A court date set by a judge as an internal reminder for themselves, often scheduled at times the court isn't open, that the defendant does not have to attend.
“court dates can be rescheduled for a number of reasons sometimes judges set a court date as an internal reminder for themselves so you'll often see these types of court dates set either at seven o'clock in the morning or five o'clock at night when the courts aren't actually open so sometimes those court dates are just a reminder that the judge is setting for themselves kind of like a tickler and then they will handle the court date you don't have to show up to those”
Alexis explains: "court dates can be rescheduled for a number of reasons sometimes judges set a court date as an internal reminder for themselves so you'll often see these types of court dates set either at seven o'clock in the morning or five o'clock at night when the courts aren't actually open so sometimes those court dates are just a reminder that the judge is setting for themselves kind of like a tickler and then they will handle the court date you don't have to show up to those"
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Each answer links directly to the source where a Right Law Group attorney addressed this question.
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