SUSPENDED LICENSE CASES  SUSPENDED LICENSE CASES

Driving while license suspended can be charged as a civil traffic infraction or a criminal offense depending on the facts and prior history. Repeated convictions can create serious driver license consequences.

The firm reviews the driving record, reason for suspension, notice issues, prior convictions, and options for resolving the case while protecting driving privileges where possible.

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COMMON ISSUES  COMMON ISSUES

Suspensions may involve unpaid tickets, failure to appear, insurance issues, DUI-related suspension, points, habitual traffic offender status, or prior criminal traffic convictions.

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AREAS SERVED  AREAS SERVED

Suspended license representation is available in Collier County, Lee County, Hendry County, and Miami-Dade County.

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PROBABLE CAUSE  PROBABLE CAUSE

Police cannot legally arrest someone based on a guess or suspicion alone. Officers must have enough facts to reasonably believe a crime was committed and that a particular person was involved.

Whether police had enough information to make an arrest or search is often one of the first issues reviewed in a criminal defense case.

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SEARCH AND SEIZURE  SEARCH AND SEIZURE

The Constitution protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures. Whether police acted lawfully depends on the facts of the stop, arrest, search, or investigation.

If a search was illegal, evidence may be suppressed. Suppressed evidence can significantly weaken the prosecution's case.

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GETTING OUT OF JAIL AFTER AN ARREST  GETTING OUT OF JAIL AFTER AN ARREST

In many cases, a person can get out of jail while the case is pending. After an arrest, a judge usually reviews the case and decides whether release is allowed and what conditions apply.

The court may consider the charge, prior record, employment, family ties, ties to the community, and whether the person is likely to return to court.

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DO POLICE HAVE TO READ MIRANDA RIGHTS?  DO POLICE HAVE TO READ MIRANDA RIGHTS?

No. Police do not have to read Miranda rights every time they stop someone or every time they make an arrest. Miranda usually applies when a person is in custody and police are questioning the person about a crime.

A person can make damaging statements before Miranda warnings are ever read. Do not assume that a statement is safe just because rights were not read first.

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SHOULD I EXPLAIN MY SIDE TO POLICE?  SHOULD I EXPLAIN MY SIDE TO POLICE?

Many people believe that if they are innocent, they can simply explain what happened and clear things up. In reality, that is often a mistake.

Police officers collect evidence for criminal prosecutions. If you make statements that help the prosecution, those statements can and will be used against you. They will not be used to help you.

If you tell an officer an alibi or explanation, your defense lawyer may not be able to use your own out-of-court statement later to prove you were innocent. But the prosecutor may use the statement to challenge you if any detail appears wrong or changes later.

Be polite and clear. Say: I am exercising my right to remain silent. Say: I want a lawyer. Then stop talking.

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Location & Hours

Main Office

3080 Tamiami Trl E, Ste 301 Naples, FL 34112

Phone: (239)400-3733