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Category Archives: Criminal Law
Does your criminal record follow you for the rest of your life?
Unfortunately, the length of criminal records have long-lasting affects. A criminal record hinders not only your record but can effect ones chance with job opportunities, credit, public benefits, housing options, and alike.
The majority of all criminal records remain with you for the rest of your life. In most cases, felony convictions remain with you forever as well as most misdemeanors.
Depending on the outcome of your misdemeanor case, you may be eligible to overcome your record for future employment and other future endeavors, such as college.
Juvenile records or convictions are sealed by law in most cases. However, even a sealed record may appear on searches by government institutions.
What options do you have to remove minor convictions? Well, it is important to seek counsel with a Criminal Defense Attorney to find out in your circumstance what options you may have. In some situations you may be eligible to expunge your record. Expunging your record removes a past conviction from staying with you in the future.
Can I get a criminal record sealed or expunged?
Yes. In Florida, Florida Statutes (FS) 943.0585 and 943.059 — and Administrative Procedures Act (APA) rule 11c-7 — outline the requirements and procedures for having a criminal history record sealed or expunged.
You can speak with an attorney to see if you qualify for an expungement. Know your rights. Call and speak with Blick Law Firm for a free consultation to see if you are able to free your past for a new tomorrow!
Call for a free consultation at 813-931-0840.
Attorneys seek to dismiss drug charges in Tampa Bay
TAMPA- Recent ruling by a federal judge has Tampa Bay Defense Lawyers asking judges to free hundreds of people from their drug charges according to Tampabay.com.
According to U.S. District Judge Mary Scriven, Florida law violates the U.S. Constitution by allowing people to be convicted of drug possession even if they did not intend to posses drugs.
For example, someone could be charged with drug possession if they unknowingly deliver a package of drugs. Or a student whose friend secretly stows drugs in his/her backpack could be charged if found by police.
Because the judge found the law unconstitutional on its face, “it’s as if it doesn’t exist,” Public Defender Bob Dillinger said.
Many lawyers are filing the motion asking that their drug defendants be released, reduce bonds and/or drop charges.
The controversy? Certain judges and prosecutors are adamant that Scriven’s ruling holds no weight in state courts- at least not yet.
The state has already filed a notice that it will appeal Scriven’s ruling.
For more information please call our offices at 813-931-0840. Think quick, call Blick.
Can you get a DUI Without Driving?
According to article, Can you get a DUI without driving? Though it seems an oxymoron, the answer is yes. You’d be surprised how many drivers don’t realize it could happen.
Consider the Florida man whose roommate objected to his choice of late-night music, so he took his tunes outside to listen to in his car. That turned out to be a big mistake. He was arrested on suspicion of DUI after deputies knocked at his window and decided to conduct a field sobriety test, which he failed.
Or the case of a North Carolina woman who was arrested at a fast-food joint after she was found asleep behind the wheel with the engine running. Or the New Jersey camper who was found passed out in the back of his pickup at a campsite and charged with DUI. Or farther afield, the Alaska man who was stuck in a snowdrift and found to have a blood-alcohol ratio more than four times the legal limit, or the Canadian man who was seen pushing his vehicle by deputies and subsequently failed a field sobriety test.
Tales abound across America of drivers who were found asleep in their vehicles, usually incapacitated, and were stunned to find a sheriff’s deputy or patrol officer knocking at their door. Usually when confronted with a dazed driver who may quickly become belligerent, a field sobriety test is pretty much automatic. And then, often, it’s into handcuffs and a trip to the calaboose. Some drivers, even then, don’t realize why they’ve been busted.
“Actual Physical Control”
Florida lawyer David Haenel has defended many “DUI without driving” cases, including the man with the loud music and the complaining roommate, and says it’s a common occurrence. A former state DUI prosecutor of the year who switched sides and now runs the site fightyourdui.com, Haenel says that drivers usually are convicted by the legal precept of “actual physical control” of any vehicle.
