Crimpro Reviewer !exclusive! 〈RECENT — PICK〉

For law students, this subject feels like a never-ending flowchart. For Bar reviewees, it is the “lowest hanging fruit” because it is purely based on the Rules of Court—no abstract philosophy, just rigid rules.

Struggling with the Rules of Criminal Procedure? Here is a structured reviewer covering Jurisdiction, Pre-Trial, Trial, Appeal, and Execution. Perfect for law students and Bar reviewees. Introduction crimpro reviewer

Let’s be honest: Criminal Procedure (CrimPro) is the subject that separates the bookworms from the litigators. While Criminal Law tells you what a crime is, CrimPro tells you how to prosecute or defend it. For law students, this subject feels like a

Disclaimer: This reviewer is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always check the latest Rules of Court and local jurisprudence. While Criminal Law tells you what a crime

Download the latest 2026 amendments (if any) from the Supreme Court website. As of this writing, the 2019 Rules remain controlling, but watch for jurisprudence on digital evidence and cybercrime procedure.

Bad answer: "The court has jurisdiction." Good answer: "The RTC has jurisdiction over the crime of homicide under Article 249 of the RPC, as the penalty (reclusion temporal) exceeds 6 years, falling under Section 20 of B.P. 129."