Immediate risks
Arrest paperwork, a first court date, bond terms, no-contact language, detective contact, DUI or license deadlines, warrants, and probation allegations should be reviewed before avoidable decisions are made.
Local Criminal Defense
A criminal accusation in St. Petersburg can begin with an arrest, police contact, a traffic stop, a domestic allegation, a court date, or a detective request. Early guidance helps protect the record, preserve evidence, and avoid avoidable statements.
St. Petersburg
Criminal matters in St. Petersburg may involve local law-enforcement contact, court dates, bond terms, and surrounding Pinellas County issues. The firm represents clients in DUI and criminal traffic matters, misdemeanors, felony allegations, domestic violence cases, drug offenses, probation violations, warrants, and pre-arrest investigations.
Arrest paperwork, a first court date, bond terms, no-contact language, detective contact, DUI or license deadlines, warrants, and probation allegations should be reviewed before avoidable decisions are made.
The firm serves clients dealing with St. Petersburg and surrounding Pinellas County communities. This is service-area guidance only and does not claim a physical office or walk-in location in St. Petersburg.
Early Defense Review
Charging papers, notices to appear, bond paperwork, court dates, license issues, probation documents, and any agency contact should be preserved and reviewed.
Reports, body-camera video, dash-camera video, witness allegations, searches, seizures, statements, and probable-cause issues can shape defense strategy.
Employment, licensing, family, housing, immigration concerns, reputation, and driving privileges may all matter alongside the criminal court posture.
What Happens Next
The first conversation should identify the charge or investigation, court location, deadlines, custody or warrant concerns, and what evidence needs to be protected. The next step may involve consultation, document review, case opening, or a controlled communication plan.
This page provides general information only and does not create an attorney-client relationship unless and until a written agreement is signed. The mailing address listed in the footer is for mail correspondence only and is not a physical office location.