Sunday, October 21, 2012

Violation of Probation Attorney

Question: Can I really be arrested without chance of bond if I am on probation and am charged with something that was really no case to begin with. I have had lawyers review evidence and have informed me that the charge is wrong. Does that mean I have to sit in jail until court just to find out I didn't really have to go to begin with. Is there a way to get around a violation hold if the evidence from the violating charge is obviously a false accusation and I am innocent. Is there away to negotiate with officials due to the circumstances to maybe even at least get offered a chance to bond at least until I get the violating charges dropped or dismissed?

Answer: Retain the lawyers that you had review it, and see what happens. If you trust their assessment, then retain them. And after you are sitting in jail, review my website on attorneys that tell clients what they want to hear, under how to locate the right attorney: Click here

Because you think it is nothing, does not make it nothing. You will be arrested on the violation of probation, and you will have a court date. The speed in getting that court date, and getting the case dropped will depend on the skill of your attorney.

Answered by Lawrence Lewise Violation of Probation Attorney

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About Me

I hung a shingle in February 2000, because I saw that individuals charged with criminal offenses were being underserved by the attorneys practicing criminal law. Since February 2000, I have represented more than two thousand criminal clients. I only practice criminal law, but I do everything from violations of probation to Supreme Court appeals. There are few attorneys under the age of sixty that have my level of experience. I have tried more than two hundred major felony jury trials. I have tried more than fifty misdemeanor jury trials. In Philadelphia as a prosecutor, I tried more than two thousand bench trials. I have conducted more than three thousand preliminary hearings and bond hearings. Yet, I still have the energy at forty-five to serve my current clients. There is nothing that will occur in a courtroom that I have not experienced before. When you are looking for an attorney, experience is everything.