Violation proceedings are dangerous precisely because they are informal: no jury, a lower standard of proof, and exposure to the time that was hanging over the original sentence. The response has to be immediate - engage the probation officer, frame the violation, and bring the mitigation before the hearing is set. Handled early, many violations end without new custody.
How these cases are built.
Federal cases are investigated long before they are charged - often for one to three years. By the time an indictment arrives, the government has your records, your communications, and frequently a cooperating witness. That is why the single most important variable in the outcome is when the defense starts. Engaged early, counsel can shape charging decisions, protect you in interviews, and sometimes end the matter before it begins.
Sentencing exposure - and how it moves.
Federal judges sentence under the guidelines, and some counts carry mandatory minimums. But exposure is not destiny: loss amounts get contested, enhancements get challenged, roles get minimized, and mitigation gets built. Six months on a $12 million Ponzi case - when prosecutors pushed for years - is what disciplined guidelines work looks like in practice.
Defenses that actually work.
Intent is the battleground in most federal prosecutions - the government must prove you knowingly and willfully broke the law, not that something went wrong. Suppression of illegally obtained evidence, attacking the loss calculation, dismantling cooperator testimony, and pre-trial motions that narrow the case are how verdicts and dismissals get won. If there is a way to win your case, we will find it.





