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The text below is taken from the Officer_of_the_court article on Wikipedia, and is used under the terms of their licence.


The generic term officer of the court applies to all those who, in some degree in function of their professional or similar qualifications, have a legal part—and hence legal and deontological obligations—in the complex functioning of the judicial system as a whole, in order to forge justice out of the application of the law and the simultaneous pursuit of the legitimate interests of all parties and the general good of society.

They can be divided into the following functional groups; in most case various synonyms and parallels exist as well as a plethora of operational variations, depending on the jurisdiction and the changes in relevant legislation:

Contents

Court proper

Foremost those who make the decisions that determine the course of justice and its outcome:

Investigation and expertise

These are, like the accidental witness, though not in chief of accidental access to relevant information but through their skills, experience and equipment, used to provide information to the actual decision makers above

Services to the parties

Sources and References

  1. ^ The Supreme Court of the United States held in in Cammer v. United States, 350 U.S. 399 (1956) that lawyers are not court "officers" in the same category as marshals, bailiffs, court clerks or judges.

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