Facing violent crime charges in South Wenatchee requires immediate, skilled legal representation. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we understand the severity of these allegations and the devastating impact they can have on your life, family, and future. Whether you’re accused of assault, battery, robbery, or other serious offenses, we provide vigorous defense strategies tailored to your specific circumstances. Our approach combines thorough investigation, examination of evidence, and aggressive courtroom advocacy to protect your constitutional rights and challenge the prosecution’s case.
Violent crime convictions carry severe penalties including substantial prison sentences, mandatory minimum terms, lifetime sex offender registration for certain offenses, and permanent criminal records affecting employment, housing, and professional licensing. Effective defense can mean the difference between conviction and acquittal, or negotiating reduced charges and sentences. A strong defense ensures thorough investigation into the circumstances, challenges questionable evidence and witness testimony, protects your rights during police interrogations and searches, and explores legitimate alternatives such as self-defense claims or mistaken identity. Your defense also impacts your future employment prospects, family relationships, and overall quality of life.
Violent crimes encompass a broad range of offenses involving force, threat, or injury to another person. These include assault, battery, robbery, domestic violence with injury, aggravated offenses, and homicide charges. Each carries distinct legal elements the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Defense strategies vary depending on the specific charge, circumstances, and evidence. Some cases involve questioning whether the defendant actually committed the act, whether self-defense applies, or whether the prosecution can prove the required intent. Others focus on challenging evidence collection procedures, witness identification reliability, or forensic analysis accuracy.
A legal defense asserting that force used against another person was necessary and reasonable to protect yourself from imminent harm. Washington law permits individuals to use reasonable force, including deadly force, when reasonably believing such force is necessary. Self-defense claims require showing you faced an immediate threat and your response was proportionate and necessary.
Circumstances that increase the severity of a crime or its penalties, such as weapon use, multiple victims, vulnerable victim status, prior convictions, or particularly brutal conduct. Identifying and challenging aggravating factors is crucial to minimizing potential sentences.
The legal term for criminal intent or guilty mind. Many violent crimes require the prosecution to prove you acted intentionally or recklessly. Challenging whether the required intent existed is a fundamental defense strategy in many violent crime cases.
Factors that reduce culpability or warrant leniency, including lack of prior criminal history, mental health conditions, substance abuse issues, difficult upbringing, cooperation with authorities, or remorse. These become important during sentencing negotiations and proceedings.
Contact our office immediately after arrest or when facing charges—delays allow evidence to disappear and memories to fade. We promptly send preservation letters to relevant parties, request police records and dashcam footage, and identify potential witnesses. Early investigation often uncovers crucial evidence the prosecution may have missed or overlooked.
Never provide statements to police without an attorney present, regardless of how innocent you feel or how cooperative you want to be. Your words can be misinterpreted, taken out of context, or used against you later. Once you request an attorney, police must stop questioning you immediately.
Bail hearings occur quickly after arrest, and having representation present dramatically improves chances of reasonable bail or release conditions. We advocate for bail reduction, present community ties, employment status, and other factors supporting your release. Remaining out of custody helps you prepare your defense more effectively.
Cases involving multiple victims, serious injuries, weapon involvement, or complex legal questions require thorough investigation and strategic planning. When evidence is circumstantial, forensic analysis is questionable, or witness testimony conflicts, comprehensive defense ensures all angles receive attention. Professional investigators, forensic consultants, and legal research become necessary to effectively challenge the prosecution.
Charges carrying significant prison time, mandatory minimums, or lifetime consequences demand the full resources and attention comprehensive defense provides. The stakes justify investing in thorough investigation, expert witnesses, and aggressive trial preparation. Plea negotiations in serious cases require understanding exactly what the prosecution can prove and what alternatives exist.
When evidence strongly supports guilt but circumstances warrant leniency, negotiating favorable plea agreements with focused sentencing advocacy may be appropriate. Clear mitigating factors like lack of prior record or mental health conditions sometimes allow efficient resolution. This approach works best when prosecution’s case is solid and negotiation becomes the priority.
Some individuals need representation solely for bail hearings and initial proceedings while seeking other counsel for trial. This limited scope works when immediate release from custody is the primary concern. However, continuity with the same attorney throughout your case typically provides better overall outcomes and consistent strategy.
