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Collin County Expunction Defense Attorney — Frisco, TX

Why Expunction in Collin County Matters

Collin County criminal records remain visible on background checks until a Chapter 55 expunction order is granted, served on every holding agency, and executed. The McKinney courthouse, the Greg Willis district attorney's office, the local police departments, the sheriff's office, DPS, and the FBI each maintain independent databases that an expunction order must reach.

Collin County is the fastest-growing record-population in North Texas. The district attorney's office in McKinney processes Chapter 55 expunction petitions through a dedicated screening attorney who reviews each petition against the DA's internal eligibility checklist before recommending a position to the court. Employers in Plano, Frisco, McKinney, and Allen pull Collin County criminal-history reports through DPS and through commercial background-check vendors that mirror DPS feeds. An arrest that was dismissed at the magistrate level, a no-billed grand jury referral, or a case that ended in acquittal still appears on those reports until a Chapter 55 expunction is granted, served on every holding agency, and executed. Beyond DPS, Collin County records implicate licensing boards for the heavy concentration of healthcare, finance, education, and engineering professionals in the county — TEA, SBEC, the Texas Medical Board, and the State Board for Educator Certification all run background checks that surface unexpunged arrests. The earlier the petition is filed, the cleaner the record becomes; we evaluate every Collin County matter for both immediate-eligibility expunction under article 55.01(a) and waiting-period expunction under article 55.01(b).

Texas Expunction Statutory Framework

The expunction remedy lives in Chapter 55 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. Eligibility is set by article 55.01; the procedural mechanics live in article 55.02; the agency-execution duties live in article 55.02 § 5.

Article 55.01(a) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides immediate-eligibility expunction for arrests that ended in (1) acquittal at trial, (2) pardon based on innocence, (3) a no-bill by the grand jury after the waiting period elapses, (4) dismissal based on actual innocence, or (5) successful completion of a Class C fine-only deferred adjudication. Article 55.01(a-1) covers prosecution that was discontinued because the case was based on identity theft. Article 55.01(b) provides waiting-period expunction for dismissed charges: 180 days from arrest for Class C misdemeanors, one year for Class A and B misdemeanors, three years for felonies (with longer periods for certain felonies). The standards are strict; a case that does not match the article 55.01 criteria cannot be expunged regardless of equitable considerations.

Article 55.02 sets the procedure: a verified petition filed in a court with jurisdiction over the matter; identification of every law enforcement agency, court, prosecutor's office, and central record-keeping agency that has records; a hearing on the petition; and an order directing each agency to delete its records within 60 days. Article 55.02 § 5 enforces the agency duty; article 55.02 § 3a reaches commercial vendors that aggregate criminal-history data from expunged records. Article 55.03 governs the effect of expunction: the person may deny the arrest occurred, subject to limited exceptions for sworn testimony and prior expunged-record disclosure in subsequent criminal proceedings.

How L&L Pursues Expunction in Collin County

Our Chapter 55 workflow rebuilds the records footprint, identifies every holding agency by ORI number, drafts the petition to article 55.02 standards, files in the originating McKinney court, appears at the hearing, and tracks agency execution through 180 days.

Our Collin County expunction workflow begins with a records audit pulled through the DPS Computerized Criminal History (CCH) system and corroborated against the local court file. The petition is drafted to list every holding agency by name and ORI number — the McKinney Police Department, the Allen PD, the Plano PD, the Frisco PD, the Collin County Sheriff's Office, the district attorney's office, the DPS Crime Records Service, the FBI Identification Division, and any private background-check vendor we can identify under article 55.02 § 3a. The hearing is calendared in the district court that handled the underlying case; we file a notice of hearing on the State and serve every named agency. Where the DA agrees the petition is well-founded, we move for an agreed order without testimony. Where the DA contests, we present evidence under article 55.02 § 2(b) — typically a stipulation, a no-bill letter, or a certified acquittal — and the court enters the order. We then personally serve the order on every agency and follow up with a confirmation-of-deletion check at the 90- and 180-day marks.

