Dallas County Drug Crimes Defense Attorney — Frisco, TX
Why a drug charge in Dallas County is serious
A Texas drug arrest in Dallas County is not a paperwork problem. It is a felony or jailable misdemeanor that runs through the Dallas County Criminal District Attorney — currently led by John Creuzot — and is filed at 133 N Riverfront Blvd, Dallas, TX 75207. Dallas County has a population of roughly 2.6 million, which means the criminal docket sees a steady flow of controlled-substance cases: roadside stops from local PDs, residential warrants worked by the sheriff's narcotics division, and interdiction stops on county highways including I-30 and I-35E.
The DA's office in Dallas County concentrates its drug-case investment on three things. First, it works closely with DEA Dallas Field Division task force, DPD Narcotics Division, and the Dallas County Sheriff's Office Special Investigations, which means the State usually has a DPS lab report, a chain-of-custody log, and a body-cam recording before the first court date. Second, the office's enforcement focus right now is on open-air market enforcement in South Dallas, fentanyl-specific charging policy following the 2023 Sheriff's Office task force, and felony-quantity cases moved to specialty courts. Third, the office screens cases for diversion eligibility at intake — meaning that the window for diversion or charge reduction often closes within the first 30 to 45 days after arrest, well before a typical pretrial conference.
Court culture in Dallas County matters. Dallas-area judges run their dockets with predictable expectations on motion practice, lab-report production, and trial-readiness. Failing to file a Brady demand or to challenge the affidavit of the arresting officer in the first 60 days is not strategic — it is malpractice. Equally important: Dallas County maintains the Dallas County Drug Impact Court (DAIC), a post-adjudication treatment docket, which is an option in the right case but a trap in the wrong one. We never enter a Drug Court plea before we have audited the State's evidence ourselves.
Texas controlled substance penalty groups
Texas does not punish all drugs the same. The Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 481 (the Texas Controlled Substances Act) sorts every substance into a "Penalty Group" — and the group plus the weight determines the punishment range. Here are the groups in plain English:
- Penalty Group 1 (H&S § 481.102) — cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, oxycodone, hydrocodone (with limits), most opioids. Possession of less than 1 gram is a state jail felony; 1-4 g is third-degree; 4-200 g is second-degree; 200-400 g is first-degree; 400+ g is enhanced first-degree (10-99 / life).
- Penalty Group 1-A (H&S § 481.1021) — LSD. Punishment by dosage unit, not weight.
- Penalty Group 1-B (H&S § 481.1023) — fentanyl and fentanyl analogues, created by the 2023 Legislature. Penalties match PG 1.
- Penalty Group 2 (H&S § 481.103) — MDMA, PCP, hallucinogens, mescaline, some prescription stimulants.
- Penalty Group 2-A (H&S § 481.1031) — synthetic cannabinoids ("K2", "Spice", and related compounds).
- Penalty Group 3 (H&S § 481.104) — Xanax (alprazolam), Valium, Klonopin, Ritalin, Adderall, anabolic steroids, codeine compounds. Less than 28 g (under a valid prescription) is normally a Class A misdemeanor; over 28 g is felony territory.
- Penalty Group 4 (H&S § 481.105) — buprenorphine, certain opioid compounds. Smaller list, similar structure.
- Marijuana (H&S § 481.121) — under 2 oz is Class B; 2-4 oz Class A; 4 oz to 5 lb state jail felony; 5-50 lb third-degree; 50-2,000 lb second-degree; over 2,000 lb enhanced first-degree. Hemp at or below 0.3% delta-9 THC is legal under HB 1325 (2019).
| Substance / weight | Penalty class | Range |
|---|---|---|
| PG 1 < 1 g | State jail felony | 180 days–2 years + $10,000 |
| PG 1, 1–4 g | 3rd-degree felony | 2–10 years + $10,000 |
| PG 1, 4–200 g | 2nd-degree felony | 2–20 years + $10,000 |
| PG 1, 200–400 g | 1st-degree felony | 5–99 years/life + $100,000 |
| PG 1-B (fentanyl) any felony qty | 1st-degree+ enhanced | Up to life + $250,000 |
| Marijuana < 2 oz | Class B misdemeanor | Up to 180 days + $2,000 |
Defense strategies for drug cases in Dallas County
Every Texas drug case has four pressure points, and Dallas County cases are no different. We attack each one in writing — discovery requests, motions to suppress, motions to compel, and Brady demands — in the first 60 days of the case.
