How does the federal court system decide which criminal cases to take?

(1 point)
Responses

They take cases that have already seen state courts.

A grand jury decides if each case has merit.

They take cases that are being appealed.

A Supreme Court justice decides which cases should be addressed.

1 answer

The correct response is: They take cases that are being appealed.

Federal courts primarily handle cases that involve federal law or constitutional issues, and many cases reach them through the appeals process, particularly in the appellate courts and the Supreme Court.