The article 55.01 analysis is mechanical: either the disposition fits one of the enumerated grounds or it does not. The art is in the records-mapping and the agency-notification work. A petition that names DPS, the FBI, and the originating police department but omits the suburban municipal PD that responded to the scene leaves a record fragment in place. A petition that identifies the agencies by name but not by ORI number can be administratively delayed at DPS execution. A petition that omits a commercial background-check vendor that has already aggregated the arrest record requires a separate article 55.02 § 3a process to clear that vendor's database. We treat the records map as the deliverable, not the petition draft.

Collin County Expunction Quick Facts

Three baseline numbers anchor every Collin County expunction analysis. Each is statutorily fixed under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 55 and verified against the current text at statutes.capitol.texas.gov.

Art. 55.01(a)
Immediate-eligibility statute for acquittal, dismissal, no-bill
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 55.01(a)
180 days
Standard waiting period for Class C deferred completion in Collin County
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 55.01(a)(2)(A)
60 days
Statutory deadline for each named agency to delete records after service
Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 55.02 § 5(a)

Case Timeline: Six Stages from Intake to Execution

The typical Collin County expunction matter follows six discrete stages. Each stage has a different deliverable and a different counterparty; understanding the sequence allows realistic timing expectations.

Stage 1
Client intake. Free consult with a Co-Founding Partner. Article 55.01 eligibility evaluated against the disposition documents. Engagement letter signed.
Stage 2
Records check. DPS CCH report pulled, McKinney court file ordered, arresting-agency records reviewed, prior counsel's file requested where relevant.
Stage 3
Petition drafted. Article 55.02 petition drafted with full ORI-number identification of every Collin County holding agency; petitioner verifies; petition filed in originating McKinney district court.
Stage 4
DA response window. Greg Willis's office reviews under article 55.01 within 15 days. Collin County DA's appellate and post-conviction division reviews each petition; agreed orders are common where eligibility is clean.
Stage 5
Hearing. Agreed or contested hearing in the originating district court. Article 55.01 facts made on the record — certified court records, no-bill letter, acquittal verdict, or Class C deferred completion documentation.
Stage 6
Order issued and agency execution. Signed order served on every named agency. Statutory 60-day deletion deadline runs from service. DPS and FBI execution typically completes within 60 to 180 days; we confirm at 90 and 180 days.

Our Expunction Process: Five Steps

Five-step representation framework used for every Collin County expunction retainer at L and L Law Group, PLLC. Each step is partner-handled; no case is delegated.

  1. Free eligibility screening. Direct-to-attorney consult; article 55.01 eligibility evaluated against the disposition documents in real time. No screener, no intake clerk — the attorney who would handle the case answers your questions in the first call.
  2. Holding-agency mapping. Every law enforcement agency, court, prosecutor's office, and central record-keeping agency identified by name and ORI number. This is the deliverable that makes the difference between a successful execution and a partial clear.
  3. Petition draft and verification. Article 55.02 verified petition drafted to Collin County procedural requirements. Petitioner reviews and signs under oath. Petition filed in originating district court with the appropriate filing fee.
  4. Hearing representation. Counsel appears at the agreed or contested hearing in McKinney. Article 55.01 facts made on the record — certified court records, no-bill letter, acquittal verdict, or class C deferred completion documentation as appropriate.
  5. Service and confirmation. Signed order served on every named agency by certified mail with return receipt. Execution monitored at 90 and 180 days; commercial vendor notification under article 55.02 § 3a where relevant.

Collin County Expunction FAQs

Eight Collin County-specific questions answered. Each answer reflects current Texas expunction practice and Collin County procedural posture as of May 18, 2026.

Who is eligible for expunction in Collin County under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure article 55.01?

