Social Sciences, asked by selissa848, 3 months ago

When do appellate courts review cases, listen to arguments from lawyers, and deliver rulings?

Options:

after the Supreme Court has heard a case and issued a majority opinion


as soon as someone has been arrested and accused of breaking federal law


when the loser in a civil or criminal trial in district court trial appeals the decision


when the prosecution loses a criminal case in district court

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
12

Answer:

The appellate courts do not retry cases or hear new evidence. They do not hear witnesses testify. There is no jury. Appellate courts review the procedures and the decisions in the trial court to make sure that the proceedings were fair and that the proper law was applied correctly.

Explanation:

answer.

after the Supreme Court has heard a case and issued a majority opinion

pls mark me as brainleast

Answered by citifiedlemur
0

Answer:

after the Supreme Court has heard a case and issued a majority opinion

Explanation:

i read the first answer and tried it and it was correct, so this is basicly aproval

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