๐Ÿ›๏ธ Junior Attorney โ€ข Advanced Training โ€ข Case File #002

The System Behind the Courtroom

Welcome back, Counselor Nivin. You know how a trial works โ€” now learn where laws come from, the rights that protect you, the real Supreme Court cases that shaped America, and how lawyers actually build an argument. Court is back in session.

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From the Courtroom to the Whole System

In Law 101 you learned what happens inside a courtroom. In Law 201 you zoom out to see the entire machine that makes the rules, protects your rights, and decides the biggest questions in the country.

You already know (101)
Now you'll learn (201)
Criminal vs. civil cases
Where laws actually come from โ€” the Constitution & 3 branches
Who's who in the courtroom
Your rights โ€” the Bill of Rights & Miranda
How a single trial works
The court ladder โ€” trials, appeals & the Supreme Court
Ethos, pathos & logos (persuading)
IRAC โ€” how lawyers structure an argument
Made-up mock cases
Real landmark cases that changed America
Lesson 1

Where Laws Actually Come From

An antique Constitution scroll with a quill and gavel

Above every law sits one supreme rulebook: the Constitution. Every other law in the country has to obey it. The Constitution also splits the government into three branches so no single person can grab all the power. Tap each branch to see its job.

๐Ÿชจ๐Ÿ“„โœ‚๏ธ Think rock-paper-scissors. Each branch can check the others: Congress writes a law, the President can veto it, the courts can rule it unconstitutional, and Congress can override a veto. Nobody wins forever โ€” that's called checks and balances, and it's the whole point.
Lesson 2

How a Bill Becomes a Law

A brand-new law starts as just an idea called a bill. Press Next โ†’ to walk the bill all the way to becoming a real law.

๐Ÿšซ Veto! The President can say "no" to a bill. But Congress isn't powerless โ€” if two-thirds of them still vote yes, they can override the veto and the bill becomes law anyway. Checks and balances in action!
Lesson 3

Your Rights: The Bill of Rights

A glowing torch of liberty at dawn

The first 10 amendments (changes) to the Constitution are called the Bill of Rights โ€” think of them as your superpowers that even the government can't take away. Tap a card to reveal each power.

๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ "You have the right to remain silentโ€ฆ" Ever heard that on TV? Those are your Miranda rights (from a real case you'll meet below). Police have to tell you: you can stay silent, and you can have a lawyer. It comes straight from the 5th and 6th Amendments.
Lesson 4

The Court Ladder

Courts are stacked like a ladder. If you think a court got it wrong, you can appeal โ€” ask a higher court to check the work. Very few cases climb all the way to the top.

Rung 1

๐Ÿซ Trial Court

Where a case starts. A judge and jury hear the evidence and reach a verdict.

โ–ฒ appeal
Rung 2

โš–๏ธ Court of Appeals

No new jury. These judges just check: did the trial follow the rules?

โ–ฒ appeal
Rung 3

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Supreme Court

The final word. 9 Justices. What they decide becomes the rule for the whole country.

๐ŸŽฎ It's like beating a video game. The Supreme Court is the final boss โ€” you only reach it after winning (or losing) the levels below, and it only takes the very biggest, hardest cases.
Lesson 5

Precedent: Why Old Cases Decide New Ones

Here's a superpower of the courts: once a case is decided, future similar cases have to follow it. That rule is called precedent (fancy Latin: stare decisis โ€” "let the decision stand"). The law grows one case at a time.

๐Ÿ  Like house rules. If your family decides "shoes off at the door," everyone who visits later follows the same rule โ€” you don't re-argue it every time. Courts work the same way, so the law stays fair and predictable.

โš–๏ธ You be the judge. A past case decided: "Students can protest peacefully at school as long as they don't disrupt class." Now a student wears a button supporting a cause โ€” quiet, no disruption. Using precedent, what should you rule?

Real History

Landmark Cases That Changed America

The grand interior of a supreme court chamber

These are real Supreme Court cases. Each one changed the rights you have today. Read what happened, guess the outcome, then reveal the decision.

1803 ยท FoundationsMarbury v. Madison

๐Ÿ‘‘ Can courts overrule the government?

Early in U.S. history, nobody was sure if the Supreme Court could actually strike down a law it thought broke the Constitution. This case answered it forever.

โš–๏ธ The Court said: Yes. This case created judicial review โ€” the power of courts to declare a law unconstitutional and cancel it. Why it matters: it made the courts a true equal branch, able to check Congress and the President.
1954 ยท EqualityBrown v. Board of Education

๐Ÿซ Can schools be "separate but equal"?

For a long time, Black and white children were forced into separate schools, and courts claimed that was fine as long as the schools were "equal." A young girl named Linda Brown challenged it.

โš–๏ธ The Court said (9โ€“0): Separate is NOT equal. Segregated schools were ruled unconstitutional. Why it matters: one of the most important cases in history โ€” it began ending legal segregation in America.
1963 ยท Right to a LawyerGideon v. Wainwright

๐Ÿง‘โ€โš–๏ธ What if you can't afford a lawyer?