Arguments escalating to physical confrontation between intimate partners often result in assault charges, sometimes with weapon allegations. We challenge claims, examine witness credibility, and explore whether mutual combat or self-defense applies.
Confrontations at venues often involve intoxicated individuals with conflicting accounts of who initiated contact and used excessive force. We obtain surveillance footage, identify corroborating witnesses, and challenge unreliable witness memories.
Instances where you used force to protect yourself may be charged as assault despite legitimate self-defense justification. We gather evidence demonstrating the threat you faced and that your response was reasonable and necessary.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd provides dedicated representation for violent crime charges in South Wenatchee and throughout Washington. We combine local knowledge with statewide experience, understanding Chelan County courts, judges, prosecutors, and law enforcement practices. Our attorneys bring proven success defending serious charges, with track records of acquittals, charge reductions, and favorable plea negotiations. We treat every case with the urgency and attention it deserves, providing direct access to the attorneys handling your matter rather than junior staff.
Beyond legal strategy, we provide emotional support and clear communication throughout this difficult process. We explain your options, potential outcomes, and realistic expectations honestly. Our commitment extends to thoroughly investigating your case, challenging improper police conduct, and advocating relentlessly in negotiations and at trial. We understand that violent crime accusations threaten everything you’ve built, and we work with that understanding driving every decision. Contact us immediately for a confidential consultation to discuss your case.
Immediately exercise your right to remain silent and request an attorney before answering any police questions. Do not consent to searches, and do not attempt to explain what happened to officers, as your words can be misinterpreted or used against you later. Contact Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd as soon as possible so we can begin protecting your rights and gathering information. We can communicate with police on your behalf and ensure proper procedures are followed. Document everything you remember about the incident, contact information for witnesses who support your account, and any injuries you sustained. Avoid discussing your case with others, particularly on social media or with incarcerated individuals, as these communications can be used as evidence.
Yes, witness testimony alone can result in conviction, but it is not always reliable. Witnesses may misidentify individuals, have poor memory of events, hold biases, or be influenced by police suggestion. Cross-examination of witnesses is crucial to establishing inconsistencies, exposing motivations to lie, and questioning identification certainty. Our defense strategy thoroughly examines witness credibility, impeaches testimony, and presents alternative explanations. We may hire investigators to interview witnesses independently, obtain prior statements they gave, and establish alibis or corroborating evidence. Video evidence, if available, often contradicts witness accounts or reveals details police and witnesses missed. We also present evidence regarding lighting conditions, visibility, distance, and other factors affecting identification accuracy.
In Washington, assault typically involves intentionally causing bodily injury to another or threatening imminent bodily injury with apparent ability to carry out the threat. Battery specifically involves unwanted touching of an offensive or harmful nature. Some jurisdictions use these terms interchangeably, but Washington law distinguishes them through elements requiring proof. Simple assault can result in misdemeanor charges with up to 90 days incarceration, while felony assault carries substantially higher penalties. Aggravated assault involves weapons, serious injury, or vulnerable victims, significantly increasing penalties. Understanding the specific charge is crucial, as defenses vary accordingly. We analyze the charges prosecutors brought and investigate whether the evidence supports the specific allegations or whether lesser charges might apply.
Washington law permits using reasonable force, including deadly force, when you reasonably believe doing so is necessary to prevent harm to yourself or others. Self-defense requires proving you faced immediate threat of bodily injury and your force response was reasonable and proportionate. The key question is what you reasonably believed, not what ultimately proved true. If someone threatened you and you defended yourself, even if they were unarmed, self-defense may apply if you reasonably feared serious injury. The prosecution must prove self-defense is unreasonable beyond a reasonable doubt once you establish evidence supporting your claim. We investigate circumstances, gather witness statements, obtain medical records, and present evidence demonstrating the threat you faced and that your response was necessary.
