OPINION
{1 The State appeals from the magistrate's pretrial order dismissing with prejudice the refiled information charging defendant Joel F. Pacheco-Ortega with attempted murder with injury and aggravated kidnap ping. 1 We reverse.
BACKGROUND
T2 On October 7, 2008, the State filed an information charging Pacheco-Ortega and his co-defendant, Luis Ceron (collectively, co-defendants), 2 with one count of attempted murder with injury, see Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-203(2) (2008), and one count of aggravated kidnapping, see id. § 76-5-302. A preliminary hearing was set for January 15, 2009.
T3 At the time set for the preliminary hearing, the victim, who was also the prosecution's key witness, was transported to the hearing from jail, where he had been held due to criminal charges pending against him. Out of concern that the victim needed separate counsel to advise him of his rights against self-incrimination, the State asked for a continuance of the preliminary hearing. Counsel for Pacheco-Ortega agreed to the continuance, stating that he thought it was "appropriate because [the victim willl take the stand. He will be questioned and probably end up taking the Fifth at this point." The magistrate granted the continuance and rescheduled the preliminary hearing for February 26, 2009.
T4 On that date, the parties agreed to another continuance. The victim was again present, this time pursuant to subpoena, and had been assigned counsel. However, the victim's counsel had not been appointed until the day before the preliminary hearing and was not adequately prepared to proceed. Therefore, the magistrate agreed to continue the preliminary hearing until April 2, 2009, but warned counsel for both sides that "even if there are problems that arise, the hearing needs to go forward on April 2 or there will be considerable rethinking of what's happen-5 » ing.
15 Although the victim had been present on the first two dates set for preliminary hearing, he did not appear on April 2. The *500 prosecutor asked for a third continuance, explaining that he had not served the victim with a material witness warrant or subpoena because he thought the victim was still in jail and would be present pursuant to a transport order. Although the prosecutor had attempted to serve the victim with a subpoena at his scheduled meeting with Adult Probation and Parole on the morning of the preliminary hearing, the victim failed to appear for that meeting. As a result, the State was unable to secure his presence at the preliminary hearing. After the State requested another continuance of the preliminary hearing, counsel for each of the codefendants objected. The magistrate dismissed the charges without prejudice, stating, "If the case is refiled and the State is able to meet all of the requirements that they need to appropriately refile this case, they may do it as they determine is appropriate and I'm not going to put any restrictions." The State then requested that the magistrate stay the order dismissing the charges until five o'clock. The progecutor indicated that, in anticipation that the magistrate might dismiss the charges, he had arranged with his staff to have the cases against the codefendants immediately refiled. The magistrate denied the State's request, explaining:
I simply am not going to make any orders that would say that if that's refiled again by 5:00 because then that's putting pressure on the refiling without taking into consideration that you still don't have that witness [the victim]. If that changes and you do and the State feels like it can go ahead and refile this case in full good faith, that you can go forward and in good faith think you will have the presence of the essential witness and that all occurs by 5:00, then that's pretty good.... I'm not restricting that refiling but it does need to be fully and completely meeting all of the requirements the State needs to do to refile.
The State refiled the cases against the code-fendants later that same day after doing no more than learning that the victim's mother believed the victim was still in Utah and had agreed to let the victim know that the prosecutor was trying to reach him.
T6 When the State refiled the case, it did not make any effort to have the case reassigned to the same magistrate, but it did notify counsel for both Pacheco-Ortega and Ceron that it was refiling. Pacheco-Ortega moved to quash the refiled information on the basis that the State's refiling violated the standards set out in State v. Brickey,
T7 At the Brickey hearing, the magistrate indicated that she was concerned both with whether the prosecutor had acted in good faith and with whether the codefendants had been prejudiced by the State's decision to refile the criminal charges the same day that the magistrate had dismissed the charges without prejudice. With respect to the issue of prejudice, defense counsel acknowledged that Pacheco-Ortega was being held by the federal government due to an immigration hold. He argued, however, that "but for this case and this filing, ... he would have been processed long ago by now [and] either released back into the United States to live with his family or not. That's a matter of a separate deportation hearing." Likewise, Ceron's counsel admitted that his client was being held on separate federal charges but opined that in the absence of the pending charges, Ceron "might be eligible and might qualify for a federal release given the nature of the charges in the federal court." Next, the magistrate addressed the issue of whether the prosecutor acted in bad faith in refiling the charges. Based on her interpretation of Brickey and the decisions from the Utah appellate courts interpreting Brickey, the magistrate considered the relevant issue to be "whether or not [the prosecutor's] refiling as quickly as he did rose to the level of an abus[ive] practice and bad faith." The magistrate then found that because the prosecutor indicated at an earlier hearing that the State could not proceed without the vie-tim's testimony, the prosecutor had acted in bad faith by refiling the charges without first assuring that the victim would be present and cooperative at the preliminary hear *501 ing on those refiled charges. 3 Therefore, the magistrate concluded that the Brickey rule demanded the cases be dismissed with prejudice. On May 26, 2009, the magistrate issued an order formally dismissing with prejudice the refiled charges against the co-defendants, finding that "in re-filing this casel,] the State violated the standards articulated in [Brickey ]" The State now appeals.
