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In the Criminal Justice System, there are three category of offenses:
You can be found guilty of DUI if you are found to be driving a vehicle under the influence of alcohol, drugs or both.You can also be found guilty if you are driving a vehicle with a Blood Alcohol Content (BAC) of .08% or higher. The California Vehicle Code sections are usually 23152.
If you are arrested for a DUI, you have ten days from the date of your arrest to contact the Department of Motor Vehicle (DMV) to request a DMV Hearing. If you fail to do so, then your license will be suspended after thirty days automatically. The DMV Hearing simply focuses on whether you were driving a vehicle, whether the police had a lawful reason to stop your vehicle, and whether your BAC is .08 or higher.
However, do not let a DUI get you down. There are defenses that area available to defend your case. At Shaw 3 Law Firm, we can evaluate if the police officer had a good basis to “stop” you. The police officer must be able to articulate and specify the reason for the traffic stop. This matters because if the police officers did not have a valid reason to stop your vehicle, your entire case can be thrown out for a violation of your Federal and State constitutional rights for unreasonable searches and seizures. We can also evaluate if the police officer had a good basis to investigate you.
In California, if there is an incident where police made an illegal or unlawful stop of you, or unlawful arrest, then under PC 1538.5, you can move to suppress any evidence that came after the illegal conduct. This means any admissions you made that you were drinking, the Breath or blood test you took, which would, in turn, win you your case. Shaw 3 Law Firm has handled hundreds of DUI cases to spot the relevant issues to successfully defend your case.
For person to be convicted of violating CVC 23103, the prosecution/DA must prove the following:
An example of this could be doing donuts, burnouts, speeding, driving too fast in the rain, swerving/changing lanes quickly, tailgating other drivers, and others.
However, you can fight the case. Depending on the facts of the case, a dismissal may be likely. A common defense to reckless driving could be something called a “necessity” type of situation. By that, it means you could be driving your pregnant wife to the hospital because she is giving birth. Another example could be that you are driving your injured friend to the hospital because they received a stab or gunshot wound. Either circumstance here shows a valid defense of Necessity for this charge.
Shaw 3 Law Firm has handled hundreds of Reckless Driving cases, depending on the facts, where most lead to it being dismissed. We can help spot the relevant issues to successfully defend your case.
For a person to be convicted of a violation of VC 20001(a), the prosecution must prove the following:
For a person to be convicted of a violation of VC 20002(a), the prosecution must prove the following:
What is important here is your knowledge. If you hit a parked car in a parking lot, but do not know you did, and based on the nature of your driving, would not have assumed you did, you could not be convicted of the crime. Likewise, if you are unsure that you hit another vehicle causing that personal injury, you could not be convicted. However, if you are speeding on the freeway, and cut across several lanes of traffic, and think you may have nicked another driver’s car, but are not sure, then the nature of your reckless driving would likely have caused some kind of property damage or injury to the other driver’s car.
Shaw 3 Law Firm has handled hundreds of Hit and Run cases. We can help spot the relevant issues to successfully defend your case.
Under CVC 14601(a): No person shall drive a motor vehicle at any time when that person’s driving privilege is suspended or revoked for reckless driving.
For a person to be convicted under CVC 14601(a)/14601.1(a)/14601.2(a), the prosecution must prove the following:
The prosecution usually must show you had knowledge of the suspension by proof that the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) mailed a notice to you telling you that your driving privilege had been suspended/ revoked. The must also prove that the notice was sent to your most recent address reported to the DMV. The prosecutor also must show proof that the notice was not returned to the department as undeliverable or unclaimed.
A license can be suspended for several reasons such as but not limited to too many points for too many point violations within a year (the limit is 4 points in a year), too many unpaid parking tickets, failure to appear, unpaid child support payments, and others.
If you are convicted of driving on a suspended license it is usually only a misdemeanor crime in California. You could be sentenced to County Jail for upwards of 180 days. You would be required to serve 50% of that time. In addition, you would likely receive two more points on your license.
Other relevant violations under this section
A person may not drive a motor vehicle on a highway unless the person then holds a valid driver’s license
If you are convicted of this crime, you can be charged as an Infraction or Misdemeanor, depending on certain factors as well as your criminal background. If you are convicted of this charge as a Misdemeanor, you could be sentenced to County Jail for up to 180 days. You would be required to serve 50% of that sentence. If convicted of this as an infraction, you would only be required to pay fines. This is commonly referred to as the reduction of VC 14601.1(a).
