Criminal Defense: What Happens after You Are Charged



A criminal charge sets a legal process in motion that most defendants do not understand until they are already inside it, and the decisions made in the first hours and days after an arrest shape the trajectory of the entire case.

The criminal justice system moves on its own calendar. Arraignments happen within days of arrest. Bail hearings follow immediately. Preliminary hearings and grand jury proceedings happen before most defendants have had time to understand what they are facing. Each of these stages requires a decision, and each decision has consequences that cannot easily be reversed. The defendant who arrives at arraignment without counsel has already made one of those decisions by default. An attorney who handles criminal defense cases can intervene at every stage, but the earlier that intervention begins, the more options remain open.

Criminal charges are prosecuted under state penal codes for state offenses and under federal statutes for federal crimes, with the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guaranteeing the right to counsel in all proceedings that could result in imprisonment. The Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments collectively define the constitutional framework within which every criminal defense operates, establishing protections against unlawful searches, compelled self-incrimination, and trial without adequate legal representation.

Contents


1. What Criminal Defense Actually Covers from Arrest through Sentencing


Criminal defense is not a single courtroom event. It is a sequence of proceedings that begins at arrest and does not end until the case is resolved through dismissal, acquittal, plea, or sentence.

An arrest triggers several immediate legal obligations on the government and several immediate rights for the defendant. Law enforcement must inform the defendant of their Miranda rights before any custodial interrogation, including the right to remain silent and the right to counsel. Statements made before Miranda warnings are given, or after the defendant invoked their right to counsel and questioning continued, are subject to suppression. The decision whether to speak with law enforcement before retaining counsel is the single most consequential decision a defendant makes, and it is one the defendant typically makes before any attorney is involved.

Arraignment follows arrest and is the proceeding at which the formal charges are read and the defendant enters an initial plea. Bail is determined either at arraignment or at a separate bail hearing shortly thereafter. The conditions of pretrial release, including any bail amount set, electronic monitoring requirements, travel restrictions, and contact prohibitions, define the defendant's liberty for the months the case takes to resolve. An attorney who handles arraignment and bail hearings can present the specific factors that support release on the least restrictive conditions before the court sets terms that will be difficult to modify later.



How Felony and Misdemeanor Charges Differ and Why It Matters


The classification of a charge as a felony or misdemeanor determines the court in which it is heard, the sentence available upon conviction, and the long-term consequences that attach to a conviction record.

Misdemeanors are generally punishable by up to one year in county or local jail, fines, probation, and community service. Felonies carry potential sentences exceeding one year in state or federal prison, significantly higher fines, and collateral consequences that include loss of voting rights, firearm prohibition, deportation for non-citizens, and disqualification from professional licenses. The same underlying conduct can be charged as a misdemeanor or a felony depending on the specific circumstances, the defendant's prior record, and the prosecutor's charging decision.

Charge reduction through negotiation is one of the most significant outcomes a criminal defense attorney can achieve, because reducing a felony to a misdemeanor changes not just the sentence but every collateral consequence that flows from the conviction record. The defendant who accepts a felony plea without exploring whether a misdemeanor resolution is achievable has accepted permanent consequences that a different disposition might have avoided. An attorney who handles misdemeanor criminal defense and felony cases can evaluate which charge level the evidence actually supports and negotiate from that position.

Charge LevelMaximum SentenceWhere ServedKey Collateral Consequences
InfractionFine only, no jailN/AMinimal, usually traffic record
MisdemeanorUp to 1 yearCounty or local jailBackground check impact, some license effects
FelonyMore than 1 yearState or federal prisonFirearms prohibition, voting rights, immigration, licensing
Federal felonyVaries by offenseFederal prison, no paroleAll state felony consequences plus federal penalties


2. How Criminal Defense Strategies Are Built before Trial


Most criminal cases do not go to trial. They resolve through plea agreements, dismissals, or diversion programs, and the outcome of those resolutions is shaped entirely by the strength of the defense built during the pretrial period.

Suppression motions are the most powerful pretrial defense tool in cases where evidence was obtained through a search, a seizure, or a custodial interrogation. Evidence that was collected in violation of the Fourth, Fifth, or Sixth Amendment is subject to exclusion under the exclusionary rule, and exclusion of the core evidence in a criminal case frequently results in dismissal because the prosecution cannot prove its case without it. The decision to file a suppression motion must be made well before trial, and the factual record needed to support the motion must be developed through discovery and sometimes through an evidentiary hearing.

