Do I Need an Attorney to Represent Me in a Criminal Investigation?

Do I Need an Attorney to Represent Me in a Criminal Investigation? A Hundred percent stop what you're doing right now call a criminal tax attorney if you believe that you're being investigated by the Criminal Investigation Division the problem that a lot of people make is they waste time the sooner that counsel can get involved the sooner that we can look at the facts and the sooner that we can control what happens in the future.

The better off you're gonna be you can't change what happened in the past there's nothing you can do the past is the past, but you can certainly change the future you can alter what the events are in the future by taking certain actions and the best thing that you can do in a criminal investigation is mitigate your liability take steps to undermine the government's case before it reaches its conclusion put things in front of the agent that would dissuade against willfulness put things in front of the agent that would contradict their facts make it as hard for them as possible to hand that case over to the US Attorney if you do enough of that and you build that from the beginning particularly when the agent is not in the conclusion stage of their investigation there's a good chance you can sabotage their case and derail it and that they ultimately won't recommend it for prosecution most people don't live in this world so you're not really going to be able to do that by yourself and by dealing with people that aren't covered under attorney-client privilege those people can eventually be used to testify against you so having the protection of an attorney in a criminal matter is critically critically important it shouldn't need saying how important it is so if you're in a criminal investigation if you think you're in a criminal investigation at least go talk to a criminal tax attorney to run the facts by them and to protect yourself as soon as possible you.

avatar

Sam Brotman, JD, LLM, MBA

Owner and Director of Legal
Brotman Law

COMMENTS