as: the LA Times, Department of Defense, Mars, Inc., the UN, the NTSB and Calvary Chapels nationwide. His website is: www.bcint.com and he can be e-mailed at kit@bcint.com.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.comConsolidated Courts

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