A person shall not drive a motor vehicle at any time when that person’s driving privilege is suspended or revoked for a conviction of a violation of Section 23152 or 23153 if the person so driving has knowledge of the suspension or revocation.
Shaw 3 Law Firm has handled hundreds of these type of cases. We can help spot the relevant issues to successfully defend your case.
If you have other vehicle related crimes, then please do not hesitate to reach out to Shaw 3 Law Firm to talk about your case.
Shoplifting is defined as entering a commercial establishment with intent to commit larceny while that establishment is open during regular business hours, where the value of the property that is taken or intended to be taken does not exceed nine hundred fifty dollars ($950).
To convict you of this crime, the prosecution must show prove:
To intend to steal from the establishment, it must be shown that you intended to deprive the owner of it permanently/to remove it from the owner’s or owner’s agent’s possession for so extended a period of time that the owner would be deprived of a major portion of the value or enjoyment of the property. This can be hard for the prosecution because usually a statement is usually their strongest evidence. Therefore, if you do not enter a commercial establishment with the intent to steal, you cannot be found guilty of Shoplifting.
Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have handled several hundreds of these cases.
Petty Theft is defined as: You took property or money from another person or business with the intent to never return the property or money. The value of the property must be $950 or less to be Petty Theft.
As example of this would be shoplifting from a store, going into a store with
empty plastic bags, filling them with items, and either leaving the store with
those items or attempting to return items you never bought. You must also do this without the consent of the owner item. Property can be any tangible item like clothing, books, cells phones, or even money.
Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have handled several hundreds of these cases.
Grand Theft is usually defined as the unlawful taking of the property of another when the value of the taken property exceeds $950 dollars. However, you may be charged with Grand Theft – regardless of the value of the property taken – if the property taken is a firearm or an automobile, or if the property is taken from somebody’s person (E.g., pickpocketing).
The prosecutor must prove beyond a reasonable doubt each of the following:
The value of the property, formally known as “fair market value”, is the highest price the property would be reasonably sold for in the open market at the time, and in the general location of, the theft.
Grand theft consists of stealing money/property worth more than $950, or a firearm, or a vehicle, or of stealing property from somebody’s person. “Stealing” means taking the property without the owner’s consent, with the intent to keep it permanently (or for a prolonged period of time), and moving the property, no matter the distance or the time.
The value of the property is the highest price a reasonable person would have paid for the property at the time and place the property was taken.
Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have defended several hundreds of these cases.
Embezzlement is the fraudulent appropriation of property by a person to whom it has been entrusted.
For a person to be convicted of a violation of PC 503, the prosecution must prove the following:
A common example is a cashier at a grocery store, who, every time she makes a transaction within the cash register, takes out $20, and leaves it next to her, to take it. She’s entrusted to ring up items, but instead, steals the money that should be put into the cash register.
Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have defended several hundreds of these cases.
If you have any other financial/theft crimes Shaw 3 Law Firm can assist you with that.
The prosecution must prove the following:
Someone acts maliciously when he or she intentionally does a wrongful act or when he or she acts with the unlawful intent to disturb, annoy, or injure an animal.There are several common ways you can be found guilty of this charge using the above elements:
Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have defended several hundreds of these cases.
The prosecution must prove the following:
An example of vandalism would be intentionally damaging someone car’s window.
Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have defended several hundreds of these cases.
The prosecution must prove the following:
You have to be so intoxicated, that you are not able to walk, talk, or do anything, such as care for yourself. In other words, you need someone to help you function. The other and less common part of this is being so intoxicated that you block some public street or walkway, which generally can only happen if you are passed out on the ground in public. Being in public is crucial too, simply because you cannot get drunk in public for passing out at home, you need to be in public. A public place means a place that is open and accessible to anyone who wishes to go there, not including a person’s home.
However, this case can be successfully defended. Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have defended several hundreds of these cases.
Battery: PC 242
California Penal Code defines the crime of battery as the willful and unlawful use of force or violence on another person, even if it does not cause injury or actual pain.
To be convicted of this crime, the prosecutor must prove:
You touched someone else
You touched someone else willfully,
The touching was in a harmful or offensive manner.
Shaw 3 Law Firm is very experienced and a trustworthy Criminal Defense Firm handling these cases. We have defended several hundreds of these cases leading to favorable results for the client.
If you are accused of any other crimes besides the above, Shaw 3 Law is happy to speak to you about your case.
If you are charged with a criminal case, then it is very important that you get the right CA Defense Attorney on your side to advocate for your aggressively.