Title 28 › Part PART I— - ORGANIZATION OF COURTS › Chapter CHAPTER 5— - DISTRICT COURTS › § 141
A district court can hold special sessions at any place in the district if the business requires it, and the court will set the notice. The court can do at a special session anything it could do at a regular session. If an emergency makes it impossible to find a place inside the district, the court may meet elsewhere in the United States after a finding by the chief judge (or, if the chief judge is unavailable, the most senior available active judge) or the circuit’s judicial council. A criminal trial may not be held outside the State where the crime happened unless the defendant agrees. If the court moves a special session outside the district, the court must have the Administrative Office tell the Senate and House Judiciary Committees why. Within 180 days after the order ends, the court must send a short report listing the reasons, how long it lasted, how it affected people in the cases, and the costs to the courts. The court must give the U.S. Marshals Service reasonable notice before the session starts. The district’s U.S. marshal must provide transportation and subsistence as allowed by 18 U.S.C. §§4282 and 4285.
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Judiciary and Judicial Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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28 U.S.C. § 141
Title 28 — Judiciary and Judicial Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73