Tap any paragraph to write a margin note. Your notes collect in the Desk below the text and file under cases with @. The side-by-side margin rail opens on a larger screen.

All sources · 33,436 documents · Table of contents · Title 19.2 · Title 19.2 · Chapter 15

Virginia

Title 19.2 · Chapter 15
55 entries
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-239. Jurisdiction in criminal cases.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-240. Clerks shall make out criminal docket; transportation orders.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-241. Time within which court to set criminal cases for trial.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-242. Accused discharged from jail if not indicted in time.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-243. Limitation on prosecution of felony due to lapse of time after finding of probable cause; misdemeanors; exceptions.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-244. Venue in general.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-245. Offenses committed without and made punishable within Commonwealth; embezzlement or larceny committed within Commonwealth; where prosecuted.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-245.1. Forgery; where prosecuted.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-245.01. Offenses involving reports or statements concerning cigarette sales or stamping.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-245.2. Tax offenses; where prosecuted.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-246. Injury inflicted by person within Commonwealth upon one outside Commonwealth.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-247. Venue in certain homicide cases.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-248. Venue when mortal wound, etc., inflicted in one county and death ensues in another.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-249. Offenses committed on boundary of two counties, two cities, or county and city, etc.; where prosecuted.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-249.1. Offenses committed within towns situated in two or more counties; where prosecuted.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-249.2. Venue for prosecution of computer and other crimes.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-250. How far jurisdiction of corporate authorities extends.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-251. When and how venue may be changed.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-252. Court ordering change of venue may admit accused to bail and recognize witnesses; remand of accused not admitted to bail.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-253. Procedure upon and after change of venue.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-254. Arraignment; pleas; when court may refuse to accept plea; rejection of plea agreement; recusal.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-254.1. Procedure in traffic infraction cases.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-254.2. Procedure in nontraffic offenses for which prepayment is authorized.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-255. Defendant allowed to plead several matters of law or fact.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-256. Approvers.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-257. Trial without jury in felony cases.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-258. Trial of misdemeanors by court without jury; failure to appear deemed waiver of jury.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-258.1. Trial of traffic infractions; measure of proof; failure to appear.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-259. On trial for felony, accused to be present; when court may enter plea for him, and trial go on.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-260. Provisions of Title 8.01 apply except as provided in this article.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-261. Charging grand jury in presence of person selected as juror.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-262. Waiver of jury trial; numbers of jurors in criminal cases; how jurors selected from panel.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-262.1. Joinder of defendants.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-262.01. Voir dire examination of persons called as jurors.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-263. Repealed.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-263.1. Contact between judge and juror prohibited.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-263.2. Jury instructions.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-263.3. Juror information confidential.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-264. When jury need not be kept together in felony case; sufficient compliance with requirement that jury be kept together.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-264.1. Views by juries.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia §§ 19.2-264.2 through 19.2-264.5. Repealed.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-264.6. through 19.2-264.14.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265. Opening statement of counsel.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265.1. Exclusion of witnesses (Subsection (a) of Supreme Court Rule 2:615 derived in part from this section and subsection (c) of Supreme Court Rule 2:615 derived from this section).
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265.01. Victims, certain members of the family and support persons not to be excluded.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265.2. Judicial notice of laws (Supreme Court Rule 2:202 derived in part from this section).
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265.3. Nolle prosequi; discretion of court upon good cause shown.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265.4. Failure to provide discovery.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265.5. Prosecuting misdemeanor cases without attorney.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-265.6. Dismissal of criminal charges on Commonwealth's motion; effect of dismissal of criminal charges.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-266. Exclusion of persons from trial; photographs and broadcasting permitted under designated guidelines; exceptions.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-266.1. Conviction of lesser offense on indictment for homicide.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-266.2. Defense objections to be raised before trial; hearing; bill of particulars.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-266.3. Continuances; appearances of parties.
Read →
§
Code of Virginia § 19.2-266.4. Expert assistance for indigent defendants.
Read →
★   the supreme law of the land   ★
Don't Tread on Me
E Pluribus Unum — out of many, one

"If you don't know your rights, you don't have any."

Marginalia · a citizen's law index
A research desk, not legal advice. Always read the cited source before relying on a summary.
Questions or an issue? support@self-law.org
disclaimerMarginalia is a research index, not a law firm. Nothing on this site is legal, tax, or financial advice and no attorney–client relationship is formed by using it. Statutes, regulations, and case law change; summaries, search results, AI output, and member posts may be incomplete, out of date, or wrong. Any interpretation drawn from material on this site should be validated by a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before you act on it.