Trial-tested domestic violence defense in Dallas County. 25 minutes from L and L Law Group's Frisco office via the Dallas North Tollway. Free, confidential consultation 24/7. Call (214) 466-1398.
Texas Bar Licensed20+ Years Criminal DefenseTCDLA MemberFormer Dallas County DAAvailable 24/7Se Habla Español
If you or someone you love is facing domestic violence charges in Dallas County, the next 24 to 72 hours matter. Bond conditions, license obligations, target-letter response windows, and digital evidence preservation are all decided early. The right attorney moves quickly to lock in advantages while options are still open. We answer the phone at any hour because that is when most domestic violence cases need defense work.
Domestic Violence Attorney Dallas cases in Texas are governed by Texas Penal Code §22.01 and Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42.013. The State must prove every element beyond a reasonable doubt — and there is almost always more room to challenge the case than the prosecutor first lets on. Stops, searches, statements, lab procedures, witness identifications, chain of custody, and constitutional rights are all open ground for a defense built on Dallas County uses a hybrid system: most agencies upload body-cam and digital evidence to Defender Data; some Dallas Police Department evidence routes through Axon Evidence.com.
L and L Law Group is a Frisco-based criminal defense firm built around two trial lawyers — Njeri London and Reggie London. Reggie London prosecuted in the Dallas County District Attorney's Office before joining the defense bar. That prosecutor's eye on every offense report is what shapes the defense from day one. We are 25 minutes from L and L Law Group's Frisco office via the Dallas North Tollway.
Your Attorneys
Trial-Tested Texas Criminal Defense Counsel
Njeri London
Co-Founding Partner
Texas Bar No.: 24043266
Licensed since: 2006
Law school: Thurgood Marshall School of Law
Memberships: State Bar of Texas, TCDLA
“Family-violence cases are won in the body-cam, the 911 call, and the affidavit. The State files fast and on thin evidence. Every minute that goes by without that evidence preserved is a minute of leverage lost.”
Reggie London
Co-Founding Partner
Texas Bar No.: 24043514
Licensed since: 2005
Law school: Thurgood Marshall School of Law
Former: Dallas County District Attorney’s Office
Memberships: State Bar of Texas, TCDLA
“I handled family-violence intake at the Dallas County DA's Office. Most cases have a complainant who never wanted to call police. The right defense work — affidavit of non-prosecution, video evidence, prior false-report history — changes the calculation.”
This page was written and reviewed by Njeri London, State Bar of Texas No. 24043266, and Reggie London, State Bar of Texas No. 24043514. Last reviewed: April 2026.
Quick Answer
Domestic Violence Attorney Dallas cases in Texas are governed by Texas Penal Code §22.01 and Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42.013. Penalties depend on offense level, prior history, and aggravating facts. Dallas County cases are filed at the Frank Crowley Courts Building. L and L Law Group provides free, confidential 24/7 consultations across the DFW Metroplex. Call (214) 466-1398.
Texas Law Governing Domestic Violence Cases
Domestic Violence Attorney Dallas charges in Texas arise under Texas Penal Code §22.01 and Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42.013 and related provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Punishment ranges in Texas run from Class C misdemeanor (fine only) through first-degree felony (5 to 99 years or life) under Texas Penal Code Chapter 12. The specific subsection charged, the alleged conduct, prior history, and aggravating facts all change the exposure dramatically.
The first job of defense counsel is to read the offense report carefully against the elements of the charged statute. Many domestic violence cases are filed quickly — sometimes before the State has all of its evidence — and a careful elemental review often surfaces gaps that translate into pretrial leverage. We use the Michael Morton Act discovery rights under Article 39.14 aggressively from the first appearance forward.
How a Domestic Violence Case Moves Through Dallas County Courts
After arrest, booking and magistration occur at Lew Sterrett Justice Center, 111 W Commerce St, Dallas, where magistration occurs within 24 hours of arrest under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 15.17. Bond is set and conditions imposed. The case is then filed in the appropriate court — county criminal court for misdemeanors, district court for felonies, federal district court for federal charges. First setting (arraignment) is typically 4 to 8 weeks after arrest; pretrial appearances follow over several months.
