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Federal Sex Trafficking Defense: Human Trafficking Charges

Federal Sex Trafficking Defense: Human Trafficking Charges The federal sex trafficking statute does not require what most people believe it requires. Section 1591 of Title 18 criminalizes a set of acts connected to commercial sex, but the convictions that hold and the convictions that collapse tend to separate at a single junction: what the defendant […]

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Federal Sexual Exploitation of Minors: Production Charges

Federal Sexual Exploitation of Minors: Production Charges Fifteen years is the floor. Under 18 U.S.C. § 2251, a first conviction for production of material depicting the sexual exploitation of a minor carries a mandatory minimum of fifteen years in federal prison and a maximum of thirty. No federal judge possesses the authority to sentence below […]

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Federal Child Exploitation Charges: SESTA/FOSTA Cases

Federal Child Exploitation Charges: SESTA/FOSTA Cases The government does not need to prove you trafficked a child. Under 18 U.S.C. § 2421A, the federal provision that FOSTA created in 2018, the government needs to prove you operated a platform with reckless disregard that your operation contributed to trafficking. The distinction between the person who commits […]

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Massachusetts Federal Criminal Defense: Defending Federal Charges in Boston

The federal conviction rate is a statistic that conceals more than it measures. In the District of Massachusetts, as in every federal district, the vast majority of cases end in guilty pleas. The figure that circulates through anxious conversations (somewhere above ninety percent, depending on the year and the methodology) reflects less about what happens […]

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College Student Federal Arrest

College Student Federal Arrest The federal system does not distinguish between a twenty year old and a forty year old at the moment of arrest. The handcuffs are the same. The booking process, the initial appearance before a magistrate, the government’s calculation of whether to seek detention: none of it adjusts for the fact that […]

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Is It Insider Trading If I Didn’t Sell?

Is It Insider Trading If I Didn’t Sell? The answer is yes, and the question itself reveals a misunderstanding of what the statute prohibits. Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 does not concern itself with the direction of the trade. It concerns itself with the act of trading while in possession of […]

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21 USC 841 Drug Distribution Charges

21 USC 841 Drug Distribution Charges: What the Statute Measures, What the Government Proves, and Where the Defense Begins The sentence that determines the rest of a defendant’s life in a federal drug case is not the one read at sentencing. It is the one printed on the indictment, the line that specifies a quantity. […]

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SEC Form 1662: Understanding Your Rights and Obligations

SEC Form 1662: Understanding Your Rights and Obligations The Document Most Witnesses Never Read The four pages of SEC Form 1662 contain more consequential language than most contracts a business owner will sign in a decade. The form accompanies every subpoena the Commission issues and precedes every request for voluntary testimony. Between those two categories […]

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What Happens After a Federal Indictment?

A federal indictment is not a conviction, but it does not feel that way on the morning it arrives. The document itself is formal and spare — a recitation of charges, statutory citations, and a brief description of the alleged conduct. It does not explain the evidence or identify the witnesses. What it communicates is […]

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Can I Refuse to Talk to FBI Agents?

The Constitutional Right to Say Nothing The Fifth Amendment protects your silence, and it does so whether you are guilty, innocent, or somewhere in the grey territory that most people occupy when federal agents appear at their door. You do not need to speak to the FBI. You do not need to explain why you […]

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Am I Under FBI Investigation? Warning Signs to Watch For

Am I Under FBI Investigation? Warning Signs to Watch For The Question You Are Already Too Late to Ask The fact that you are searching for signs of an FBI investigation is, in most cases, the only sign you need. Federal investigations do not announce themselves. They operate in silence for months, sometimes years, constructing […]

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FBI Investigations

Federal Criminal Defense: FBI Investigations The investigation does not begin with an arrest. In most federal cases involving the FBI, the arrest is one of the last things that happens. The work that precedes it—grand jury subpoenas, witness interviews, document production, surveillance, and the assembly of a case file that may run to tens of […]

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Federal Tax Evasion: Criminal vs. Civil Cases

Federal Tax Evasion: Criminal vs. Civil Cases Every federal tax case, civil or criminal, reduces to the same evidentiary question, and the answer is never located in the numbers on the return. The IRS does not prosecute arithmetic. It prosecutes intent. A taxpayer who understates income by the same amount in two successive years may […]

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Conspiracy Charges in Federal White Collar Cases

The Function of Conspiracy in Federal Prosecution Conspiracy is the charge that makes every other count in a white collar indictment more dangerous. It does not describe a separate act of wrongdoing so much as it describes the architecture of the wrongdoing itself, the agreement between persons that precedes, accompanies, and outlasts the substantive offense. […]

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Federal Customs Violations: Import/Export Crime Defense

The phone call from a customs broker is not the beginning. By the time a business owner receives notice that Customs and Border Protection has flagged an entry, the investigation has been underway for weeks, sometimes months, conducted through data analysis and cross-referencing that the importer never perceives until the consequences arrive. Federal customs violations […]

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Federal Firearms Offenses: Charges

Federal Firearms Offenses: Charges The federal government does not treat a firearms charge as an accessory to something else. It treats the firearm as the crime. This distinction, which most defendants do not perceive until the indictment is already filed, determines the trajectory of everything that follows: the court, the sentencing range, the absence of […]

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Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum: What Documents Must I Produce?

