| United States of America v. Demetrius Combs |
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St. Louis, MO criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with drug trafficking crimes. |
| United States of America v. Danaje Raymond Webster, Dayvion Jyraud Parker |
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St. Louis, MO criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with Stealing from Gun Store . |
| State of Idaho v. James Martinez, Kelli Woolum, and Tinas Houlden |
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Boise, Idaho, criminal defense lawyers will be representing the Defendants charged with Murder, criminal solicitation to commit a crime, and harboring a felon. |
| United States of America v. Jeffrey L. Goss, aka Loran Gross |
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Honolulu, Hawaii, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with r manufacture and |
| Marvin Keith Stiff v. City of Tulsa |
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Tulsa, Oklahoma criminal defense lawyer represented the Plaintiff who charged with driving 16-20 miles per hour over the posted speed limit. |
| Estate of Ian Simmers v. County of King, et al. |
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Seattle, Washington, personal injury lawyer represented the Plaintiff on a civil rights violation claim. |
| United States of America v. Kate Carson |
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Nashville, Tennessee criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with international parental kidnapping. |
| United States of America v. Mervin Anderson |
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Memphis, TN criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with Possessing Shanks While in Federal Prison. |
| United States of America v. Dorian Trevor Sykes |
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Detroit, NI criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with four counts of bank and credit union robbery and an attempted bank robbery. |
| United States of America v. Victor Manuel Castro-Huerta |
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Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta, 597 U.S. 629 (2022), was a United States Supreme Court case related to McGirt v. Oklahoma, decided in 2020. In McGirt, the Supreme Court ruled that the U.S. Congress never properly disestablished the Indian reservations of the Five Civilized Tribes in Oklahoma when granting its statehood, and thus almost half the state was still considered to be Native American land. As $0 (12-31-2022 - OK) |
| United States of America v. Javier Cornelio Cruz-Nava |
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Houston, TX criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with assaulting an office |
| State of Oklahoma v. Clifton Merriel Parish |
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Wilberton, Oklahoma, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with second degree murder. |
| United States of America v. Savin Seng aka “Two-Face” |
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Houston, TX criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with federal weapons violation |
| State of Oklahoma v. Billy Znne Deo |
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Okemah, Oklahoma, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with secon-degree burglary and grand larcen and knowingly concealing stolen property. |
| United States of America v. Dewayne Darzell Johnson-Emory |
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Rock Island, Illinois, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with unlawful transportation of a firearm. |
| United States of America v. Jorge Alberto Maradiaga-Carias |
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San Antonio, Texas criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with Assaulting 2 Federal Officers at a Karnes Immigration Processing Center. |
| United States of America v. Corwin Monte Jett, Jr. |
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Grand Rapids, Michigan, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine. |
| United States of America v. Dewayne Keith Miles, |
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Washington D.C. criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with Daylight Shooting with an Illegal Pistol |
| United States of America v. Derrick Polk |
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Johnstown, Pennsylvania criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with Methamphetamine Trafficking |
| State of West Virginia v. James William Ross |
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Clarksburg, West Virginia criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with a sex crime. |
| United States of America v. Marian Hudak |
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Greensboro, North Carolina, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with committing a hate crime. |
| United States of America v. Kevin Perez Sandoval, a/k/a Noctorno, a/k/a Nocturno, a/k/a Dengue |
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Alexandria, Virginia criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with conspiracy to participate in a racketeering enterprise, conspiracy to commit murder in aid of racketeering, and conspiracy to distribute cocaine and marijuana, among other crimes. |
| Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Donnell Brunson |
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Scranton, Pennsylvania, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with first-degree murder. |
| State of New York v. John Doe |
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Buffalo, New York, criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with Attempted Murder in the Second Degree, one count of Assault in the First Degree (Class B violent felonies), one count of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree (Class C violent felony), and one count of Assault in the Second Degree (Class D violent felony). |
| United States of America v. Elijah Roy a/k/a “Eli Spice” and “Swervo,” |
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Brooklyn NY criminal defense lawyer represented the Defendant charged with Mass Shooting in Crown Heights |
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