Services We Provide
As a criminal defense and appeals firm, The Law Office of Christopher Simpkins, based in San Antonio, provides aggressive and skillful representation to clients charged with DWI, drug crimes, family violence, and other felony and misdemeanor offenses. We also help our clients clean up their criminal history by expunging the records of their arrest or by sealing their records through petitions for non-disclosure. A brief list of some of the services offered by The Law Office of Christopher Simpkins is provided below.
If you or a loved one is in need of competent, compassionate, and effective legal representation, call the Law Office of Christopher Simpkins immediately at 210-273-4874, to protect your freedom, future, and reputation.
Services Offered
- Administrative License Revocation (ALR Hearings)
- Alcohol Offenses: Public Intoxication, Minor in Possession, DUIM, etc.
- Appeals & Post-Conviction Writs
- Assault
- Assault-Family Violence (Domestic Assault)
- Bond Reduction/Jail Release (Attorney Bonds Available)
- Criminal Trespass & Criminal Mischief
- Deadly Conduct
- Drug Offenses (Manufacture, Delivery, Intent to Distribute & Simple Possession)
- Driving While Intoxicated (DWI)
- Early Termination of Probation or Deferred Adjudication
- Evading Detention/Resisting Arrest
- Expunctions of Criminal Arrests
- Marijuana Charges (Possession, Delivery)
- Obtaining Prescription Drugs By Fraud
- Occupational Driver's License
- Parole Law
- Possession of Marijuana
- Possession of Drug Paraphernalia
- Possession of a Prohibited Weapon
- Probation Revocation (Motion to Revoke Probation)
- Sealing of Criminal History (Petitions for Non-Disclosure)
- Traffic Offenses
- Unauthorized Use of a Motor Vehicle
- Unlawful Carrying of a Weapon
- White Collar Criminal Defense
"Experience should teach us to be most on guard to protect liberty when the Government's purposes are beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding."
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United States v. Olmstead, 277 U.S. 438, 479 (1925) (Brandeis, J., dissenting)