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
T8 The State contends that the magistrate erred by dismissing the charges against codefendants because standards art ticulated in Brickey do not preclude refiling an information when the prior dismissal is based on the prosecutor's failure to proceed at the preliminary hearing and there is no evidence of abusive practices. "Interpretation of case law presents a question of law which is reviewed for correctness." State v. Atencio,
ANALYSIS
T9 According to the State, State v. Brickey,
I. The Brickey Rule Is Applicable when Criminal Charges Have Been Dismissed Previously for Insufficient Evidence.
110 The purpose of a preliminary hearing is to "ferret out ... groundless and improvident prosecutions," thereby protecting the accused from the "substantial degradation and expense attendant to a criminal trial," and to "conserve judicial resources and promote[ ] confidence in the judicial system." Id. at 646 (omission in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). At the preliminary hearing, the State bears the burden of presenting sufficient evidence to establish probable cause that the crime has been committed and that the accused has committed it. See id. Although "not a full-blown determination of an accused's guilt or innocence," the preliminary hearing is "nonetheless a critical stage in the criminal process, and proper consideration for a defendant's constitutional rights must be observed." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). Where the State fails to meet its burden, the magistrate must dismiss the case, but "[the dismissal and discharge do not preclude the [State from instituting a subsequent prosecution for the same offense." See Utah R.Crim. P. However, the State's ability to refile is not without bounds.
¶11 In Brickey, the Utah Supreme Court considered the proper balance between the State's right to prosecute criminal offenses and the defendant's due process rights. See Morgan,
¶12 While reviewing its own analysis in the Brickey case, the supreme court in State v. Morgan,
{ 13 However, the Morgan court also clarified that the Brickey rule does not prevent "refiling generally or preclude refiling where a defendant's due process rights are not implicated." See Morgan,
T 14 Based on these decisions, we conclude that the restrictions on refiling identified in *503 Brickey are limited to instances where the criminal charges have been previously dismissed after a preliminary hearing at which the State presented evidence that the magistrate deemed insufficient to bind the defendant over for trial Here, the criminal charges were dismissed because the parties, on three occasions and for various reasons, were unable to proceed. The State has never been put to its proof at a preliminary hearing, and thus, there has not yet been a determination of whether the State can meet its burden to establish probable cause that the offenses were committed and that the codefendants committed them. Consequently, Brickey does not govern whether the State could refile the charges after the magistrate dismissed them for failure to proceed in a timely fashion.
II. Prior Decisions from Our Appellate Courts Do Not Mandate Dismissal of the Charges Against Codefendants with Prejudice.
T15 Notwithstanding the narrowness of Brickey's holding, the codefendants argue that the subsequent decisions in State v. Rogers,
¶16 In Rogers, the Utah Supreme Court first reversed this court's holding that Brick-ey prevented the magistrate from granting a continuance to allow the State to prepare and present additional evidence, concluding "that Brickey does not apply." See Rogers,
[I]t would be unreasonable to grant a continuance to afford the prosecution more time to investigate or develop new evidence. However, it would be reasonable to grant a continuance when the prosecution, in good faith, fails to present sufficient evidence but the necessary evidence is reasonably available. Long or unspecified continuances would rarely be proper, and brief ones, where the magistrate is convinced that due process for the accused is protected and justice is otherwise served, would rarely be improper.
Id. ¶21. The Rogers court distinguished between continuances and dismissals and did not address the due process requirements applicable when the charges were previously dismissed for failure to proceed, rather than for insufficient evidence. See id. ¶¶13-16.
