The St. Louis County Circuit Clerk's office is the busiest circuit in the State of Missouri processing nearly 120,000 filings a year or 12.6% of the State's total filings. Many of the forms used in the 21st Judicial Circuit Court are provided to the public and attorneys for use in the Court. Click to search for a form.
If the Assistant Circuit Attorney determines that an action can be taken, your case will be filed in court and all necessary parties will be notified.
If you have questions regarding the court process you can call us during regular business hours at 622-4434. Listed below are the locations and phone numbers of three area police stations: For more help you may contact Crime Victim Advocacy Center at http://www.supportvictims.org/.
You may apply for child support through the Missouri Department of Social Services [www.dss.mo.gov].
The Missouri Department of Social Services' Missouri Family Support Division (FSD) is the agency that provides child support services to: Custodial parents - parents who live with the children. Noncustodial parents - parents who do not live with the children.
The Circuit Attorney is the prosecutor for state-level criminal cases in the city. The office's specialized units include Child Support, Community Affairs, Drug Court, Felony Trial, Victim Services, White Collar Crime and the Warrant Office. The salary for this position in the most recent year was $152,672.
1) Contact the Missouri Secretary of State's Office to let the office know that you intend to run, confirm that your registered address qualifies you for the position you intend to run for, and that you meet other office specific qualifications. 2) Complete the qualifying papers and submit your declaration to run to the St. Louis City Board of Election Commissioners. Inquire as to if the qualifying must be accompanied by either a qualifying fee or petition paper s in lieu of a qualifying fee. 3) Submit the qualifying papers accompanied by either the qualifying fee or petition papers during the stipula ted qualifying times , which can be inquired from the clerk. If you have any questions please contact the St. Louis City Board of Election Commissioners at (314) 622-4336 or (314) 622-4336.
Missouri law provides you with the possibility of legal protection against the person (s) threatening or acting violently against you. You may file a request for an Order of Protection. If the Court grants you an Order of Protection, it would be illegal for the accused abuser, called the Respondent, to come near you.
If an Order of Protection is granted, the Court will set a court hearing within 14 days of the issuance of the Order to determine if your temporary Order is made a full Order of Protection. If your request for an Order of Protection is denied, you will be given a court date for a re-hearing. In either event, the accused abuser will be given a notice to appear. The Order of Protection only becomes effective once it is served on the Respondent.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, rather than in-person hearings, petitioners may file online to request an order of protection. Click here for instructions.
The CIRU will notify applicants at at least the following stages: when their application is received, if their application is declined, and if the CIRU concludes that it supports their claim of actual innocence.
The principal responsibility of a prosecutor is not to convict people — it is to do justice. Doing justice means acknowledging that, on rare occasions, prosecutors bring cases that result in the conviction of people who are actually innocent.
Only a court—not a prosecutor—can actually set aside a conviction. If the CIRU determines that an individual is factually innocent, it can ask for relief from the court, the governor, or the parole board. While many states have passed laws that allows prosecutors to ask a court to free an innocent man or woman, Missouri is not one of those states. That means that exonerations are less straightforward in St. Louis County than they are in many other parts of the country.
Not all of these options will be right for all cases. In some cases, the CIRU may file petitions with the circuit court or the court of appeals asking for the conviction to be overturned or asking for a new trial. In other cases, the CIRU may support a petition filed by the applicant him- or herself.
For this reason, there is no right to appeal its determinations. Because the CIRU’s investigation is not part of a court proceeding, the CIRU’s decisions or recommendations do not prevent a claimant from raising the same claims of innocence in another forum, such as a writ of habeas corpus. All individuals who submit an application to the CIRU should be aware, however, that the evidence developed by the CIRU during its investigation may be shared with a court or another prosecutorial entity.
A convicted person can file his or her own application, but applications may also be filed by a family member or friend of the convicted person, or by a lawyer acting on behalf of the convicted person. In order for a full investigation to proceed, however, the CIRU will need the cooperation of the convicted person.
No. The CIRU will consider claims whether or not the applicant is represented by counsel.