1. The stop or the entry
Under the Fourth Amendment and Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.23, evidence obtained through an unlawful stop, search, or entry is inadmissible. Roadside drug cases in Dallas County hinge on the legality of the traffic stop and the scope of any consent or warrant. We pull the dashcam and bodycam, time-stamp the seizure window, and challenge the reasonable suspicion under Wade v. State, 422 S.W.3d 661 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013), and Davis v. State, 947 S.W.2d 240 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997). Residential cases get the same treatment under the four corners of the warrant affidavit (Massey v. State, 933 S.W.2d 141).
2. Constructive vs. actual possession
If the drugs were not on your person, the State has to prove "affirmative links" between you and the contraband under Evans v. State, 202 S.W.3d 158 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006), and Tate v. State, 500 S.W.3d 410. Shared cars, shared apartments, and group-occupancy situations are common in Dallas County cases — and they are routinely defensible because the State cannot meet its proof.
3. The DPS lab
Texas DPS labs in Garland and Austin process most Dallas County drug evidence. We audit the lab report against Mata v. State, 46 S.W.3d 902 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001), the Texas Rules of Evidence 901 / 902 chain-of-custody requirements, and the analyst's certification. A late or unsupported lab report can collapse the State's case.
4. Intent to distribute
The State frequently overcharges possession as possession-with-intent based on quantity, packaging, scales, or text messages. Texas case law — Branch v. State, 599 S.W.2d 324, and Williams v. State, 902 S.W.2d 505 — requires more than quantity alone. We push back on the intent element at every charging conference because a successful reduction from PWITD to possession is a one-step reduction in penalty range.
Case timeline
- Arrest and booking. Police book you into the Dallas County jail. Evidence is bagged and sent to DPS Garland or Austin for testing.
- Magistrate and bond. A magistrate sets bond within 24-48 hours. Standard schedules cover most PG 3 / marijuana cases; PG 1 felonies typically require a formal bond hearing.
- Arraignment. We enter a plea of not guilty, file a notice of representation, and serve a discovery request on the Dallas County Criminal District Attorney.
- Motion to suppress. We file a written motion challenging the stop, the search, the lab, or the chain of custody. The court holds an evidentiary hearing.
- Pretrial conferences. Plea offers, lab-report production, and trial-readiness conferences happen here. Diversion eligibility is also confirmed at this stage.
- Trial or plea. Cases that do not resolve through diversion, dismissal, or negotiated plea are set for jury trial. Most Texas drug cases never reach jury selection — and the ones that do, we try ourselves.
Our drug crimes defense process
- Free 24/7 intake call. A co-founding partner answers — no paralegal screen, no answering service.
- Discovery and lab review. We pull the offense report, dashcam, bodycam, and DPS lab report and audit the chain of custody.
- Motion practice. We file motions to suppress, motions to compel, and Brady demands. Suppression collapses the State's evidence in most drug cases.
- Negotiation or diversion. We push for the Dallas County Diversion Court — a post-arrest, pre-indictment track for low-level PG 1 / PG 2 possession cases announced by DA Creuzot in 2019 where appropriate, deferred adjudication, or a misdemeanor reduction with no permanent record.
- Trial readiness. Cases that cannot be diverted or reduced go to a jury — and we try them ourselves.
Arrested for a drug case in Dallas County?
Free consultation. Direct attorney access. We pick up after-hours for jail-release calls.
Call (972) 370-5060Dallas County drug case FAQs
Will the Dallas County Criminal District Attorney offer pretrial diversion on a first drug case in Dallas County?
John Creuzot's office runs the Dallas County Diversion Court — a post-arrest, pre-indictment track for low-level PG 1 / PG 2 possession cases announced by DA Creuzot in 2019. Eligibility is screened case by case — typical factors include no prior felony, no weapon allegation, and possession quantity inside the program's cap. We screen and apply for diversion in the first 30 days because seats are limited.
How does Dallas County handle fentanyl cases differently from other drug cases?
Following the 2023 Texas Legislature's amendment to Health & Safety Code § 481.1123 — which created Penalty Group 1-B specifically for fentanyl — Dallas County prosecutors charge fentanyl cases at the highest available penalty class. Lab confirmation through DPS Garland or Austin is required before indictment, which creates a real suppression window if the chain of custody breaks.
What is the Dallas County Drug Court and can I get in?
the Dallas County Drug Impact Court (DAIC), a post-adjudication treatment docket is a post-plea, voluntary treatment docket for non-violent felony defendants. Admission usually requires a plea of guilty held in abeyance, regular drug testing, treatment compliance, and 12 to 24 months of supervision. Successful completion typically reduces or dismisses the underlying charge. Not every defendant should accept Drug Court — we audit the strength of the State's case before recommending it.
Where is the Dallas County courthouse and where do drug cases get filed?