Penalties vary significantly depending on the specific violent crime and circumstances. Simple assault may result in up to 90 days jail and $1,000 fine for misdemeanor conviction. Felony assault carries one to ten years imprisonment depending on severity. Robbery penalties range from two to twenty years. Homicide charges carry potential life sentences or death penalty in extreme cases. Beyond incarceration, convictions result in permanent criminal records affecting employment, housing, professional licenses, and personal relationships. Some offenses trigger lifetime sex offender registration. Court-imposed fines, restitution payments to victims, and lengthy probation periods frequently accompany imprisonment. Understanding potential exposure helps guide defense strategy and plea negotiations. Our attorneys work to minimize these penalties through skilled negotiation or successful trial defense.
Charges can sometimes be dismissed if prosecutors lack sufficient evidence or if constitutional violations occurred during investigation or arrest. Preliminary hearings allow challenging whether probable cause exists to proceed. Pre-trial motions can suppress illegally obtained evidence, which often eliminates key prosecution proof. Charges may also be reduced through plea negotiations where prosecutors recognize evidentiary weaknesses or you present mitigating circumstances. Diversion programs sometimes allow charges to be dismissed after completing conditions like counseling or community service. We file appropriate motions, develop suppression arguments when police violated your rights, and negotiate aggressively with prosecutors. Early case evaluation often reveals weaknesses prosecutors recognize, making reduction or dismissal feasible. The strength of the prosecution’s evidence, officer credibility, and witness reliability all affect realistic reduction prospects.
Preliminary hearings allow the prosecution to present evidence showing probable cause that you committed the alleged crime. You have the right to cross-examine prosecution witnesses and present your own evidence, though many defendants strategically reserve this opportunity. The judge must find probable cause to proceed to trial; if the standard is not met, the case is dismissed. Preliminary hearings provide discovery opportunities, allowing you to hear prosecution witnesses and evaluate their testimony quality. We use preliminary hearings to expose weaknesses in the prosecution’s case, lock witnesses into testimony, and establish inconsistencies. Our cross-examination challenges identification reliability, reveals contradictions, and demonstrates evidentiary gaps. Strategic decisions at this stage sometimes include waiving preliminary hearing to avoid disclosing defense strategy too early, depending on case circumstances.
Hiring an attorney immediately after arrest is critical because evidence disappears, witness memories fade, and police continue investigation without your input. Early retention allows us to demand police preserve evidence, investigate independently before prosecution narrative solidifies, and assert your rights during interrogation. Prompt bail hearings determine whether you remain in custody during proceedings, affecting your ability to prepare defense effectively. Delays allow officers to secure witness statements unopposed and may result in additional charges. Early investigation often uncovers exculpatory evidence that sustains prosecution investigation misses. Constitutional violations like illegal searches lose effectiveness when challenged immediately. The longer you wait, the fewer options remain and the worse your position becomes. Our immediate involvement protects your rights when they are most vulnerable.
Prior convictions significantly impact violent crime cases, particularly for sentencing purposes. If you’ve previously been convicted of similar offenses, prosecutors may argue this demonstrates propensity and seek enhanced penalties. Prior convictions can affect bail decisions and whether judges grant certain motions. However, in trial, prior convictions generally cannot be mentioned unless you testify and prosecutors use them for impeachment. Washington’s Persistent Offender statutes allow enhanced sentences for repeated violent offenses. Understanding how prior convictions affect your specific case is important for strategic decision-making regarding pleas versus trial. We analyze prior convictions for potential challenges based on constitutional violations or procedural defects that might render them unusable. Even with prior convictions, mitigation strategies exist and conviction is not inevitable.
Discovery is the process where the prosecution provides evidence and statements to the defense. Prosecutors must disclose police reports, witness statements, evidence collected, forensic analysis results, and anything potentially helpful to your defense. This includes impeaching information that damages prosecution witnesses’ credibility. You have rights to inspect and copy evidence, interview witnesses, and obtain expert reports. We demand complete discovery immediately and carefully review everything prosecutors provide. Discovery often reveals weaknesses in their case, inconsistencies in witness statements, or procedural violations affecting evidence admissibility. Physical evidence like weapons, drugs, or biological samples can be independently tested. We identify discovery violations and may exclude prosecution evidence obtained or withheld improperly. Thorough discovery review informs strategic decisions regarding negotiations and trial preparation.
Personal injury and criminal defense representation
"*" indicates required fields