He warned the supervisors not to “judge-shop” by trying the cases before another judge in a nonjury trial room. And if the District Attorney’s Office withdraws prosecution in a case because it doesn’t have the resources to try that many cases as jury trials, which typically take more time than nonjury trials and incur juror-related expenses, “I will be reporting this to the Disciplinary Board” of the state Supreme Court, DiClaudio said.