Article 55.01(a) provides immediate-eligibility expunction for an arrest that ended in acquittal, a dismissal based on actual innocence, a no-bill by the grand jury, or a Class C deferred adjudication that has been successfully completed. Article 55.01(a-1) and (b) cover waiting-period eligibility for dismissed misdemeanors and felonies, with the waiting period running from the date of arrest (180 days for Class C misdemeanor, one year for Class A and B misdemeanor, three years for felony). In Collin County we file under whichever subsection fits the disposition; the DA's office screens the petition against the same checklist regardless of which subsection applies.

Does a dismissed case in Collin County automatically clear from my record?

No. A dismissal — even a dismissal with prejudice — does not by itself delete the arrest entry from any database. The arresting agency, the booking agency, the DA's office, DPS, and the FBI each maintain independent records. An article 55.01 expunction order is the mechanism that compels every named agency to delete its records. Without the order, the dismissed case continues to appear on background checks for the rest of your life.

How long does an expunction take in Collin County after the petition is filed?

The typical Collin County expunction timeline is 60 to 120 days from filing to execution. The DA's office reviews within 15 days, the hearing is set within 30 to 60 days, the signed order issues immediately after the hearing, and agency execution typically completes within 60 to 90 days of service. The full DPS and FBI clearance can take up to 180 days in some cases. We monitor execution and follow up to confirm deletion.

Can a Class C deferred disposition be expunged in Collin County?

Yes. Successful completion of a Class C deferred adjudication for a fine-only misdemeanor — typically a Class C traffic, theft-under-$100, or disorderly-conduct case — is expunction-eligible under article 55.01(a)(2)(A). The waiting period is 180 days from the date of dismissal of the deferred. We file the petition under article 55.02 in the originating municipal or justice court, identify every holding agency, and obtain the order. Class C deferred completion is one of the most common expunction-eligible dispositions in Collin County.

What if my case in Collin County ended in a regular probation (not deferred adjudication)?

Straight probation following a conviction is generally not expunction-eligible under article 55.01. Conviction-based probation results in a final judgment of guilt, which Chapter 55 does not reach. The non-disclosure statute under Texas Government Code Chapter 411 may apply to certain post-conviction probation records (particularly first-offense misdemeanor cases under § 411.073 and certain felony cases under § 411.0731), but the analysis is distinct from expunction. We evaluate both options at the initial consultation.

Will District Attorney Greg Willis's office in Collin County contest my expunction petition?

Collin County DA's appellate and post-conviction division reviews each petition; agreed orders are common where eligibility is clean. Facially eligible petitions — meaning petitions that match the article 55.01 statutory criteria, identify every holding agency, and attach the supporting documentation — are typically agreed to without a contested hearing. The DA may request fact development where the disposition is ambiguous, where the petition omits a holding agency, or where a related non-disclosure or expunction case is pending. We resolve those questions during the pre-hearing review.

What does the petition need to include to succeed in Collin County?

The petition must include the petitioner's full name, address, date of birth, and identifying numbers (driver's license, Social Security where applicable); the date of arrest; the offense charged; the cause number; the disposition; and a list of every law enforcement agency, court, prosecutor's office, and central record-keeping agency that has records related to the matter. Each holding agency must be identified by name and, where possible, ORI number. The petition is filed under article 55.02 and verified by the petitioner. We draft the petition to satisfy the Collin County procedural requirements.

What happens after the expunction order is signed in Collin County?

The order is filed and served on every named agency. Each agency is required to delete its records within 60 days of service. DPS and the FBI execute on their own schedule, typically within 60 to 90 days. Background-check vendors that subscribe to DPS feeds typically update within 30 days of DPS execution; commercial vendors that aggregate from other sources may require separate notification under article 55.02 § 3a. We follow up at 90 and 180 days to confirm that every named agency has executed.

Six cross-links to companion frameworks across the L and L Law Group practice library.

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Have a specific question about your Collin County record?

This page covers Chapter 55 in general terms. Your case is not general. Get a free, no-obligation consult with Njeri or Reggie London — both Co-Founding Partners, both available 24/7 for Collin County expunction matters.

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L&L Law Group represents clients across North Texas counties for DWI, assault, drug crimes, juvenile defense, outstanding warrants, bond reduction, and expunction matters.

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