The effort ultimately raised more than $25 million after promising — falsely, according to the indictment — that the donations would not benefit Kolfage. An indictment is an official charge that states that a person will be charged with a crime and that a criminal trial will take place. Good for them – but what a shameful indictment of Planet Fashion. According to the indictment, the Cobra president provided FEMA`s regional administrator with the use of helicopters, hotel accommodation, airline tickets, personal security services, and the use of a credit card in exchange for influence to obtain power restoration works. An indictment is a formal announcement in which a person is officially charged with a crime. An indictment is only presented after a prosecutor and grand jury have determined that police investigators have gathered enough evidence to charge someone with a crime. In the United States and the United Kingdom, the law requires an indictment to charge someone with a serious crime. The purpose of this procedure is to ensure that a case is brought before the courts only if there is sufficient evidence. For possible crimes, a prosecutor will present evidence from an impartial group of citizens called a grand jury. Witnesses can be subpoenaed, evidence is presented to the grand jury, and grand jury members have a glimpse of the case. The grand jury hears the prosecutor and witnesses, then votes in secret on whether it believes there is enough evidence to charge the person with a crime. A grand jury can decide not to indict a person based on the evidence, no charges would come from the grand jury. All proceedings and testimony before a grand jury are sealed, meaning only those in the room know who said what about whom.

The grand jury is a constitutional requirement for certain types of crimes (meaning it`s written in the U.S. Constitution), allowing a group of citizens who don`t know the defendant to make an impartial decision based on the evidence before charging a person with a crime. Britannica.com: Encyclopedia article on indictment n. an indictment for a felony (serious crime) decided by a grand jury on the basis of a proposed indictment, testimony and other evidence presented by the prosecutor (district attorney). To bring charges, the grand jury will not be found guilty, but only the likelihood that a crime has been committed, that the accused has committed it, and that he or she will be brought to justice. District prosecutors often introduce only key facts that are sufficient to show probability, both to buy time and to avoid having all the evidence exposed. The Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution states that “no person shall be held responsible for a major or notorious felony unless there is a grand jury.” While grand juries are common in indicting federal crimes, many states use grand juries sparingly and use the criminal complaint followed by a “preliminary hearing” held by a judge or other judge of a lower court that will determine whether or not the prosecutor has presented sufficient evidence that the accused committed a crime. If the judge considers that there is sufficient evidence, he orders that the case be referred to the competent court for hearing. As a result, Dingle now faces 23 charges. After reviewing the investigators` information and the information they receive from conversations with those involved, the prosecutor decides whether or not to refer the case to the grand jury. When a person is charged, he or she is officially informed that he or she is suspected of having committed a crime.

The indictment contains basic information informing the person of the charges against him. The purpose of an indictment is to inform an accused of the charges against him so that he can prepare his defense. The scream, which rose into the night, signaled a moral indictment, no matter what the grand jury had said. The 2001 grand jury indictment named 21 suspects involved in the bombings of the U.S. embassy, including Osama bin Laden. Manin`s indictment was also directed against the use of knives in popular uprisings. Because states are not required to appoint a grand jury to receive criminal charges, those that do can follow their own rules. State grand juries operate similarly to federal grand juries, but vary depending on the number of jurors and the type of majority required (simple majority, two-thirds, etc.).