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The defendant shall have thirty (30) days from the date of first publication in which to appear and defend.
Contempt or Contempt of Court is a remedy available in Mississippi against a person who fails to follow a Court Order or Judgment. If someone is held in Contempt of court, the court has the power to punish the violator with a fine, jail time, other actions, or all of these.
Rule 81 requires use of a special summons which commands that the defendant appear and defend at a specific time and place set by order of the court and informs him or her that no answer is necessary.
A judge may summarily sanction the violator as set forth in Rule 32.2 of the Mississippi Rules of Criminal Procedure. Punishment may not exceed 30 days in jail or a $100.00 fine.
Under T.R. 53.2, if a judge takes a cause tried to the court under advisement and fails to determine any issue of law or fact within ninety (90) days of the submission of all pending matters, the case may be withdrawn from the judge. Ind.
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Generally speaking, criminal contempt of court is charged as a misdemeanor, though it may be charged as a felony in certain situations.
It provides a mechanism to prevent interference and to maintain the authority of the law. The object of contempt proceedings is not to protect judges personally from criticism but to protect the public by preserving the authority of the court and the administration of justice from undue attack.
Generally speaking, criminal contempt of court is charged as a misdemeanor, though it may be charged as a felony in certain situations.
A judge may summarily sanction the violator as set forth in Rule 32.2 of the Mississippi Rules of Criminal Procedure. Punishment may not exceed 30 days in jail or a $100.00 fine.
Contempt or Contempt of Court is a remedy available in Mississippi against a person who fails to follow a Court Order or Judgment. If someone is held in Contempt of court, the court has the power to punish the violator with a fine, jail time, other actions, or all of these.

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