T17 The codefendants also rely on Aten-cio, a decision of this court issued two years before the supreme court's decision in Rogers. See Atencio,
118 The Atencio court also responded to the defendant's claim that the prosecutor's decision to end the preliminary hearing prematurely and to refile the charges constituted forum shopping. See id. 117. The court concluded that the prosecutor innocently misplaced her file, which did not constitute a potentially abusive practice, and that she could not engage in the forum shopping that Brickey sought to prevent because she never presented any evidence. See id. ¶¶15, 17 & n. 5. As such, the court held that "the State did not abuse Defendant's due process rights when it refiled the charges because the prosecutor did not present any evidence at the preliminary hearing and there was no evidence of prosecutorial misconduct." Id. 119. In doing so, this court may have conflated the analysis of whether the Brickey rule applies when the case is dismissed for failure to proceed with the analysis of whether the defendant's due process rights were violated by any potentially abusive practices when the prosecutor began, but did not complete, the preliminary hearing. Notwithstanding that confusion, we do not agree that the Atencio decision extends the Brickey rule to charges dismissed before the preliminary hearing results in the magistrate's conclusion that there is insufficient evidence to bind the defendant over for trial.
119 The limitation of the Brickey rule to situations in which the charges were dismissed for insufficient evidence makes sense because the abusive practices identified in connection with that rule are not implicated when charges are dismissed before consideration of the sufficiency of the evidence. Although the codefendants claim that the State engaged in misconduct by refiling in front of a different magistrate, as in Rogers and Atencio, there is no danger of inappropriate forum shopping here. Because the State never put on its evidence at a preliminary hearing, there has been no determination by the original magistrate on the sufficiency of the evidence. Thus, there has been no result on the merits to "shop" to a different judge in the hope of obtaining a better result. Furthermore, it would be impossible for the magistrate to "look[ ] at the facts to determine whether the new evidence or changed cireumstances are sufficient to require a re-examination and possible reversal of the earlier decision dismissing the charges," see Brickey,
III. General Notions of State Due Process Did Not Bar Refiling of the Criminal Charges.
120 The codefendants further contend that Utah's due process requirements transcend the Brickey rule and impose restrictions on the refiling of criminal charges even where no determination has yet been made on the sufficiency of the evidence. We agree that even in the absence of the Brickey rule, the codefendants have due process rights that guarantee them "fundamental fairness." See Morgan,
21 Initially, we note the important limits on the authority of the judicial branch of government to restrict the refiling of criminal charges by the executive branch. See Utah Const. art. V, § 1 (requiring the separation of powers). Although not directly on point, we find the reasoning of the Utah Supreme Court's decision in State v. Greuber,
{22 The codefendants first contend that the prosecutor engaged in abusive practices because they have been inconvenienced by the multiple delays involved in moving this case forward, during which they have been deprived of their liberty. In State v. Morgan,
123 Although the prosecutor perhaps should have anticipated that his key witness, who was also facing criminal charges, would need his own counsel, there is no suggestion that he was responsible for the failure to have the victim's defense counsel timely appointed so that the preliminary hearing could proceed on the second scheduled date. The victim was present on the first two dates set for the preliminary hearing. On the third date, however, the victim did not appear. Again, the lack of communication among various State players that led to the prosecutor's surprise that the victim had been released might be properly attributed to the prosecutor in terms of evaluating responsibility for the continuances or "good cause" for a further extension under rule 7(h)(2). However, even if the prosecutor could have done more to secure the victim's presence at the third scheduled preliminary hearing, there is no finding that the failure to do so amounted to "prosecutorial misconduct" as required to dismiss the charges with prejudice. See Greuber,
T24 Nor do the codefendants argue that the prosecutor acted in bad faith in being unable to proceed at the scheduled preliminary hearings. Rather, the codefendants argue that the magistrate was correct in dismissing the charges with prejudice due to the prosecutor's failure to follow the magistrate's instructions to comply with Brickey by securing the presence and cooperation of the victim before refiling. Where we have determined that nothing in Brickey prohibited the prosecutor from refiling the charges, and the magistrate told the prosecutor to make its own assessment of whether it could refile in good faith in light of the Brickey rule, we conclude that the magistrate's finding of bad faith was premised on a legally erroneous interpretation of the admittedly somewhat confusing case law interpreting Brickey. See generally State v. Atencio,
$25 We are also not convinced that our interpretation of the proper separation of powers between the executive and judicial branches will result in the unfettered abuse predicted by the codefendants. Like the right to grant a continuance considered in State v. Rogers,
126 In addition, the magistrate has the discretion to determine whether, and the conditions under which, a defendant will be held in custody while charges are pending. See Utah Const. art. I, § 8 (providing that, except in limited cireumstances, all defendants shall be bailable)»; Utah Code Ann. § 77-1-6(1)(b) (2008) (providing for the setting of bail and for trial within thirty days if the defendant cannot post bail and the business of the court permits); Utah R.Crim. P. 7(d)(5) (requiring the magistrate to set bail); Utah R.Crim. P. 25 (providing that the court may make such orders with respect to custody of the defendant upon dismissal of charges as the interest of justice may require). Thus, delay by the prosecution in binding the defendant over for trial can result in release of the defendant from custody. And, if the delay exceeds constitutional limits or the statute of limitations adopted by the legislature for that crime, it can result in dismissal of the charges with prejudice. However, such a remedy was not available here.