Dallas County uses a hybrid system: most agencies upload body-cam and digital evidence to Defender Data; some Dallas Police Department evidence routes through Axon Evidence.com — this matters because the defense file is built around what the State must produce. Resolution comes through dismissal, motion to suppress, plea, deferred adjudication under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 42A, pretrial diversion, or jury trial in Dallas County courts.
Video: Texas Civics — A Student's Guide to the Texas Judicial Branch — State Bar of Texas. Visit the official channel →
Defenses Commonly Raised in Domestic Violence Cases
Self-defense and defense of another — Texas Penal Code §9.31 and §9.33 provide affirmative defenses where reasonable force was used to defend against unlawful force.
Body-cam and 911-audio analysis — initial reports often do not match the actual recording. Cross-examination on contradictions is the most common path to dismissal.
Affidavit of non-prosecution — does not bind the State, but reshapes leverage materially when supported by other facts.
Excited-utterance and confrontation challenges — Texas Rules of Evidence 803(2) and the Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause limit what 911 calls and witness statements can be used at trial.
Negotiating away the family-violence finding — Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42.013 finding triggers federal firearm ban (18 U.S.C. §922(g)(9)) and ineligibility for sealing under Government Code §411.0727. Avoiding the finding is the single most important goal in most cases.
Reduction to non-family-violence offense — preserves firearm rights and sealing eligibility.
Collateral Consequences You Should Know About
A family-violence-affirmed assault conviction triggers a permanent federal firearm prohibition under 18 U.S.C. §922(g)(9), even for a misdemeanor; ineligibility for nondisclosure under Texas Government Code §411.0727; immigration deportability under 8 U.S.C. §1227(a)(2)(E); presumption of evidence in Texas family-court custody disputes under Family Code §153.004; and licensing consequences for nursing, education, healthcare, and security professionals. Avoiding the affirmative finding under Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42.013 is the central goal.
How We Defend Domestic Violence Cases
Our Five-Step Defense Process
01
Free 24/7 Consultation + MOEP Compliance Review
On the call, we confirm the Magistrate Order of Emergency Protection details under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 17.292 — duration, no-contact terms, firearm-surrender requirement. Violation of the MOEP under Penal Code §25.07 is a separate offense; compliance from hour one is non-negotiable.
02
Body-Cam, 911 Audio, and Witness Investigation
Once retained, we pull body-cam, dash-cam, 911 audio, the offense report, and any photographs taken at scene. We interview witnesses and identify any prior false-report history. The body-cam routinely contradicts the offense report.
03
Affidavit of Non-Prosecution + Defense Building
Where the complainant supports it, we work with them through the Affidavit of Non-Prosecution process. We develop self-defense or defense-of-another theories under Texas Penal Code §9.31 and §9.33 where the facts support them.
04
Negotiation: No Family-Violence Finding
The Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42.013 family-violence finding is what triggers the federal firearm ban under 18 U.S.C. §922(g)(9) and ineligibility for sealing under Government Code §411.0727. Avoiding the finding is the central negotiation goal in most cases.
05
Trial-Ready Defense + Record Clearing
If the case proceeds, we cross-examine the complainant on prior statements, develop expert testimony on injuries when relevant, and try the case. After resolution, we screen for expunction (dismissals) or nondisclosure (eligible deferred outcomes).
Client Outcomes
Social Proof & Case Results
5.0
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Average rating across verified client reviews
Recent Client Reviews
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“Continuous Violence Against the Family is a third-degree felony. They got it reduced to a single Class A misdemeanor and we negotiated out the family-violence finding entirely.”
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
“A 911 call I never made put me in cuffs in front of my kids. Body-cam contradicted the report and they used it to get the case dismissed. The family-violence finding never attached.”
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
“I was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Self-defense facts were strong but messy. The case ended with a misdemeanor reduction and no felony record.”
Representative Case Results
Aggravated assault reduced to misdemeanor — Second-degree felony reduced to Class A after self-defense facts developed. Tarrant County, 2023.
