Information Sheet :: District Of Columbia :: Civil Actions 2025

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The Constitution dictates that the federal district be under the jurisdiction of the US Congress. Washington, DC operates as a state while also performing functions of a city and a county. We are treated as a state in more than 500 federal laws. We are leaders in a region of 4 million people and growing.
Within limits set by Congress and the Constitution, district courts have jurisdiction to hear nearly all categories of federal civil and criminal cases. The vast majority of civil and criminal cases are filed in state courts. Sometimes a case can be filed under similar statutes in either state or federal court.
The DC Courts are comprised of the DC Court of Appeals, the Superior Court of DC, and the Court System, which provides administrative support to both courts.
It is important to know that DC is very peculiar in that most cases are prosecuted by the United States Attorneys Office for the District of Columbia. This means that criminal cases are being prosecuted by federal prosecutors, even though it is being prosecuted in DC Superior Court, which is not a federal court.
For cases that are electronically filed, the motion to seal must be electronically filed and redacted as necessary for the public record. If the motion to seal is granted, an unredacted motion to seal with the materials sought to be placed under seal must be delivered in paper form to the clerks office for filing.
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Although these courts are authorized under federal law, they exist separately from other federal courts in DC, instead filling the traditional role of state courts in many ways.
DC Superior Courts Jurisdiction The Superior Court of the District of Columbia has jurisdiction of any civil action or other matter (at law or in equity) brought in the District of Columbia pursuant to DC Code 1-204.31 et seq.

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