Also known as custody, pre-trial detention, provisional detention, remand imprisonment, pretrial detention, on remand, jail
detention of a criminal defendant after charges are filed until a trial
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Lady Justice—the allegory of justice—statue at court building in Olomouc, Czech Republic
Pre-trial detention, also known as jail, preventive detention, provisional detention, or remand, is the process of detaining a person until their trial after they have been arrested and charged with an offence. A person who is on remand is held in a jail, prison or detention centre or held under house arrest. Varying terminology is used, especially from country to country; the term "remand" is generally used in common law jurisdictions and "preventive detention" elsewhere. In the United States, "remand" is rare except in official documents, and "jail" is the most commonly used term. Detention before charge is commonly referred to as custody and continued detention after conviction is referred to as imprisonment.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).