Protective-order hearing won — Judge denied final protective order after cross-examination of complainant. Collin County, 2024.
No affirmative finding of family violence — Plea negotiated without §22.013 finding — federal firearm rights preserved. Collin County, 2024.
Continuous Violence Against the Family dismissed — §25.11 count dismissed after one of the predicate cases was thrown out. Dallas County, 2024.
Family-violence assault dismissed — Body-cam analysis contradicted the offense report; case dismissed. Dallas County, 2024.
Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Each case is unique and depends on its own facts and applicable law.
Frequently Asked Questions
Domestic Violence — FAQ
Domestic Violence charges in Texas are governed by Texas Penal Code §22.01 and Code of Criminal Procedure Article 42.013. Penalties depend on offense level, prior history, aggravating facts, and the specific subsection charged. The State must prove every element beyond a reasonable doubt at trial.
L and L Law Group offers free initial consultations. Engagement fees for domestic violence cases in Dallas County vary based on case complexity, charge level (misdemeanor versus felony), and whether trial is anticipated. We offer flat-fee pricing with payment plans. Call (214) 466-1398 for a confidential quote tailored to your case.
The first setting is typically arraignment at the Frank Crowley Courts Building. In most Dallas County misdemeanor cases the defendant's attorney can appear without the client; felony arraignments require the defendant's presence. We will tell you exactly what is required for your case before the setting.
Yes — though never guaranteed. Common dismissal pathways include motions to suppress under Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.23 when the stop, search, or interrogation was unlawful, insufficient evidence, witness recantation, pretrial diversion, and prosecutorial discretion in marginal cases.
It depends on the disposition. A dismissal makes you eligible for expunction under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 55A. A deferred-adjudication completion may qualify for nondisclosure under Government Code §411.0735. SB 731 (2023) expanded eligibility materially. We screen every case for record-clearing options at intake.
Yes. Even when a plea is the right outcome, the negotiated terms — dismissal of greater counts, deferred adjudication versus straight probation, conditions, and the path to record sealing — vary widely with skilled negotiation. A plea entered without counsel is rarely the best plea available.
Misdemeanor domestic violence cases typically resolve within 6 to 12 months in Dallas County. Felony cases often run 9 to 18 months, longer if trial. Federal cases routinely run 12 to 24 months. The timeline depends on court docket, evidence complexity, and motions filed.
You have an absolute Fifth Amendment right not to testify, and a jury cannot hold silence against you. The decision is yours and yours alone, made with full advice from counsel after seeing how the State's case develops at trial.
Local agencies in Dallas County build cases that route through the Dallas County District Attorney's Office. Discovery is typically delivered through Dallas County uses a hybrid system: most agencies upload body-cam and digital evidence to Defender Data; some Dallas Police Department evidence routes through Axon Evidence.com. Knowing the local agency's practices, the prosecutor unit assigned, and the trial judge's preferences shapes the defense.
Do not talk to law enforcement without counsel present. Do not consent to searches. Do not delete digital records — that can be charged separately as tampering with evidence under Texas Penal Code §37.09. Call us — the first 24 to 72 hours of an investigation are when defense leverage is highest.
Before You Go to Court
Frank Crowley Courts Building
Conveniently located in Frisco — 25 minutes from L and L Law Group's Frisco office via the Dallas North Tollway
On-site garage at 133 N Riverfront ($5–$10/day). Pearl/Arts District DART station 5-min walk. Free 2-hour street parking is rare; plan for paid.
Security & What to Bring
Photo ID required. No firearms, knives, or large bags. Cell phones permitted but must be silenced. Allow 15–25 min at security during peak hours (8:30–9:30 a.m.).
Hours & Clerk
Building 7 a.m.–6 p.m. weekdays. Clerk's window 8 a.m.–4 p.m. District Clerk: (214) 653-7307. County Clerk: (214) 653-7099.
Dress Code
Conservative business casual at minimum. Closed-toe shoes. Avoid clothing with profanity, drug imagery, or gang-affiliated colors. Hats off in courtroom. Phones must be silenced or off.
