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What is a preliminary inquiry? - Steps to Justice
A preliminary inquiry is when a judge reviews the evidence in your case to decide if there's enough evidence to have a trial. A preliminary inquiry
3. Prepare for your preliminary inquiry - Steps to Justice
Before the preliminary inquiry , you or your lawyer must go to your Crown pre-trial meeting or judicial pre-trial meeting. At this meeting, you and the Crown decide which Crown witnesses will testify at the preliminary inquiry. Even if the Crown decides not to call a certain witness, you can ask for that witness to be called if you want to ask them questions. The Crown must make that …
4. Go to your preliminary inquiry - Steps to Justice
At your preliminary inquiry, the judge looks at the Crown's evidence to see if there's enough evidence to have a trial at the Superior Court of Justice.
1. Decide if you want a preliminary inquiry - Steps to Justice
If you're charged with an offence that gives you the right to a preliminary inquiry , you don't have to have one. You should first try and figure out if a preliminary inquiry will help your case or weaken it. A preliminary inquiry can be useful in some situations. For example, you might want to have a preliminary inquiry if: you want to see and hear the Crown's case against you you need ...
preliminary inquiry - Steps to Justice
A proceeding in the Ontario Court of Justice available to people being prosecuted by indictment. A preliminary inquiry does not determine guilt or
What is a judicial pre-trial? - Steps to Justice
A judicial pre- trial is similar to a Crown pre- trial, except a judge helps: resolve the matter in a way you and the Crown agree with, or make the trial shorter by reducing the number and complexity of issues to be discussed The judge may also say what they believe would be fair in your case if there was a trial. They do this based on the law and the circumstances of your case. Asking …
2. Fill out a Notice of Election form - Steps to Justice
If you didn't ask for a preliminary inquiry, you can make a re-election as long as there are more than 60 days before your trial starts. If you chose to have a preliminary inquiry followed by a trial at the Superior Court of Justice, you can make a re-election to have a trial at the Ontario Court of Justice only if the Crown agrees.
5: Get the judge’s decision - Steps to Justice
The judge at your preliminary inquiry decides whether there's enough evidence to have a trial. If they think there's enough evidence, the judge says
2. Choose the court for your trial - Steps to Justice
with a judge, or Superior Court of Justice with a judge and jury. This is called “making an election ”. Preliminary inquiries You also have the option to ask for a preliminary inquiry if: you choose to have your trial at the Superior Court of Justice, and you could be jailed for more than 14 years if you're found guilty A preliminary inquiry
3. Go through the plea inquiry - Steps to Justice
You must go through the "plea inquiry" before you plead guilty. The purpose of the plea inquiry is to make sure you understand: what it means to plead