US Courts

This is the limited version of the US Courts company profile: Join LinkedIn or Sign In to see more information.

Current Company Logo

The federal courts often are called the guardians of the Constitution because their rulings protect rights and liberties guaranteed by it. Through fair and impartial judgments, the federal courts interpret and apply the law to resolve disputes. The courts do not make the laws. That is the responsibility of Congress. Nor do the courts have the power to enforce the laws. That is the role of the President and the many executive branch departments and agencies.

* Find your local federal court
* Understanding the difference between Federal and State Courts

The Founding Fathers of the nation considered an independent federal judiciary essential to ensure fairness and equal justice for all citizens of the United States. The Constitution they drafted promotes judicial independence in two major ways. First, federal judges are appointed for life, and they can be removed from office only through impeachment and conviction by Congress of "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors."

Second, the Constitution provides that the compensation of federal judges "shall not be diminished during their Continuance in Office," which means that neither the President nor Congress can reduce the salary of a federal judge. These two protections help an independent judiciary to decide cases free from popular passions and political influence.

Article III

The federal courts are comprised of:

* U.S. Supreme Court
* U.S. Courts of Appeals
* U.S. District Courts
* Bankruptcy Courts

Article I

Congress has created several Article I or legislative courts that do not have full judicial power. Article I courts are U.S. Court of Military Appeals, U.S. Tax Court, and U.S. Court of Veterans' Appeals were established under Article I of the Constitution.

Specialties

adjudication, justice, law

Your Connections to US Courts

To see how you’re connected: Join Now or Sign In

Popular Profiles at US Courts

New Hires and Recent Promotions at US Courts

  • Kat Li, Law Clerk

    was Judicial Intern - 4 months ago

To see more new hires & promotions: Join Now or Sign In

Last edited by Training Specialist (Instructional Systems)

This LinkedIn Company Profile was created by LinkedIn and is about US Courts. This page is not endorsed by or affiliated with US Courts. For questions regarding LinkedIn Company Profiles, contact us.