Drug cases in Dallas County are filed at 133 N Riverfront Blvd, Dallas, TX 75207. Felony controlled-substance cases are assigned to the criminal district courts; Class A and B misdemeanor possession cases are assigned to the county courts at law. Our Frisco office is a short drive from the Dallas courthouse.
What is the difference between actual and constructive possession in Dallas County?
Actual possession means the drug is on your person. Constructive possession — Texas case law from Tate v. State, 500 S.W.3d 410 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016), and Evans v. State, 202 S.W.3d 158 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) — requires the State to prove "affirmative links" between the defendant and the contraband. Distance, ownership of the vehicle, fingerprints, statements, smell, and exclusive access are the standard link factors. Constructive-possession cases in shared vehicles, shared apartments, and roadside stops are routinely defensible.
Can a Dallas County drug charge be expunged or sealed?
Dismissals, acquittals, and successfully completed pretrial diversions are eligible for expunction under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 55. Successfully completed deferred adjudication can be sealed by order of nondisclosure under Government Code § 411.072 or § 411.0735, depending on the offense. Direct convictions and probation revocations are not expungeable. See our expunction page.
How quickly should I call a lawyer after a Dallas County drug arrest?
Within the first 24 hours. Bond decisions, magistrate warnings, and the State's first look at the lab evidence all happen inside the first business day. Calling early lets us file the notice of representation before the DA's intake screening — which is when most charge-amendment opportunities exist.
Do I have to appear at every Dallas County court setting on a drug case?
No. Many pretrial conferences in Dallas County can be handled by counsel through written waivers under Code of Criminal Procedure Article 27.13 and 27.14. Texas law requires your personal appearance at arraignment, plea, sentencing, and trial — and at any suppression hearing where you may testify. We always confirm appearance requirements with the court coordinator before each setting.
Can police search your car? The automobile exception in Dallas County drug cases
Most Dallas County drug charges start with a traffic stop, and the State's whole case often rests on what officers found after they searched the vehicle. Under the automobile exception, police may search a car without a warrant only if it is readily mobile and there is probable cause to believe it contains contraband. If that probable cause is missing, the search was unlawful, and the drugs it produced can be challenged before trial.
Probable cause is not a hunch. The Marcopoulos court explained that it requires a "fair probability" of finding evidence based on the totality of the circumstances. A driver looking nervous, a stop in a so-called "high-crime" area, or a brief visit to a place officers suspect of narcotics activity does not, on its own, clear that bar. The standard is meant to keep a warrantless search tied to real, articulable facts rather than a label an officer attaches to a neighborhood.
The defense-favorable holding in Marcopoulos targets one common police justification directly: furtive gestures alone are not enough. The court held that movements like reaching down or shifting in the seat "must be coupled with reliable information or other suspicious circumstances relating the suspect to the evidence of crime." In that case, a short stop at a suspected-narcotics location plus furtive movements did not add up to probable cause, so the search was held unlawful.
That distinction matters for cases filed at the Frank Crowley Courts Building and prosecuted by the Dallas County District Attorney. When a search rests on nervousness, presence in a particular area, or vague hand movements, a defense lawyer can file a motion to suppress and ask the court to examine whether the officer actually had probable cause. If the search is suppressed, the evidence behind a Dallas County Jail booking may be kept out, which can reshape or end the case.
Authority: Marcopoulos v. State, 538 S.W.3d 596 (Tex. Crim. App. 2017).
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Free downloads & tools
- Defense tools hub — DWI Bond Calculator, Sentencing Range Tool, Character Letter Generator, Expunction Checker, Procedure Master Guide.
- Possession of Controlled Substance — canonical charge encyclopedia.
- Texas felonies reference (state jail, third-degree, second-degree, first-degree, capital).
- Texas misdemeanors reference (Class A, B, C).
- Drug Penalty Group calculator — look up the PG and range for a specific substance.
References & Statutes
- Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 481 (Texas Controlled Substances Act)
- H&S § 481.102 (Penalty Group 1) · § 481.1023 (PG 1-B fentanyl)
- H&S § 481.115 (PG 1 possession offenses and ranges)
- H&S § 481.121 (Marijuana possession)
- Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.23 (exclusionary rule)
- CCP Chapter 42A (Community Supervision & deferred adjudication)
- CCP Chapter 55 (Expunction of Criminal Records)
- Evans v. State, 202 S.W.3d 158 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006) (constructive possession affirmative links)
- Tate v. State, 500 S.W.3d 410 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016) (constructive possession)
- Mata v. State, 46 S.W.3d 902 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) (lab analyst testimony)