The subpoena duces tecum does not ask whether you possess relevant documents. It presumes that you do. The distinction matters, because the response you fashion in the first seventy-two hours will determine not only what the government receives but what it is permitted to use against you, your employees, and anyone whose name surfaces in […]

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Can I Refuse to Testify Before a Federal Grand Jury?

Can I Refuse to Testify Before a Federal Grand Jury? You cannot refuse the subpoena. You may, under certain conditions, refuse to answer specific questions. The distance between those two facts is where most people lose their footing, and where the consequences of misunderstanding become severe. The impulse to treat a grand jury subpoena as […]

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How to Quash a Federal Grand Jury Subpoena

How to Quash a Federal Grand Jury Subpoena A federal grand jury subpoena carries a presumption of regularity that most recipients do not understand until it is too late to alter their position. The Supreme Court confirmed as much in United States v. R. Enterprises, where the burden of demonstrating that compliance would be unreasonable […]

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Safety Valve Provisions: Avoiding Mandatory Minimums in Drug Cases

Safety Valve Provisions: Avoiding Mandatory Minimums in Drug Cases The Criterion Nobody Prepares For The five requirements for safety valve relief under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(f) are not, in practice, equally difficult to satisfy. Four of them are matters of record: criminal history, the absence of violence, no death or serious bodily injury, no leadership […]

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FBI Search Warrant at My Home or Business: Your Rights

FBI Search Warrant at Your Home or Business: Your Rights The search warrant is not the beginning of the investigation. It is, in almost every case we encounter, confirmation that an investigation has been underway for months or years in silence. By the time federal agents arrive at a residence or place of business, the […]

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How to Get a 5K1.1 Motion for Sentence Reduction

How to Get a 5K1.1 Motion for Sentence Reduction The Government’s Motion, Not Yours The single most consequential fact about a 5K1.1 motion is the one most defendants learn too late: you cannot file it yourself. Only the government can request this departure. Only the prosecutor decides whether your cooperation qualifies as substantial. Only the […]

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Federal Grand Jury Subpoenas

Federal Grand Jury Subpoenas The federal grand jury subpoena communicates more than most recipients perceive on first reading. Before the envelope is opened, before counsel is retained, before the words “Fifth Amendment” enter the conversation, the government has already determined that a person possesses something it requires: testimony, documents, or both. The subpoena is not […]

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Should I Respond to a Target Letter Without a Lawyer?

The answer to this question has already been decided for you, though not in the way you might expect. A federal target letter is not a request for your side of the story. It is a document whose purpose is to set a process in motion, and that process does not require your participation to […]

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Vermont Federal Criminal Defense

Vermont Federal Criminal Defense The Small Docket Problem The District of Vermont prosecutes fewer federal criminal cases than nearly any district in the country, and that is precisely what makes it dangerous. A defendant in the Southern District of New York is one file among hundreds. A defendant in Vermont is one among perhaps eighty. […]

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IRS Criminal Investigation: Tax Crime Investigation Defense

IRS Criminal Investigation: Tax Crime Investigation Defense The Conviction Rate and What It Permits An 89 percent conviction rate should end most conversations about whether to cooperate with IRS Criminal Investigation. It does not. The number, drawn from IRS-CI’s own fiscal year 2025 annual report, reflects the agency’s selectivity more than its strength: CI initiates […]

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DEA Investigation Defense: Responding to Drug Enforcement Agents

DEA Investigation Defense: Responding to Drug Enforcement Agents The investigation is over before you know it has begun. The agents who appear at your door are not beginning their work; they are confirming what months of database analysis, prescription monitoring, and financial review have already suggested. You do not know what they know, and that […]

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FBI Investigation Defense: What to Do When Contacted by FBI

Most federal prosecutions do not begin with an arrest. They begin with a conversation the defendant believed was voluntary. The business card left in a doorframe, the voicemail requesting a callback about “a matter,” the pair of agents waiting in a parking lot who assure you this will only take a moment: each of these […]

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Federal Drug Task Force Investigations: Multi-Agency Prosecutions

Federal Drug Task Force Investigations: Multi-Agency Prosecutions The arrest is the last thing that happens. In a federal drug task force investigation, by the time agents appear at a door, the government has already recorded the conversations, mapped the associations, catalogued the financial transactions, and constructed a prosecution theory designed to produce a conviction. The […]

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Federal Drug Wiretap Cases: Title III Interceptions

Federal Drug Wiretap Cases: Title III Interceptions The necessity requirement is where federal wiretap cases are won or lost, and it is the part of Title III that most defendants never hear about until the suppression deadline has passed. Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act imposes on the government a […]

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