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AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE CLASSIFICATION OF LEGAL ISSUES TYPE OF CASE CIVIL CASES CRIMINAL CASES covers issues of claims, suits, contracts, and licenses. covers illegal actions or wrongful acts and can result in fines and imprisonment KINDS OF LAW TYPE OF LAW COMMON LAW STATUTORY LAW ADMINISTRATIVE LAW CONSTITUTIONAL LAW laws that are derived from precedents set by courts of the past. laws created by legislative bodies. laws that agencies create as rules and regulations that concern their area of influence. laws created due to the interpretation of the constitution established under the judicial review. DUAL COURT SYSTEM FEDERAL LAW Exclusive Jurisdiction: Federal civil disputes are heard in specific federal courts or federal district courts Federal criminal cases are usually heard in federal district courts Examples of exclusive jurisdiction: -Citizens of one state sue citizens of another -Counterfeiting U.S. currency -Kidnapping -Mail fraud -Interstate trade conflicts -National banking conflicts -Conflicts with federal officials, agencies and federal government -U.S. Border issues -Crossing state lines to commit crimes -Denying civil rights of citizens -Conflicts or patents & copyrights STATE LAW State Jurisdiction: Most civil disputes between citizens are settle in state civil courts Most criminal disputes in the United States are settled in state criminal courts Appeals from state courts are sent to state supreme courts (usually thought of as court as last resort ) - Jurisdiction is the right to hear a case. -States have the power to create their own laws so they need their own court system. The national government has the power to create laws so they also need their own court system. - Concurrent Resolution is when Federal Law and State Law overlap. If a citizen commits a crime that violates both federal and state laws, the case might be heard by either level of the judicial system.

LAYERS OF FEDERAL COURTS LAYER AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE TYPE OF JURISDICTION OF JURISDICTION District Courts Courts of Appeals (Circuit Courts) Supreme Court Original Jurisdiction Appellate Jurisdiction Original Jurisdiction Appellate Jurisdiction There are 94 district courts in across the United States. This is where a case is heard for the first time. Created by Article III of Constitution. There are 12 courts of appeals. A previously tried case to check for fairness. Created by Congress. Some cases can be appealed to Supreme Court which has the final say. Created by Congress. -Over 90% of the Supreme Court's cases are ones being reviewed (appellate jurisdiction) but there are some cases are being heard for the first time in the Supreme Court (original jurisdiction). Cases that may start with the Supreme Court are ones that involve ambassadors, public ministers or state suing other states. In modern times, such cases are usually limited to state disputes concerning boundaries, water, or mineral rights. -The Supreme Court was established by Article III of the U.S. Constitution. Congress was given the power to create any inferior courts. -The Judiciary Act of 1789 established the basic three-tiered structure of the federal court system. CONSTITUTIONAL COURTS VERSUS LEGISLATIVE COURTS CONSTITUTIONAL COURTS SPECIAL LEGISLATIVE COURTS Justification Obtain Judgeship Term Directly or indirectly mentioned in Constitution Appointed by President confirmed by the Senate For life (good behavior) Needed for specific purpose Appointed by President confirmed by the Senate Typically a 15 year fixed term (Some courts need such a qualified expert they have no term) -Congress creates inferior courts (constitutional ) and special legislative courts. When in doubt on test just pick Congress :) -Sovereign Immunity: The United States has to grant you permission to sue them. Oddly enough, they allow it often. It goes through the U.S. Court of Claims.

