Articles Tagged with Attorney-Client Relationship

WARNING:  If your child is facing criminal charges in Charlotte and you don’t want to hear the truth, STOP READING NOW.  This blog post isn’t for you. If you want to know how things really work in the legal system, from experienced defense lawyers who honestly care but also tell it like it is, what follows might save you a whole lot of heartache and pain.

Starting off, know this:

  • Defense lawyers understand your child is a good person

If you have a criminal charge, a traffic matter, an impaired driving case in North Carolina, or a related legal issue that might affect your license, liberty, family, job, reputation, or future, knowing how to work effectively with a defense lawyer is an important first step. Lawyers focus on case analysis, strategy, negotiation, and courtroom advocacy. The client’s role in that is important. We need to know, early on, what really happened.

That sounds simple until fear takes over. A pending case can make normally very reasonable folks act in ways that can hurt them in the long run. They start talking to witnesses, texting, and even trying to call the charging officer.  Sometimes they explain themselves online or respond to a snarky comment on social media. Occasionally, clients hide facts from their lawyer because the truth seems too embarrassing.

To be clear, the lawyer-client relationship is not built on flattery, blind trust, or constant reassurance. Defense lawyers truly want to help their clients. That’s why we went to law school. We enjoy helping people. We want to make a difference. A solid professional relationship and trust can take time.  Here’s What NOT To Do when it comes to working with your lawyer:

Hiring a criminal defense lawyer is an important decision. For many clients, this is a first encounter with the criminal court system. Questions about legal fees, communication, court appearances, case strategy, and timing are understandable. The following information explains how representation works, so that expectations are clear from the outset.

Criminal defense work involves much more than standing beside a client in court. A hearing may take a short amount of time. The preparation behind that hearing often takes far longer. A great deal of the work in a criminal case happens outside the courtroom and outside the client’s view. That work normally begins immediately after the firm is retained.

Criminal Defense | How Legal Fees Are Structured

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