The Client was in the middle of a messy divorce when his wife falsely accused him of hitting her in the face. She had injuries on her face and claimed that he battered her in front of one of their young children. The police believed her and arrested the Client. Though she testified against the Defendant at an injunction hearing, and provided photos of her injuries, the Court saw through her lies. Jessica entered evidence of video footage, from the approximate time of the incident, proving there was no altercation and that the wife left home without incident. Jessica also presented witness testimony that refuted the Wife’s testimony. The Court denied the injunction. Jessica immediately provided a recording of the hearing to the State Attorney’s Office, and they dismissed the criminal case. Just weeks after the arrest, the Client was back in his home and with his children.
The client was accused of pushing his way into his friend’s home, when she wasn’t home, and molesting and abusing her children. Jessica argued that the victim’s stories were inconsistent with one another and that the alleged victim of molestation made the allegations up to distract her mother from the fact that she was skipping school and using drugs.
The client was initially facing the death penalty, and then a mandatory Life sentence for Murder and Attempted Murder. The surviving victim named and identified the client as the murderer and historical cell site tracking revealed that the client was near the scene of the crime. At trial, Jessica was able to show the jury that there was another suspect that the police ignored who was just as likely to have committed the crime. Moreover that the cell phone records could only put the client’s cell phone within a few miles of the crime scene, not at the scene as the police had claimed. After a 3 week trial the jury could not make a decision. Jessica tried the case again, and this time the State brought in a jail house snitch. Through very thorough investigation, Jessica learned that the snitch was being paid very well for his testimony against the client. However, after a month long trial, the jury still could not reach a decision. The lengthy trials and extensive investigation led to the State reducing the charges and agreeing to a 5 year prison sentence, instead of Mandatory Life.
The client was a caretaker accused of stealing a large amount of money from an elderly woman whom she was caring for. The State had significant evidence including receipts, videos of the client cashing checks made to cash at the bank and a doctor who stated that the alleged victim was not in her right mind. Jessica was able to show the jury that the client and the alleged victim had a very close relationship and the client took outstanding acre of her. Moreover, the alleged victim’s family had filed a civil law suit and their motive in the criminal case was to get paid.
The client was alleged to have beaten a man outside of a club on South Beach. Jessica was able to locate and obtain a cell phone video, via social media, that captured the entire incident, revealing that the alleged victim had started the fight and the client was merely defending himself.
The client was alleged to have sold his prescription morphine and oxycodone to a confidential informant. Jessica did a Motion to Disclose the Identity of Confidential Informant and the Motion was granted. Jessica was able to show the jury that the informant was a liar and had entrapped the client, a law abiding citizen and a veteran, in return for keeping himself out of prison.
The client was a security guard, desperate to keep his record clean. The alleged victims claimed that they knew the client and recognized him as he entered their home, with another man, both armed and demanding cash. They also claimed that the two ran away while witnesses tried to catch them. Jessica was able to show the prosecutor inconsistencies in the victim’s and witness’s accounts of what happened, as well as medical records that the client was physically unable to run due to a medical condition. Thereafter, Jessica filed a Motion to have the client’s property returned to him and it was granted. The police were ordered to return the client’s firearms, cell phone and cash to him.
The client and his wife were accused of violently attacking a young woman just outside of her home. Jessica was able to highlight the inconsistencies in the alleged victim’s story and show the jury that she was lying. Jessica argued that the alleged victim was a junkie who owed the client money and was trying to pay him with sexual favors; this caused an altercation between the client’s wife and the alleged victim and the client merely defended himself when he got caught in the middle.
The client was accused of robbing his roommate and his roommate’s mother at gunpoint, in Monroe County. To make matters worse, the client was a convicted felon, which meant a minimum mandatory prison sentence of 3 years and a maximum of Life in prison. After 2 years with another attorney, the client hired Jessica when the judge gave a strict deadline for the client to choose between 3 years in prison or a trial. Within 2 months, Jessica had the charges significantly reduced and a plea agreement for probation. The client was able to go home to his children, instead of to prison.
The client was accused of molesting his daughter. The client was convicted at trial, and sentenced to 25 years in prison. The case was reversed on appeal, and the client hired Jessica for the new trial. Jessica was able to avoid the trial and secure a plea deal for time served to a non-sex offence. The client is free and is not a sex offender.
The client violated his sentence of 12 years of probation, by testing positive for cocaine and marijuana, after just 2 months of probation. The State was adamant that the client should spend 8.5 years in prison for the violation. Within one month of being hired, Jessica was able to negotiate a reinstatement with house arrest and the client was released just in time for the birth of his baby boy.
The client scored approximately 6 years in prison, at the bottom of the guidelines. Jessica was able to provide affidavits from the victim and witness to the State, evidencing that they could not prove the new charge. The client was released from jail before the holidays and within weeks on hiring Jessica.