Pennsylvania Grand Jury System: Statewide and County Grand Jury Processes
Pennsylvania operates two distinct grand jury mechanisms — the statewide investigating grand jury and county-level grand juries — each governed by separate statutory authority and serving different investigative and charging functions within the state's criminal justice infrastructure. The statewide system, established under the Pennsylvania Investigating Grand Jury Act, authorizes multi-county investigations supervised by a supervising judge appointed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. Understanding the structural distinctions between these two mechanisms is essential for practitioners, researchers, and individuals whose matters intersect with the Pennsylvania criminal procedure framework.
Definition and scope
A grand jury in Pennsylvania is a body of citizens empaneled to hear evidence and determine whether sufficient probable cause exists to issue criminal charges, or — in the case of an investigating grand jury — to investigate matters of public concern and recommend action. Pennsylvania grand juries derive their authority from two primary legal sources: 42 Pa. C.S. §§ 4541–4553, which governs the statewide investigating grand jury, and the Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure, specifically Rules 556.1 through 556.12, which govern county-level grand jury procedures for returning indictments.
The statewide investigating grand jury consists of 23 jurors drawn from at least 2 judicial districts and convened upon petition of the Pennsylvania Attorney General (Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office). County grand juries, by contrast, are empaneled at the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas level and operate within a single county's jurisdiction.
Scope of this page: This reference covers Pennsylvania state grand jury proceedings — both statewide and county-level — as governed by Pennsylvania statute and procedural rules. Federal grand jury proceedings conducted in the Eastern, Middle, or Western Districts of Pennsylvania under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6 fall outside this coverage, as do grand jury systems of adjacent states. Matters involving the regulatory context for Pennsylvania's legal system, including interactions between state and federal prosecutorial authority, are addressed in the regulatory framework resources available across this reference network.
How it works
Statewide Investigating Grand Jury
The statewide grand jury is convened by order of a supervising judge appointed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, following a petition by the Attorney General. Once authorized, the grand jury may investigate conduct occurring in multiple counties simultaneously — a design feature that addresses organized crime, public corruption, and systemic offenses that cross county lines.
The process proceeds through these phases:
- Petition and authorization — The Attorney General files a petition with the supervising judge demonstrating that an investigation of statewide scope is warranted.
- Juror selection — 23 grand jurors are drawn from at least 2 judicial districts; 15 jurors constitute a quorum for proceedings.
- Presentation of evidence — Witnesses testify under oath; subpoenas may compel testimony and document production.
- Deliberation and report — The grand jury issues either a presentment (recommending charges) or a report addressing matters of public concern not resulting in criminal charges.
- Supervising judge review — All reports and presentments are reviewed by the supervising judge before release, ensuring compliance with constitutional standards.
County Grand Jury (Indicting Grand Jury)
Under Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure 556.1–556.12, a district attorney may elect to proceed by grand jury indictment rather than by preliminary hearing. The county grand jury consists of 23 jurors drawn from the county jury pool. The district attorney presents evidence; the target has no right to be present. A minimum of 12 jurors must vote in favor of a true bill to return an indictment. The Pennsylvania District Attorney offices retain discretion over whether to invoke the grand jury process or proceed through the preliminary arraignment pathway.
Common scenarios
Pennsylvania grand juries are most frequently activated in the following contexts:
- Public corruption investigations — The Attorney General has convened statewide grand juries to investigate elected officials, municipal employees, and law enforcement agencies across multiple counties, as occurred in the 2018 grand jury report on clergy sexual abuse involving 6 dioceses and spanning multiple decades of documented conduct.
- Organized crime and drug trafficking — Multi-county narcotics distribution networks that cross judicial district boundaries fall within the statewide grand jury's natural jurisdiction.
- Child exploitation — Investigations involving internet-facilitated offenses that span county lines are regularly referred to the statewide mechanism.
- Financial crimes and fraud — Complex fraud schemes involving multiple county victims may be aggregated under the statewide grand jury rather than forcing parallel county proceedings.
- Local charging decisions — In high-profile or politically sensitive county-level cases, a district attorney may convene a county grand jury to provide institutional legitimacy to charging decisions, creating a buffer between the prosecutorial office and the indictment decision.
Decision boundaries
The choice between the statewide and county mechanisms turns on several factors with distinct legal consequences.
| Factor | Statewide Grand Jury | County Grand Jury |
|---|---|---|
| Convening authority | Pennsylvania Attorney General | County District Attorney |
| Geographic reach | Multi-county, statewide | Single county |
| Supervising authority | PA Supreme Court–appointed supervising judge | Court of Common Pleas |
| Output | Presentment or public report | Indictment (true bill) or no bill |
| Primary statute | 42 Pa. C.S. §§ 4541–4553 | Pa. R. Crim. P. 556.1–556.12 |
The statewide grand jury cannot replace the trial jury; its function is investigative and recommendatory, not adjudicative. A presentment by the statewide grand jury does not automatically result in criminal charges — the supervising judge must approve the presentment before it is transmitted to the appropriate county district attorney or the Attorney General for prosecution.
Targets of grand jury subpoenas retain Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination but have limited rights to challenge grand jury proceedings before an indictment is issued. Pennsylvania courts have held that challenges to grand jury composition or procedure must generally be raised pretrial, following indictment. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court maintains oversight authority over statewide grand jury operations and has issued administrative orders governing confidentiality and the sealing of grand jury materials.
The broader Pennsylvania legal system overview places grand jury authority within the state's multi-tier court structure, where grand jury outputs feed into trial-level proceedings at the Court of Common Pleas. The Pennsylvania Judicial Conduct Board and the Pennsylvania criminal sentencing guidelines govern subsequent proceedings once charges are formally filed following a grand jury presentment or indictment.
References
- Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, 42 Pa. C.S. §§ 4541–4553 — Investigating Grand Jury Act
- Pennsylvania Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rules 556.1–556.12
- Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office
- Pennsylvania Unified Judicial System — Supreme Court
- Pennsylvania Courts (Unified Judicial System)
- Pennsylvania General Assembly — Legislative Information
- U.S. Constitution, Fifth Amendment — Grand Jury Clause
- Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, Rule 6 — Grand Jury (for contrast with state procedure)