Our Approach
Three forces shape every legal outcome. Understanding all three — and being prepared for each — is what separates good representation from reactive damage control.
The Framework
Why Most People Underestimate Their Case
Most clients come in focused on one question: what did I do, and how bad is it? That framing misses two-thirds of the picture. Legal outcomes are shaped by three distinct forces — your own conduct, the legal weaknesses in the opposing case, and circumstances that neither side controls. Ignoring any one of them leaves points on the table.
As a former police officer and former prosecutor, I have been on both sides of these cases. I know how the state builds its file, where the holes tend to appear, and which real-world developments tend to collapse cases that looked airtight on paper. The framework below is how I approach every matter I take on.
What You Can Do
Your Actions Shape the Outcome
Step 01 · Your Conduct
What you do in the first 48 hours often decides the case.
Do
Stay silent until counsel is present
Do
Preserve every text, photo, and document
Don't
Post about the case on social media
Don't
Speak with opposing parties or insurers
The decisions you make from the moment a legal situation begins can strengthen or weaken your case. Staying silent after an arrest, preserving texts and emails, documenting injuries the day they happen, keeping a custody journal — these are not small things. They become exhibits, timelines, and credibility.
From our first conversation I will tell you exactly what to do and — just as importantly — what to stop doing. That means no social media posts about your case, no direct contact with opposing parties without counsel, no signing anything you haven't sent to me first.
Clients who follow this guidance consistently arrive at trial or settlement in a stronger position than those who don't. Your conduct during this period is something you control entirely. Use it.
Key Factors
- Document everything — photos, timestamps, screenshots, written notes
- Stay off social media about the matter entirely
- Keep a running log of dates, conversations, and events
- Decline to speak with police or opposing counsel without me present
- Follow all court orders to the letter, even ones you disagree with
- Bring every document, letter, and communication to our meetings
What the Law Can Do
Attacking the Legal Weaknesses in Their Case
Step 02 · Pressure Points
Every case has a fault line. The job is finding it before trial — not during.
Suppress
Unlawful stops, bad warrants, Miranda gaps
Audit
Chain of custody, lab protocol, report gaps
Move
Motions filed early, not the week of trial
Leverage
Trial-ready preparation drives better pleas
This is where experience as both a police officer and a prosecutor pays off. I know how evidence gets gathered, how charges get filed, and — critically — where the process breaks down. Unlawful stops, Miranda violations, chain-of-custody gaps, charging errors, improper valuations, procedural missteps: these are not technicalities. They are the law working as designed.
On the civil and family side, this means knowing which statutory deadlines the other party missed, which discovery requests they dodged, and which expert opinions won't survive cross-examination. Every case has legal angles the opposing side is hoping you won't find.
I build the legal theory of your defense or claim from day one — not the week before trial. That means motions to suppress filed on time, experts retained early enough to actually matter, and settlement leverage that comes from genuine preparation rather than wishful thinking.
Key Factors
- Suppression motions for unlawfully obtained evidence
- Chain-of-custody and lab-protocol challenges
- Charging document review for jurisdictional or elements errors
- Discovery enforcement and sanctions for non-compliance
- Expert witness coordination and cross-examination preparation
- Plea and settlement negotiation backed by trial-ready preparation
What Circumstances Can Do
The Factors No One Controls — But Everyone Should Understand
Step 03 · The Long Game
Cases that look airtight on paper rarely stay that way. Patience is a tool.
Watch
Officer credibility, IA files, terminations
Drift
Witnesses move, statements soften, footage lost
Track
Docket churn, judge changes, ADA rotation
Strike
Move the moment the opening appears
Some of the most powerful forces in a legal case have nothing to do with either party's strategy. Police officers retire, resign, or are terminated for misconduct — and their credibility goes with them. Witnesses relocate, lose interest, or become unavailable before trial. Surveillance footage gets overwritten. Alleged victims change their accounts or stop cooperating entirely.
On the civil side, insurance adjusters rotate, opposing counsel changes firms, and plaintiffs sometimes exhaust their resources before a case resolves — forcing settlements that have nothing to do with the merits. Court dockets back up. Judges retire mid-case. Economic circumstances shift.
I watch for these developments and move when they create openings. That means staying in contact with prosecutors' offices, monitoring case assignments, and timing motions and offers strategically. Patience is a legal tool. Knowing when circumstances have tilted in your favor — and being ready to act — is a significant part of what you are hiring me to do.
Key Factors
- Officer credibility: prior misconduct, termination, pending IA investigations
- Witness availability: relocation, changed statements, cooperation falling off
- Evidence decay: footage overwritten, physical evidence degraded or lost
- Opposing party attrition: funding runs out, plaintiff fatigue, insurer pressure
- Docket dynamics: continuances, judge reassignments, scheduling leverage
- Prosecutorial discretion: case load, election cycles, policy shifts
Ready to Talk
Let's Look at Your Situation
Every case is different. The best way to understand where you stand across all three dimensions is to talk through the facts with someone who has handled cases from both sides of the courtroom.
Please do not include any confidential or sensitive information in a contact form, text message, or voicemail. The contact form sends information by non-encrypted email, which is not secure. Submitting a contact form, sending a text message, making a phone call, or leaving a voicemail does not create an attorney-client relationship.