The courtroom work group involves a group and people who work together to successfully prosecute a criminal court case. The daily interaction includes making sure the rules are followed in each case but also allows the investigation is done in a timely manner. The courtroom group is able to make and offer plea bargains and choose jurors by working together and communicating with each other. The courtroom workgroup, then, works with each other from the beginning of the criminal case and carries the case through the full justice system and to its conclusion. This group consists of the claimants, defendants, prosecutors, jurors, defense attorneys, and the Judge. Each member of this group plays a very important part of each case and allows each party the ability to work toward a conclusion of each case. The Prosecutor is the official who is brought forward to bring charges against one accused of a crime. The Prosecutor is a government official and could be state, federal, or local. The Prosecutor is an elected official who represents federal, state or local entities during criminal trial processing. The Prosecutor is the opposing party in a criminal trial. The Prosecutor stands against the Defense and the Defendants during each criminal trial. The Prosecutor represents the victims in a criminal trial process. The role of the prosecutor is to protect the government or community’s best interests. This being said, the prosecutor must take cases based on the facts of each case and the evidence provided. If the prosecutor did not do this and took every case under less stringent requirements it could leave many cases going to trial with a lack of evidence and lead to a waste of courtroom time and money for attempting a trial with no evidence to convince a jury. This could also lead to innocent people being convicted on no evidence simply because of a well-spoken lawyer. This being said, if the prosecutors were more stringent about the cases