JUDICIAL REVIEW AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE CASE SPECIFICS IMPACT Marbury v. Madison (1803) Jefferson became president but did not deliver the official John Adam s appointments papers for judges. Marbury sued and wanted a congressional law interpreted to give him his appointment. The Supreme Court said that Congressional law was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court established it had the power to: interpret the words of the Constitution to decide if government actions are constitutional ( Judicial Review ) This case established Judicial Review. Even though the Constitution does not actually say that the Supreme Court has this power. PROCESS OF INCORPORATION (SELECTIVE INCORPORATION) DEFINITION OF SELECTIVE INCORPORATION CONSTITUTIONAL JUSTIFICATION PORTIONS OF BILL OF RIGHTS INCORPORATED -Free speech -Free press -Freedom of religion -Assembly & petition rights -Association 1st Amendment The process through which the Supreme Court applies portions of the bill of rights to protect individuals from the State government. The 14th Amendment requires all states to provide all citizens with due process and equal protection. -Search & seizure -Exclusion of evidence -Self incrimination -Double jeopardy -Confront witness -Impartial jury -Speedy trial -Right to counsel -public trial 4th Amendment 5th Amendment 6th Amendment -prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment 8th Amendment -Prior to the 14th Amendment (1868), dual federalism dominated views where State laws were for States and national law was for the nation. Under this, the Bill of Rights only protected citizens from the National Government. The 14th Amendment changed all this. Now individual liberties can be protected from State governments too. -Also privacy has been incorporated even though it is not listed in Bill of Rights (it is implied and interpreted from several amendment cases)

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE HEARING AND DECIDING SUPREME COURT CASES STEPS IN THE PROCESS DECIDING TO TAKE THE CASE ORAL ARGUMENTS THE CONFERENCE AND VOTE WRITING OPINIONS The petitioner files a petition for certiorari : a brief arguing why the lower court erred. The Rule of Four : 4 justices (out of 9) must agree to listen a case. The court then issues a writ of certiorari to the lower court informing it of the Court s decision and to request the full trial transcript. Each side gets 30 minutes to make their case and this included the time they get to answer questions from the Justices. The justices meet once a week (during argument scheduled weeks) to discuss the case and attempt to influence each other. The decision is made on the case by a simple majority vote (usually 5 out of 9). Justices write the reasoning for their opinions. This is important because of stare decisis meaning let the decision stand. Future court decisions are based on precedent set on this decision. -In one year the Supreme Court has to decide how many out of the 9,600 cases were filed. About 75 were heard. It helps if: the federal government is the party asking for review, the case involves conflict among the courts of appeals, the case presents a civil rights or civil liberties question, the case involves the ideological or policy preferences of the justices, or the case has a significant social or political interest, as evidence by the present interest group amicus curiae briefs. - In forma pauperis : Filings by prisoners for a new trial (In the form or a pauper) OUTSIDE INFLUENCE INFLUENCE AMICUS CURIAE BRIEFS HARVARD LAW AND YALE LAW REVIEWS LIVING IN SOCIETY CLERKS Interest groups and concerned individual are allowed to send in briefs explaining their viewpoints and reasoning for a case they are interested in. Most justices went ivy-league law schools. They read items published from their alma mater. They are people. They have opinionated family and friends. They read and watch the news. They are aware of public opinion. Assist justices by handling briefs and analyzing important reports. They work closely with and influence the justices.

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE THE GOVERNMENT S INFLUENCE ON THE BRANCH PART OF BRANCH LEGISLATIVE EXECUTIVE Senate House of Representatives & the Senate House of Representatives & the Senate House of Representatives & the Senate House of Representatives & the Senate President Department of Justice Department of Justice The Senate Confirms the presidential appointments for the judiciary. Senatorial Courtesy : is when the Senate from the State with the federal judge opening recommends judges to the White House. House impeaches judge (charged with crime) and Senate Convicts (decides if they guilty) Pay judges salaries Sets jurisdiction of legislative courts Creates new seats as needed. (Double # of seats in last 50 years) The President appoints judges (with Senate approval) Attorney General (and people in office) prosecute federal criminals and defends the United States in court. Solicitor general (appointed by President, confirmed by Senate) determines which cases to appeal the U.S. Supreme Court and represents the United States in the Supreme Court room. They also file amicus curiae briefs (friend of court brief) for cases not involving the United States.

