As a lawyer, I will, of course, take issue with your....
by Marine Domer (2024-03-04 16:02:12)

In reply to: I know there are plenty of lawyers here...  posted by El Kabong


question just a bit. Only a Federal court can convict someone of a Federal crime. State courts can convict someone of the same crime, but under State law, not Federal law. As for "determining" someone violated Federal law short of conviction (for instance, as an evidentiary matter), that depends upon the circumstances, but I'm sure that can happen. For instance, a State court can take notice of a Federal conviction as evidence in aggravation or relevance to some other issue in the State case.


The NY trump case is an interesting example
by ratinatux  (2024-03-05 08:05:34)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Cannot reply

To the extent they intend to prove a federal election law crime was committed and being covered up in order to make the state law violation into a felony


he's asking whether state courts have jurisdiction to hear
by airborneirish  (2024-03-04 16:51:48)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Cannot reply

federal criminal cases. the answer is generally no, and at most a state court would have concurrent jurisdiction where both the state and feds have criminalized something. There are no states that have criminalized insurrection against the US though there are states, including Colorado, who have criminalized insurrection against that state.

Jurisdiction in the case of treason and insurrection is still not cut and dry. Johnson wanted to try Davis in a us district court in Virginia following the civil war. An argument was made by then US AG Speed that Davis ought to be tried via military tribunal https://openyls.law.yale.edu/bitstream/handle/20.500.13051/11198/70_24YaleLJ669_1914_1915_.pdf?sequence=2

A state court ought not have jurisdiction over insurrection against the United states.