Criminal Defense Attorneys
DearLegal connects you with experienced criminal defense attorneys who know how the prosecutors and judges in your jurisdiction operate. Misdemeanors and felonies, state and federal charges, DUIs, drug cases, white-collar matters, domestic violence, post-conviction relief, expungement. We’ll match you with the right attorney near you — and the most important thing is getting counsel involved before anything else happens.
Why Do You Need a Criminal Defense Attorney?
A criminal charge is the most consequential legal document most people will ever face. It can take your freedom, your job, your housing, your professional license, your immigration status, your right to own a firearm, and your record for the rest of your life. The system runs fast. Bail and bond decisions happen within hours of arrest. Plea offers are made early and rescinded if you wait. Evidence — surveillance video, witness memory, phone data — degrades within weeks. Every word you say to a police officer, every text on your phone, every social media post becomes potential evidence against you. A criminal defense attorney is not an admission of guilt; it’s a statement that you understand how much is at stake. The single most important factor in case outcome — across every category from DUI to homicide — is whether the defendant has experienced counsel from the start.
When Do You Need a Criminal Defense Attorney?
Our network includes criminal defense attorneys who handle every kind of case, including:
Types of Criminal Defense Cases
From the moment you connect with a criminal defense attorney, they go to work protecting your case. The most common matters we handle:
Common Criminal Defense Mistakes
Even a small misstep can hurt your case. Here’s what to avoid:
How Much Do Criminal Defense Attorneys Cost?
Most matters are billed as a flat fee per petition or filing — fee depends on case complexity.
Criminal defense attorneys work on hourly or flat-fee retainers — contingency fees are prohibited in criminal cases under ABA Model Rule 1.5(d) and every state’s equivalent rule. Misdemeanors and many lower-level felonies are typically flat-fee; complex cases (federal, capital, white-collar) use hourly billing. Public defenders are available for defendants who can’t afford retained counsel.
What Can Your Criminal Defense Compensation Include?
DearLegal is a legal referral service, not a law firm. We connect individuals with licensed attorneys who can evaluate their case. Nothing on this page constitutes legal advice. Results vary based on individual circumstances.
