There wasnt a judge present at the Grand Jury I sat on. The prosecutor runs the session. One grand juror is placed in charge of the jury. That person manages the vote and discussion.
The answer is no there is not judge at a grand jury. If a witness or someone compelled by subpeona refuses to answer a question by a prosecutor or juror the prosecutor can go to a judge to get an order to compell the witness to answer at the risk of being held in contempt.
No there is no judge present at a grand jury. Supposedly you can read. I gave you the answer with a quote from a legal website that exists to instruct people how a grand jury works.
LOL. You just keep making yourself look dumber and dumber.
2012 West Virginia Code
CHAPTER 52. JURIES
ARTICLE 2. GRAND JURIES.
§52-2-6. Charge.
Universal Citation: WV Code § 52-2-6 (through 1st Spec. Sess. 2012)
The grand jurors, after being sworn, shall be charged by the judge, and shall then be sent to their room.
2012 West Virginia Code
CHAPTER 52. JURIES
ARTICLE 2. GRAND JURIES.
§52-2-1. At what terms grand jury shall attend; when court or judge may dispense with it.
Universal Citation: WV Code § 52-2-1 (through 1st Spec. Sess. 2012)
There shall be a grand jury at each term of a circuit court, except that the circuit court of any county by an order entered of record, or the judge thereof in vacation by written order to the clerk at least twenty days before the term, may dispense with the grand jury for one or two of the terms required by law to be held in such county annually, and the circuit court of any county in which there may be a criminal court whose jurisdiction includes the trial of felony cases, by an order entered of record, may dispense with the grand jury for all the terms of such circuit court required by law to be held in such county annually; and in such case no grand jury shall be drawn by the court or by the judge in vacation. Any circuit court may, at a special, regular or adjourned term thereof, whenever it shall be proper to do so, order a grand jury to be drawn and to attend such term. A grand jury summoned to attend a special, regular or adjourned term may consider any offense against the laws, whether the same shall have been committed before the next preceding term of the court or not, and whether the accused shall have been held for trial or not prior to the next preceding regular term.
And here is a federal example:
https://www.law.com/nationallawjournal/almID/1202795035299/?slreturn=20180527220615