Your Child is CHARGED With a Crime? Do THIS!
Co-Founding Partners
Texas Bar verified. Reggie London (Texas Bar No. 24043514) and Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266) are the co-founding partners of L and L Law Group, PLLC — based at 5899 Preston Rd, Suite 101 in Frisco, Texas (Collin County), with many 5-star Google reviews, and available 24/7 for criminal defense consultations.
Bottom line up front: Texas juvenile law (ages 10-16) under Family Code Title 3 is separate from adult Penal Code. Seventeen-year-olds are adults under Texas law. Juvenile adjudications are not convictions and records are confidential from creation under § 58.007.
Texas legal context
- Constitutional defenses applicable to your child is charged with a crime? do this! include the Fourth Amendment (search and seizure), Fifth Amendment (self-incrimination), and Sixth Amendment (right to counsel and confrontation). The Texas Constitution Article I provides parallel — and sometimes broader — protections.
- Deferred adjudication under CCP § 42A.103 may apply to your child is charged with a crime? do this!-related charges, resulting in NO conviction upon successful completion. Eligibility for non-disclosure under Government Code § 411.0725 typically follows. We evaluate eligibility at the retainer stage.
- Reggie London (Texas Bar No. 24043514) and Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266), co-founding partners of L and L Law Group, appear personally on every your child is charged with a crime? do this! case. Office: 5899 Preston Rd, Suite 101, Frisco, Texas. Direct line: (972) 370-5060.
- Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42A.054(a) lists offenses ineligible for judge-recommended probation ("3g offenses"). Where your child is charged with a crime? do this! touches this list, jury-recommended probation under § 42A.054(b) remains possible.
- For the canonical L and L Law Group reference framework on Texas criminal procedure, see the defense process Guidebook covering investigation, arrest, bond, trial, sentencing, appeals, and record-clearing.
Authored by L and L Law Group, PLLC. (972) 370-5060. info@landllawgroup.com.
Videos
Key Legal Terms
- TJJD (Texas Juvenile Justice Department)
- State agency operating residential commitment facilities for adjudicated juveniles. Commitment under Family Code § 54.04 is the most restrictive juvenile disposition short of certification to adult court.
- Certification to Adult Court
- Family Code § 54.02 procedure transferring a juvenile case (14+ for serious felonies, 15+ for other felonies) to adult district court for criminal prosecution. Certification permanently reverses every juvenile protection.
- Determinate Sentencing
- Family Code § 53.045 procedure imposing a years-length sentence (up to 40) that can transfer from TJJD to adult TDCJ if the juvenile reaches age 19 without completing the sentence. The highest-stakes juvenile-disposition pathway.
- Juvenile Record Sealing
- Family Code § 58.253 (automatic at 18) and § 58.260 (application-based) procedures sealing juvenile records. Stronger than adult non-disclosure — accessible only by specific government agencies.
In our practice defending Texas criminal cases, we have represented clients in Collin, Dallas, Denton, and Tarrant County criminal courts on the full Texas Penal Code and Health & Safety Code spectrum. Reggie's prosecutor background in Dallas County means we know the State's evidentiary playbook; Njeri's trial-trained motion practice anchors the suppression-driven defense work.
Frequently Asked Questions
At what age is someone an adult in Texas criminal law?
Can a juvenile record be sealed in Texas?
What is juvenile certification in Texas?
What is determinate sentencing in Texas juvenile cases?
Can a juvenile be tried as an adult in Texas?
References & Authoritative Sources
About the Authors
Charged with a crime in Texas? Talk to L and L Law Group.
Co-founding partners Reggie London (Texas Bar No. 24043514) and Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266) personally handle every case. Free consultation. Frisco, Texas.
Call (972) 370-5060