Texas Criminal Defense Insights — Page 6
Texas criminal defense analysis by L and L Law Group, PLLC — DWI, drugs, sex crimes, federal, theft, juvenile, probation, record sealing, and more. 1307 articles in our library.
Texas Self-Defense Law — Penal Code §9.31 Stand Your Ground
Texas self-defense Penal Code Chapter 9: stand your ground, Castle doctrine, deadly force justification. § 9.31 reasonable force; § 9.32 deadly force.
Divorce Lawyers Near Me — Texas DFW Family Law Search
Finding divorce lawyers near you in Texas DFW region — search methods, evaluation, geographic considerations.
Texas Doxxing Law — Penal Code §42.075 Charges
Texas doxxing law Penal Code § 42.075: publishing personal information with intent to cause harm. Class B misdemeanor to felony levels.
Divorce Attorney Texas — Frisco, Plano, Dallas Specialists
Texas divorce attorney services in Frisco, Plano, Dallas region — specialists, services, fees.
Terroristic Threat Texas Penal Code §22.07
Texas terroristic threat Penal Code § 22.07: Class B misdemeanor base to first-degree felony depending on intent and circumstances.
Divorce Papers Texas — How to File and What's Required
Texas divorce papers — required forms, filing process, fees, and procedural requirements.
Harassment Texas Penal Code §42.07 — Charges Decoded
Texas harassment Penal Code § 42.07: Class B misdemeanor base, Class A for repeat or against children. Electronic communications included.
Criminal Trespass Texas — Penal Code §30.05
Texas criminal trespass Penal Code § 30.05: Class B misdemeanor base. Enhanced for habitation, weapons, agricultural land, critical infrastructure.
Divorce Lawyer Texas — DFW Family Law Specialists
Finding a Texas divorce lawyer in Dallas-Fort Worth — what to expect, costs, choosing the right attorney.
Child Support in Texas — Complete 2026 Guide
Complete Texas child support guide — calculation, modification, enforcement, and 2026 updates.
Criminal Mischief Texas — Penal Code §28.03
Texas criminal mischief Penal Code § 28.03: damaging or destroying property. Penalties by damage value from Class C misdemeanor to first-degree felony.
Theft Texas Penal Code §31.03 — Felony Thresholds
Texas theft Penal Code § 31.03 felony thresholds: $2,500 = state-jail felony; $30,000 = third-degree; $150,000 = second-degree; $300,000 = first-degree.
State Jail Felony Texas — What It Means
Texas state jail felony: 180 days-2 years state jail facility (not prison), up to $10,000 fine. No parole eligibility — flat time service.
2nd Degree Felony Texas — Sentencing Reference
Texas 2nd degree felony: 2-20 years state prison, up to $10,000 fine. Common examples: aggravated assault, manslaughter, sexual assault.
3rd Degree Felony Texas — Punishment Range
Texas 3rd degree felony: 2-10 years state prison, up to $10,000 fine. Common examples: third DWI, intoxication assault, deadly conduct.
Texas DWI Penal Code §49.04 — Prosecution Elements
Texas Penal Code § 49.04 DWI prosecution elements: operation, public place, intoxicated. State must prove each beyond reasonable doubt.
Is a DWI a Felony in Texas?
Texas DWI: first and second misdemeanors; third DWI is third-degree felony (2-10 years). DWI with child passenger and intoxication assault/manslaughter also felonies.
PAWS (Post-Acute Withdrawal Syndrome) — Texas Probation Considerations
Post-Acute Withdrawal Syndrome (PAWS) in Texas recovery — symptoms, duration, probation considerations.
First Offense DWI Texas Penalties
Texas first offense DWI: Class B misdemeanor, 72 hours-180 days jail, $2,000 fine, license suspension. Defense options and reduced charges.
HALT (Hungry Angry Lonely Tired) — Texas Recovery Trigger Awareness
HALT (Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired) trigger awareness for Texas recovery and probation compliance.