By the Numbers
Dallas County, Texas — Domestic Violence Statistics
Class A
Misdemeanor assault causing bodily injury — up to one year in county jail and $4,000 fine.
Source: Texas Penal Code §22.01(b), §12.21
2–20 yrs
Aggravated assault — second-degree felony; first-degree if family violence with deadly weapon.
Source: Texas Penal Code §22.02, §12.32–§12.33
18 USC §922(g)(9)
Federal lifetime firearm prohibition for any misdemeanor crime of domestic violence conviction.
Source: 18 U.S.C. §922(g)(9)
31–91 days
Magistrate Order of Emergency Protection (MOEP) duration depending on injury and weapon allegations.
Source: Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Art. 17.292
County Prosecution Approach
How the Dallas County District Attorney's Office Handles Domestic Violence
the Dallas County District Attorney's Office files domestic violence cases through specialized trial divisions at the Frank Crowley Courts Building. Initial filings move through intake; specialized trial divisions then handle the case to resolution. Knowing which division has the file, the supervising prosecutor's practices, and the trial judge's preferences shapes how the defense is best presented. Dallas County DA's Office →
Dallas County operates a high-volume docket. Cases that sit without active defense work tend to follow the State's default trajectory toward conviction or unfavorable plea. Cases where the defense files motions early, requests discovery aggressively under Article 39.14, and engages the prosecutor on the merits routinely resolve more favorably. The Dallas County DA also operates several specialty courts and pretrial-diversion programs that, where eligible, can convert a conviction-track case to a dismissal-track case.
Every case is different. The information above reflects general patterns and does not constitute a prediction or guarantee of any specific outcome.
What to Expect
Your Case Timeline
STEP 1
Arrest & Booking → Magistration
Timeframe: Within 24–48 hours
Booking and magistration occur at Lew Sterrett Justice Center, 111 W Commerce St, Dallas, where magistration occurs within 24 hours of arrest under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 15.17. Bond is set; conditions imposed; counsel may be requested at this stage.
STEP 2
Bond Posting & Release Conditions
Timeframe: Same day to 72 hours
Bond posting (cash, surety, or PR bond), conditions reviewed, MOEP issued in family-violence cases. Compliance from hour one is non-negotiable.
STEP 3
First Setting / Arraignment
Timeframe: 2 to 6 weeks after arrest
First court setting in Dallas County. The defendant's attorney can typically appear without the client at the first misdemeanor setting; felony arraignments require the defendant's presence.
STEP 4
Discovery & Pretrial Motions
Timeframe: 2 to 8 months
Dallas County uses a hybrid system: most agencies upload body-cam and digital evidence to Defender Data; some Dallas Police Department evidence routes through Axon Evidence.com. Defense files Article 39.14 demands, Article 38.23 motions to suppress, motions to quash, and motions in limine.
STEP 5
Negotiation, Plea, or Trial
Timeframe: 3 to 18+ months
Resolution through dismissal, motion-to-suppress ruling, plea (with or without deferred adjudication), pretrial diversion, or jury trial in Dallas County courts.
STEP 6
Post-Resolution Record Clearing
Timeframe: Eligibility varies
After resolution, eligibility for expunction (CCP Chapter 55A) or nondisclosure (Government Code §411.0735) is screened and pursued where available, including SB 731 (2023) expansions.
Every case is different. Case timelines vary based on court docket, evidence complexity, and the specific facts of your situation. L and L Law Group will give you a realistic timeline assessment at your free consultation.
Available 24/7 — we respond within 60 minutes. Confidential consultation. Your information is protected by attorney-client privilege. No obligation. Se habla español. We accept payment plans.
This website is for general information purposes only and constitutes attorney advertising under the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.
Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Each case is unique and must be evaluated on its own facts and circumstances.
L and L Law Group, PLLC attorneys are licensed to practice in the State of Texas. Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266) is the attorney responsible for the content of this page. Reggie London (Texas Bar No. 24043514). None of the attorneys at L and L Law Group, PLLC are Board Certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization unless specifically and separately stated.
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