Discovery in criminal cases gives the defense access to the prosecution's evidence, including police reports, witness statements, laboratory reports, and any exculpatory evidence the prosecution is required to disclose under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). Brady requires the prosecution to disclose any evidence that is material to guilt or punishment, including evidence that impeaches the credibility of prosecution witnesses. Brady violations, in which the prosecution withheld material evidence that the defense requested or that was clearly favorable to the defendant, are grounds for overturning a conviction at any stage of the proceedings.



When Plea Bargaining Is the Right Outcome and When It Is Not


Plea bargaining resolves approximately 97 percent of all federal criminal convictions and a similarly high proportion of state convictions, and the terms of a plea agreement determine the defendant's sentence, their criminal record, and their collateral consequences for the rest of their life.

A plea agreement involves the defendant pleading guilty to one or more charges, typically in exchange for the dismissal of other charges, a reduced charge level, a sentencing recommendation from the prosecution, or a combination of these. The judge is not bound by the prosecution's sentencing recommendation in most jurisdictions, though judges frequently follow them. A defendant who enters a guilty plea waives the right to trial, the right to confront witnesses, and the right against self-incrimination, and those waivers are generally irrevocable once accepted by the court.

The decision to plead guilty or proceed to trial requires a realistic assessment of the prosecution's evidence, the strength of the available defenses, the likely sentence at trial compared to the plea offer, and all collateral consequences that attach to a guilty plea but not to an acquittal or dismissal. For non-citizen defendants, immigration counsel must review the plea before it is entered because a guilty plea to certain offenses triggers deportation regardless of the sentence imposed. An attorney who handles criminal defense and trials can structure that assessment and present the full picture of what each outcome actually produces.


The prosecution's case is built during the investigation, before the defendant knows charges are coming. By the time of arraignment, the government has already assembled its core evidence, identified its witnesses, and decided which charges to file. The pretrial period between arraignment and trial is when the defense can most effectively challenge that evidence through suppression, compel disclosure of exculpatory material, and develop the record that supports a favorable resolution.



3. Federal Criminal Defense and Why It Requires a Different Approach


Federal criminal defense is not simply state criminal defense in a different courthouse. The investigation process, the evidence rules, the sentencing framework, and the available outcomes are each materially different from state court proceedings.

Federal investigations begin long before any arrest. Grand jury subpoenas, search warrants, and consensual interviews with cooperating witnesses each build the government's case in the months or years before an indictment is filed. By the time a federal defendant is arrested and arraigned, the government has typically completed its investigation and has evidence that the defendant has not seen. The pretrial detention system in federal court is also different from state court: under the Bail Reform Act of 1984, federal defendants charged with certain offenses face a presumption of detention that shifts the burden to the defendant to demonstrate that release conditions can reasonably assure appearance and community safety.

Federal sentencing operates under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, which calculate an advisory sentencing range based on the offense level and the defendant's criminal history category. While the Guidelines are advisory following United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005), judges in the federal system follow them in the majority of cases. Sentencing enhancements for specific offense characteristics, role adjustments, and mandatory minimums imposed by statute each interact with the Guidelines calculation in ways that require specialized knowledge to navigate. An attorney who handles federal criminal defense cases can calculate the applicable guidelines range, identify applicable downward departures, and present the sentencing factors most likely to influence the judge's determination.



What Happens after Conviction: Appeals, Post-Conviction Relief, and Record Clearing


A criminal conviction is not necessarily the final word, and defendants who believe their conviction resulted from constitutional error, ineffective assistance of counsel, or newly discovered evidence have specific legal mechanisms available after sentencing.

A direct appeal challenges the trial court's rulings on legal issues and must typically be filed within 30 days of sentencing. The appellate court reviews the trial record for errors of law, not errors of fact, and it will reverse a conviction only when the error was not harmless. Issues not raised at trial are generally forfeited on direct appeal unless they rise to the level of plain error, which is a significantly higher standard than preserved error.

Post-conviction relief through a habeas corpus petition challenges the constitutional validity of the conviction or sentence after direct appeal rights have been exhausted. Federal habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 allows federal defendants to challenge their convictions based on constitutional violations, including ineffective assistance of counsel claims that could not be raised on direct appeal. The one-year statute of limitations on federal habeas petitions runs from the date the conviction became final, and missing that deadline forfeits the right to post-conviction relief in most cases. An attorney who handles criminal appeals and post-conviction matters can evaluate whether any viable grounds for relief exist and identify the correct procedural vehicle before the applicable deadlines run.