SUPREME COURT OPINIONS OPINION AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE Per Curiam Opinion Brief, unsigned court opinion. Opinion of the Court Majority opinion belief (this is the law of the land). Concurring Opinion Dissenting Opinion Justices write this if they agree with the Opinion of the Court but for different reasons. A justice writes this to explain why they disagree with the Opinion of the Court. ( These are used as justifications when people try to make the Supreme Court change its mind in the future) FIVE SUPREME COURT CASES LIKELY TO BE ON THE AP TEST CASE SIGNIFICANCE Marbury v. Madison, 1803 McCulloch v. Maryland, 1819 Gibbons v. Ogden, 1824 Gitlow v. New York, 1925 Brown v. Board of Education, 1954 Court establishes Judicial Review : The Court can now determine if government action violates the constitution or not. (case was about presidential appointments) Court decides that Congress has the right to implied powers (not written in Constitution) due to the necessary and proper clause, in order to carry out their expressed powers. (case was about Maryland taxing the national bank) Court says that only the National Government (Congress) has the power to regulate interstate commerce. (case was about issuing licenses for ports between New York and New Jersey) The court uses Selective Incorporation for the 1st time in order to protect individuals freedom of speech from State governments. ( case was about New York charged Gitlow for printing a communist manifesto) Court declared segregated schools were unconstitutional (case was about Brown had to walk past white school to attend color school that was inferior)

CHIEF JUSTICE ERAS CHIEF JUSTICE AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE PERIOD OF TIME YEARS GENERAL John Marshall 1801-1835 34 years Helped establish many court powers Roger Taney 1836-1864 28 years Favored state power Earl Warren 1953-1969 16 years Major civil right changes and cases William Rehnquist 1986-2005 19 years Major conservative influence Chief Justices have no extra powers. The chief justice organizes hearings and guides discussion but all justices have equal power. Any 5 justices in agreement (or more) determine the majority decision. The chief justice writes the majority opinion if they are in the majority. THE AND THE POLITICAL SPECTRUM POLITICAL SPECTRUM POSITION THEY TEND TO SUPPORT JUDICIAL LIBERALS JUDICIAL CONSERVATIVES Broad interpretation of the Elastic Clause (Necessary and Proper Clause) Broad interpretation of civil rights acts and laws Pro-choice decisions Strict limits on the separation of church and state Affirmative action programs to end discrimination Stricter limits on the use of the Commerce Clause Limited uses of necessary and proper More local and state control of civil rights questions Pro-life decisions Community standards for free speech and obscenity Affirmative action as a form of reverse discrimination Community limits to lifestyle choices -Justices and judges are people. They have political interests and agendas. Presidents nominate judges and justices with political beliefs similar to their own. They tend to reflect the biases of the two major parties. -Judges are insulated from the public in that many serve for life and they are not elected. -Judges answer to the public in that they could be impeached and removed by Congress, their records of opinions and actions are used to determine if they should be appointed in the first place, and Congress can react to unpopular decision by leading the charge to amend the Constitution. -Generally judicial liberals favor a more open interpretation of the powers of the Constitution. Those who oppose that view are judicial conservatives.

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE APPROACH OF COURTS AS A POLICY MAKER JUDICIAL APPROACH JUDICIAL ACTIVISM JUDICIAL RESTRAINT When judges or courts make rulings that support a particular political agenda or have a direct affect on policy. Example: Brown v Topeka Board of Education, 1954 evidence of an instance in which judicial action can be needed. The belief that policy decisions should be left to the legislative and executive branches because the judicial branch's role is to interpret and apply the law, not to create it. -The Court exerts policy-making influence through Judicial Review, setting legal precedents, and overturning the decisions of lower courts. - Stare decisis : latin for let the decision stand is based on the custom of making judicial rulings based on decisions made by earlier, similar cases. However the Supreme Court has overruled its own precedent on many occasions.