Felonies

To see just how successful our approach is, here are some representative results:

State v. F.H.

November, 2015
Charges: 12 felony counts in multiple matters.

In this cluster bomb of a situation, Mr. Adkins was able to negotiate a result utterly impossible to have expected: in exchange for a mere 5 months longer in prison that was already ordered for an unrelated kidnapping/aggravated assault case, this client resolved 8 drug cases, another ugly kidnapping, several assaults, and a failure to register matter, as well as having nearly 20 misdemeanor cases dismissed.

The client will be back with his family next summer, rather than facing between 20-30 years of prison. In this matter, the absolute requirement of a consistent, honest approach to both your judge and the assigned prosecutor was highlighted. It certainly did not hurt that the client had done such a magnificent job remaking himself while awaiting the outcome to his cases.

Justice sought, justice achieved.

Types of Charge(s): Felonies

State v. A.C.

July, 2015
Charges: Felon in Possession of Firearm counts.

In this matter, a client facing a mandatory 60 months in prison relating to a handgun found in his home, while officers were executing a search warrant for narcotics and other contraband had his conviction overturned, and the matter was remanded and eventually dismissed without another hearing. Mr. Chèvre, with convictions from Texas for heroin possession, had confessed to owning the gun that was found in his bedroom, but that statement was thrown out by the Court of Appeals due to the lack of a Miranda warning—this, notwithstanding the defendant was in his own home, and typically courts would have found such a conversation to be non-custodial in nature. This served as a seminal decision on Miranda grounds, and relieved the client of a massive prison commitment.

Types of Charge(s): Felonies

State v. C.S.

July, 2015
Charges: Felony Assault count against a Sheriff’s Deputy

Misdemeanor sentence to an assault charge, successfully obtained upon arguments directly to Trial Judge – even after the State refused to relent from a prison-commit offer. No jail was required. Client’s outstanding effort to rehabilitate himself changed hearts and minds, and legal arguments regarding voluntary intoxication convinced the judge to extend a probationary outcome to the client. A significant win, to say the least.

Types of Charge(s): Assault Case Results, Felonies

State v. F.H.

July, 2015
Charges: Total of 12 files, 9 of which contained felony counts, including Assault, First Degree Drug Sales, and Kidnapping.

Client avoided designation as a Career Felony Offender, and thereby avoided a prison term of at least twenty years; he will serve only 2-6 months additional incarceration over the term he was already serving for a prior Kidnapping conviction (in that matter, the client avoided a possible Attempted First Degree Homicide prosecution, and received less than 20% of the time he would normally have had to serve). Multiple complex negotiations were required, and artful work with a particularly talented and well-regarded prosecutor. The client will be home to give his children back a father in less than 18 months, armed with a new lease on life.