Clarence Gideon was too poor to hire a lawyer and had to defend himself. He lost. From prison, he hand-wrote a letter to the Supreme Court arguing that wasn't fair.

โš–๏ธ The Court said: You get a lawyer. If you can't afford one, the government must provide one. Why it matters: it's why everyone โ€” rich or poor โ€” has a real defense. (Straight from the 6th Amendment.)
1966 ยท Your RightsMiranda v. Arizona

๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ Do police have to tell you your rights?

Ernesto Miranda confessed to police โ€” but no one had told him he could stay silent or ask for a lawyer first. Was that confession fair to use?

โš–๏ธ The Court said: Police must warn you first. That's why officers now read your Miranda rights: "You have the right to remain silentโ€ฆ" Why it matters: it protects you from being pressured into saying things without knowing your rights.
1985 ยท StudentsNew Jersey v. T.L.O.

๐ŸŽ’ Can a school search your backpack?

A student was caught, and a school official searched her purse and found more. She argued the school violated her 4th Amendment right against unfair searches.

โš–๏ธ The Court said: Schools can search โ€” but only with a good reason. They need "reasonable suspicion," not a full warrant like police. Why it matters: it decides exactly how much privacy you have at school. Very real for you!
Lesson 6

How Lawyers Really Argue: IRAC

In Law 101 you learned ethos, pathos, logos โ€” how to persuade. Now learn how lawyers structure an argument so it's airtight. They use four steps called IRAC.

I

Issue

What's the exact question we're deciding?

R

Rule

What law or precedent applies here?

A

Application

How does that rule fit these facts?

C

Conclusion

Soโ€ฆ who wins, and why?

Score: 0 / 0

๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ Spot the IRAC part

Read the sentence from a lawyer's argument. Which part of IRAC is it?

The Fun Part

โš–๏ธ Advanced Cases: You Decide

Now use everything โ€” rights, precedent, and IRAC. Read each case, make your call, then reveal what a court would likely say and which landmark case it connects to.

4th AmendmentCase #1 โ€” The Searched Backpack

๐ŸŽ’ The Student vs. The School

A teacher smells smoke in a bathroom and sees Priya walk out. Based on that, the principal searches Priya's backpack โ€” no warrant โ€” and finds nothing. Priya says her privacy was violated. You are the judge.

The two sides:
  • ๐ŸŽ’ Priya: "You searched me with no proof โ€” that's an unfair search!"
  • ๐Ÿซ School: "Smoke plus seeing her leave is a reasonable suspicion."
โš–๏ธ A court would likely say: the search was allowed. Schools only need reasonable suspicion, and smoke + seeing her leave counts โ€” even though they found nothing. ๐Ÿ”— Precedent: New Jersey v. T.L.O. (1985)
1st AmendmentCase #2 โ€” The Protest Button

โœŠ Free Speech at School

Leo wears a small button supporting a cause he cares about. It's quiet, causes no argument, and doesn't disrupt any class. The school tells him to remove it. Leo says that's against his free speech.

The two sides:
  • โœŠ Leo: "Wearing a button is peaceful speech โ€” it's my 1st Amendment right."
  • ๐Ÿซ School: "We want no political stuff at school."
โš–๏ธ A court would likely say: Leo wins. Peaceful expression that doesn't disrupt school is protected. Students don't "shed their rights at the schoolhouse gate." ๐Ÿ”— Precedent: Tinker v. Des Moines (1969)
5th & 6th AmendmentCase #3 โ€” The Silent Suspect

๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ Rights When Questioned

Police bring in a suspect and question him for an hour. They never tell him he can stay silent or ask for a lawyer. He says something that makes him look guilty. Can the court use it?

The facts:
  • ๐Ÿš” Police never read him any rights.
  • ๐Ÿ—ฃ๏ธ He answered questions without a lawyer present.
โš–๏ธ A court would likely say: throw it out. Because police never gave the Miranda warning, the statement can't be used. Lesson: your rights only protect you if they're respected from the start. ๐Ÿ”— Precedent: Miranda v. Arizona (1966)
Final Challenge

๐ŸŽ“ The Advanced Bar Exam

Eight questions covering everything in Law 201. Earn your Advanced Attorney badge.

Reference

๐Ÿ“– Glossary 2.0 โ€” Advanced Terms

ConstitutionThe supreme rulebook of the country. Every other law must obey it.
AmendmentA change or addition to the Constitution. The first 10 are the Bill of Rights.
UnconstitutionalWhen a law breaks the Constitution โ€” courts can cancel it.
Judicial ReviewThe court's power to strike down laws that break the Constitution (from Marbury v. Madison).
Precedent (stare decisis)Past decisions that future similar cases must follow.
AppealAsking a higher court to review whether a lower court got it right.
JurisdictionThe power a court has to decide a certain kind of case.
VetoThe President's power to reject a bill.
OverrideCongress passing a bill anyway, with a two-thirds vote, after a veto.
Due ProcessThe right to fair treatment and fair steps before the government punishes you.
Miranda RightsThe warning police must give: you can stay silent and have a lawyer.
DissentWhen a judge disagrees with the majority and writes why.
IRACIssue, Rule, Application, Conclusion โ€” how lawyers structure an argument.