127 Despite our holding, we understand the magistrate and defense counsel's frustration regarding the State's immediate refiling of the charges against codefendants. Although the magistrate may have incorrectly recalled that there was an explicit discussion about whether the prosecutor could go forward without the victim at some future hearing, it is easily inferred from the colloquy between the two that, at least at that time, the prosecutor thought the victim's testimony was essential to the State's case. UI-timately, the decision of whether to file criminal charges falls upon the executive branch and is subject to testing at a preliminary hearing in the courts. Nevertheless, the premature filing of criminal charges inconveniences the defendant, wastes judicial resources, requires defense counsel-often also funded by the state's taxpayers-to attend multiple preliminary hearings, and impinges on the limited time available to our already overburdened court staff, including the magistrate. Individual prosecutors are officers of the court who must comply with the rules of professional conduct and orders of the court. Where unreasonable delay is caused by the prosecutor's ineptitude, lack of preparation, or failure to comply with court orders, the court may sanction the individual prosecutor. However, "[dlismissal of a criminal information as a sanction against the prosecutor is rarely appropriate, even if the prosecutor is in contempt of court." Salt Lake City v. Dorman-Ligh,
€ 28 In sum, we do not agree that refiling the charges after a dismissal for failure to proceed violated the Brickey rule. In addition, we see nothing in the careful balance reached in Brickey between the executive *508 branch's power to prosecute and the court's role in protecting the due process rights of the defendant that would permit the magistrate to impose restrictions on the State's ability to refile here. In the absence of a preliminary hearing where the State's remaining evidence against the codefendants could be tested, the magistrate's finding that the prosecutor was not credible in suggesting he could proceed without the victim's testimony infringed upon the separate powers of the executive branch to prosecute crimes freely. Despite the magistrate's assumptions about the need for the victim's testimony based on the prosecutor's inability to proceed on the prior hearing date, it is the function of the executive to make decisions about when and whether to prosecute. As the magistrate correctly noted when she initially dismissed the charges without prejudice, "I'm not going to make any restrictions about when the State can refile because I'm not in a position to be reviewing that."
CONCLUSION
129 The Brickey rule does not prevent the State from refiling charges that have been previously dismissed at a preliminary hearing due to the prosecutor's inability to proceed. However, general notions of fundamental fairness prohibit the prosecutor from engaging in abusive practices that impinge on the defendant's right to due process, even where the Brickey rule is inapplicable. The magistrate's finding of bad faith was based solely on its erroneous conclusion that the prosecutor failed to comply with the Brickey rule. Consequently, the magistrate erred when she dismissed the cases with prejudice.
1 30 Reversed.
1 31 WE CONCUR: STEPHEN L. ROTH and MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN, Judges.
Notes
. See Utah Code Ann. § 77-18a-1(3) (2008) (outlining circumstances in which the State may appeal).
. Co-defendant Ceron's case may be found at State v. Ceron,
. The State contends that the magistrate's memory of the colloquy during the prior hearing is inaccurate. While we agree thai the transcript of that hearing does not reflect direct questions about the ability to pursue the charges against the codefendants without the victim's cooperation, the implication from the exchange between the magistrate and the prosecutor is that the victim's testimony was a key component of the evidence against the codefendants. The State is correct that it never indicated that prosecution was impossible in the absence of the victim's testimony. However, the prosecutor expressly indicated that he was unable to proceed at that time without the victim, and did not raise the possibility of proceeding at a future hearing without him.
. Because the State challenges only the magistrate's legal conclusion about whether it could refile, we do not address the codefendants' argument that the State failed to marshal the evidence adequately.
. Furthermore, [flor the court to hold one in contempt of an order, that order must be ... sufficiently specific and definite as to leave no reasonable basis for doubt regarding its meaning." State v. LA.,
