9.6 THE PRELIMINARY HEARING
The preliminary hearing is an early screening process that protects a person who is arrested on a felony charge before indictment from the possibility of a long detention on groundless charges. The hearing is held in the presence of the accused before a district court judge, who examines witnesses under oath for and against the accused to determine whether there is "sufficient cause" to charge the accused with an offense. After the hearing, the felony charge is either certified to the circuit court for reference to a grand jury, reduced to a misdemeanor and tried by the district court, or dismissed. The preliminary hearing must take place "as soon as may be practical," which should be construed to mean within a reasonable time after the arrest. 436 At the preliminary hearing, the defendant must not be called upon to plead. A guilty plea entered at the hearing is inadmissible against the accused at trial. 437
The accused arrested for a felony has a statutory but not a constitutional right to a preliminary hearing. 438 Although the Virginia Code states that no person arrested for a felony may be denied a preliminary hearing, 439 a hearing is required only where the accused was arrested before indictme...