Post-conviction relief and record clearing through expungement are separate legal processes with separate eligibility requirements and separate deadlines. A defendant who received a favorable outcome at trial but whose arrest record remains publicly accessible, or who completed probation years ago and qualifies for expungement under current law, has legal remedies available that are not self-executing. Neither the court nor the prosecution will initiate these processes on the defendant's behalf.



4. Frequently Asked Questions about Criminal Defense


People who have just been arrested, families searching for help at two in the morning, and individuals dealing with the aftermath of a prior conviction all arrive with the same fundamental questions about how the system works. The most urgent of those questions are answered here.



What Is Criminal Defense and What Does a Criminal Defense Attorney Do?


Criminal defense covers the legal representation of individuals charged with crimes, from the moment of arrest through sentencing, appeal, and post-conviction proceedings. A criminal defense attorney reviews the charges and evidence, files pretrial motions to suppress unlawfully obtained evidence, negotiates with prosecutors over charges and plea terms, represents the defendant at trial if the case does not resolve before trial, and advocates for the most favorable sentence if a conviction results. The attorney also advises on collateral consequences including immigration status, professional licenses, and civil liability.



What Are My Rights If I Am Arrested?


The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and seizures and requires law enforcement to obtain a warrant based on probable cause for most searches. The Fifth Amendment protects against compelled self-incrimination and requires Miranda warnings before any custodial interrogation. The Sixth Amendment guarantees the right to counsel at all critical stages of the proceedings, including arraignment, preliminary hearing, trial, and sentencing. Invoking the right to remain silent and the right to counsel immediately upon arrest, before any questioning begins, is the most important step any defendant can take at the moment of arrest.



Should I Talk to Police without a Lawyer?


No. Statements made to law enforcement can be used as evidence against you regardless of your intent in making them. What seems like a helpful explanation often becomes the most damaging evidence in the prosecution's case. The right to remain silent exists precisely because people in stressful interrogation situations routinely say things they do not mean, misremember facts, or provide accurate information that appears incriminating out of context. Invoking the right to counsel ends questioning and preserves the defense's ability to evaluate what the government knows before making any decision about what to say.



What Is the Difference between a Felony and a Misdemeanor?


A misdemeanor is a criminal offense punishable by up to one year in county jail, with collateral consequences that are significant but generally less severe than felonies. A felony is punishable by more than one year in state or federal prison and carries permanent collateral consequences including prohibition on firearm possession, loss of voting rights in many states, deportation for non-citizens, and disqualification from many professional licenses and government employment. The same conduct can sometimes be charged as either, depending on specific facts and the prosecutor's charging decision.



What Is a Plea Bargain and Do I Have to Accept One?


A plea bargain is an agreement in which the defendant pleads guilty, typically to a reduced charge or with a sentencing recommendation from the prosecution, in exchange for the dismissal of other charges or the certainty of a known outcome. No defendant is required to accept a plea offer. The decision requires comparing the plea offer against the realistic likelihood of a better outcome at trial, accounting for the risk of a worse outcome at trial, and considering all collateral consequences that attach to the specific conviction. Approximately 97 percent of federal convictions result from plea agreements rather than trials.



Can a Criminal Conviction Be Expunged or Sealed?


Expungement eligibility depends on the state, the specific offense, the sentence received, and the time elapsed since conviction. Many states allow expungement of misdemeanor convictions and first-offense felonies after completion of all sentence conditions and a waiting period of several years. Federal convictions are not eligible for expungement under current federal law with limited exceptions. Arrest records that did not result in conviction are expungeable in most states. An attorney who handles criminal record expungement can determine what relief is available in your specific state and initiate the process before the waiting period expires.


16 Dec, 2025


Информация, представленная в этой статье, носит исключительно общий информационный характер и не является юридической консультацией. Предыдущие результаты не гарантируют аналогичного исхода. Чтение или использование содержания этой статьи не создает отношений адвокат-клиент с нашей фирмой. За советом по вашей конкретной ситуации, пожалуйста, обратитесь к квалифицированному адвокату, лицензированному в вашей юрисдикции.
Некоторые информационные материалы на этом сайте могут использовать инструменты с технологиями помощи в составлении и подлежат проверке адвокатом.

Записаться на консультацию
Online
Phone