When it comes to choosing a United States Federal Court Criminal Defense Attorney, Experience Counts. Chase Dearman is a Mobile, Alabama federal criminal defense attorney with over 19 years of courtroom experience: trying cases, fighting for clients, persuading judges and juries, and protecting his client's rights. It would be best if you had a professional criminal defense attorney with experience, knowledge of the law, and the determination to stand up for your rights.
Over the last nineteen years as an Alabama criminal defense attorney, Dearman's practice has tried cases and won his client's freedom in circumstances where his clients faced the most serious of criminal charges. If you are facing a criminal charge in Municipal Court, State Court or Federal Court because of a crime in Mobile and Baldwin Counties, or anywhere in the State of Alabama, put The Dearman Law Firm's years of experience to work for you.
Call attorney Chase Dearman today and discuss your legal situation. Call us before things get out of hand.
Over the last nineteen years as an Alabama criminal defense attorney, Dearman's practice has tried cases and won his client's freedom in circumstances where his clients faced the most serious of criminal charges. If you are facing a criminal charge in Municipal Court, State Court or Federal Court because of a crime in Mobile and Baldwin Counties, or anywhere in the State of Alabama, put The Dearman Law Firm's years of experience to work for you.
Call attorney Chase Dearman today and discuss your legal situation. Call us before things get out of hand.
Services
The Dearman Law Firm handles all criminal charges in the State of Alabama on City Municipal, Alabama District Court, Alabama Circuit Court, Alabama Court of Appeals, Alabama Supreme Court and the United States District Court in the Southern, Middle and Northern Districts of Alabama.
The Alabama State Bar requires the following statement: No representation is made that the quality of the legal services to be performed is greater than the quality of legal services performed by other lawyers.
The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.
The Alabama State Bar requires the following statement: No representation is made that the quality of the legal services to be performed is greater than the quality of legal services performed by other lawyers.
The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice.
A felony charge is one of the firmest convictions that a person can experience.
The range of punishment can exceed one year of confinement if found guilty.
It's a very serious charge that must not be taken lightly.
Consider also that if ordered to serve jail time, you'll be serving it in the Alabama Department of Corrections or a Federal Penitentiary instead of a Mobile county jail, or another local prison.
Being convicted of a felony is something that can remain on your record for the rest of your life, making future employment exceedingly tricky, and on top of it, you will lose some of your Constitutional rights such as your right to own a gun, and even your right to vote.
The range of punishment can exceed one year of confinement if found guilty.
It's a very serious charge that must not be taken lightly.
Consider also that if ordered to serve jail time, you'll be serving it in the Alabama Department of Corrections or a Federal Penitentiary instead of a Mobile county jail, or another local prison.
Being convicted of a felony is something that can remain on your record for the rest of your life, making future employment exceedingly tricky, and on top of it, you will lose some of your Constitutional rights such as your right to own a gun, and even your right to vote.
SPLC, Alabama Appleseed release new report documenting widespread and unjust use of civil asset forfeiture in Alabama.
Courts in 14 Alabama counties awarded $2.2 million to law enforcement agencies through civil asset forfeiture actions filed in 2015 - and in a quarter of the 1,100 cases, law enforcement sought to keep property seized from people who were never even charged with a crime, according to a report released today by the SPLC and the Alabama Appleseed Center for Law & Justice.
The study - Forfeiting Your Rights - paints a disturbing picture of a legal process that was once intended to strip illicit profits from drug kingpins but has since evolved into a revenue-generating scheme for law enforcement, one that is now being widely used against people accused of low-level crimes, particularly marijuana offenses, or no crime at all.
Courts in 14 Alabama counties awarded $2.2 million to law enforcement agencies through civil asset forfeiture actions filed in 2015 - and in a quarter of the 1,100 cases, law enforcement sought to keep property seized from people who were never even charged with a crime, according to a report released today by the SPLC and the Alabama Appleseed Center for Law & Justice.
The study - Forfeiting Your Rights - paints a disturbing picture of a legal process that was once intended to strip illicit profits from drug kingpins but has since evolved into a revenue-generating scheme for law enforcement, one that is now being widely used against people accused of low-level crimes, particularly marijuana offenses, or no crime at all.
The Alabama Criminal Code contains numerous Alabama drug charges ranging from simple possession of marijuana to more serious offenses such as the distribution of drugs or drug trafficking.
Punishment and sentences for drug crimes are harsh and may be more severe than warranted.
Because of the link between drug use and other criminal acts, law enforcement aggressively investigates and prosecutes drug charges.
Chase Dearman of the Dearman Law Firm has aggressively represented countless clients facing drug charges.
Punishment and sentences for drug crimes are harsh and may be more severe than warranted.
Because of the link between drug use and other criminal acts, law enforcement aggressively investigates and prosecutes drug charges.
Chase Dearman of the Dearman Law Firm has aggressively represented countless clients facing drug charges.
The Alabama drug distribution statute is found that Alabama Code § 13 A - 12 - 211.
The Alabama drug distribution statute makes it unlawful for a person to sell, furnish, give away, deliver, or distribute a controlled substance.
A controlled substance is defined in the Alabama drug distribution statute is being any substance listed in the drug schedules I through V.
The statute applies to illegal drugs such as methamphetamine, cocaine, or heroin, as well as legal drugs that require a prescription, but which are distributed unlawfully.
The Alabama drug distribution statute makes it unlawful for a person to sell, furnish, give away, deliver, or distribute a controlled substance.
A controlled substance is defined in the Alabama drug distribution statute is being any substance listed in the drug schedules I through V.
The statute applies to illegal drugs such as methamphetamine, cocaine, or heroin, as well as legal drugs that require a prescription, but which are distributed unlawfully.
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