In the Florida case, the man had his keys in the ignition to allow his music to play. Some drivers found impaired in their vehicles have turned on their car for heat or AC, Haenel explains. Usually, such drivers are found asleep, but as their keys are in the ignition or on their person, they are found to have “actual physical control” in the eyes of the law.
“A person may be sitting in a vehicle and the keys may be in the ignition. They may have no intention of driving the vehicle, but the car is on,” he says. Haenel says such laws are “uniform” across the nation.
Actual physical control, by definition, means the defendant must physically be in or on the vehicle and have the capability to operate the vehicle, regardless of if he or she operated the vehicle at the time.
Haenel says often drivers have no intention of driving, that they’ve either left a party or drinking establishment, realized that they are impaired and decided to sleep in their cars. Usually they’re startled by an officer, who often will realize the driver is impaired and administer a field sobriety test.
If the driver refuses a breath or blood test, the same rules apply as for a regular DUI test. Often, a driver will lose their license for a period and be expected to attend DUI classes. A heavy fine is almost always levied, and a driver will face a hike in their auto insurance.
Haenel says if a driver has been proven to have actual physical control of a vehicle, he will often try to get surveillance video from the surrounding area in a bid to prove that a driver had no intention of driving, that they had been parked in the vehicle for several hours, which could show the driver had no intent to drive.
A simple way to avoid such charges, of course, is to not drink to begin with, or arrange alternate transportation or a designated driver. But Haenel says the best way to avoid an instance of DUI without driving is to “get rid of the car keys.”
“They should put them underneath or on the passenger side tire, if they have a release for their trunk, that would be ideal. But most people don’t think of that until they’re in handcuffs.”
Posted in Blog, Criminal Law, DUI
Tagged can you get a DUI without driving, DUI attorneys, tampa dui attorney
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Drunken driving, traffic crime deportations way up
WASHINGTON (AP) — Huge increases in deportations of people after they were arrested for breaking traffic or immigration laws or driving drunk helped the Obama administration set a record last year for the number of criminal immigrants forced to leave the country, documents show.
The U.S. deported nearly 393,000 people in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, half of whom were considered criminals. Of those, 27,635 had been arrested for drunken driving, more than double the 10,851 deported after drunken driving arrests in 2008, the last full year of the Bush administration, according to Immigration and Customs Enforcement data provided to The Associated Press.
An additional 13,028 were deported last year after being arrested on less serious traffic law violations, nearly three times the 4,527 traffic offenders deported two years earlier, according to the data.
The spike in the numbers of people deported for traffic offenses as well as a 78 percent increase in people deported for immigration-related offenses renewed skepticism about the administration’s claims that it is focusing on the most dangerous criminals.
President Barack Obama regularly says his administration is enforcing immigration laws more wisely than his predecessor by focusing on arresting the “worst of the worst.” He promised in his 2008 presidential campaign to focus immigration enforcement on dangerous criminals. As recently as May 10, Obama said in a speech in El Paso, Texas, that his administration was focused on violent offenders and not families or “folks who are looking to scrape together an income.”
Posted in Blog, Criminal Law, DUI
Tagged immigration laws, tampa criminal lawyers, tampa dui attorney, tampa traffic attorney
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Casey Anthony not guilty of murder, guilty of lying
ORLANDO — Casey Anthony was found not guilty of murder in the death of her 2-year-old daughter, a jury announced in an Orlando courtroom Tuesday afternoon.
She was found guilty of lesser charges, including providing false information to police.
Anthony, accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter Caylee in 2008, faced several felony charges, including aggravated child abuse and giving false information about a missing person. But the most serious charge was first-degree murder, which would have carried a death sentence.
Casey sobbed after hearing the verdict, while the rest of the courtroom stayed silent.
Sentencing for the guilty charges will take place Thursday morning, the judge announced after the reading of the verdict. As the session came to a close, Anthony hugged several members of her legal team, many of whom were in tears.
The jury was picked in Pinellas six weeks ago. After several days of hearing the case, they began deliberations just after noon Monday. It was the first time the Pinellas dozen could finally talk about the case among themselves.
By Monday at 6:30, the jury had not reached a decision and returned at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday to deliberate.