The RegistryPractice Area · Statewide

Criminal Defense Attorneys in California

Counsel for the accused — from arraignment through trial and record clearance. This is the statewide record for criminal defense in California — every attorney on the State Bar of California's official roll whose practice reaches this shelf, scored in the open by the published Growth Score.

Californians search this field under many names — criminal defense lawyer, criminal defense attorney, criminal lawyer, felony defense lawyer, misdemeanor attorney — and the registry answers all of them from the same source. Below: the governing deadline with its citation, what to weigh as you read the roster, the questions Californians ask with the code sections that answer them, and the record city by city, from the North Coast to the border.

The clock & the craft

Statute of limitations

Most misdemeanors: one year to charge; most felonies: three years.

Cal. Penal Code §§ 799–802

Charging deadlines scale with the offense — crimes punishable by death or life imprisonment, and embezzlement of public money, may be prosecuted at any time (Cal. Penal Code § 799). After arrest, arraignment must generally occur within 48 hours (Cal. Penal Code § 825).

Reading the roster

For criminal charges, the useful questions are concrete: how often the attorney appears in the specific courthouse where your case is set, their experience with the charged offense, who will actually stand up in court with you, and how fees are structured (criminal defense is typically flat-fee by stage of case). Move fast — early representation matters at arraignment and bail, and pre-filing intervention can sometimes shape charging decisions.

Criminal Defense · statewide roster

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195,000+ California attorneys are being verified against official State Bar of California records. Verified listings for Criminal Defense · California will appear here as indexing completes.

Official State Bar data · Scored in the open · Updated daily

Criminal Defense questions, cited

How long can California wait to file criminal charges?

It depends on the offense. Most misdemeanors must be charged within one year (Cal. Penal Code § 802) and most felonies within three years (Cal. Penal Code § 801). Offenses punishable by eight or more years run six years (§ 800), and crimes punishable by death or life imprisonment have no limitations period (§ 799). Certain sex offenses and fraud offenses follow special discovery-based rules.

What happens at an arraignment in California?

The court formally states the charges, advises you of your rights, takes your plea, and addresses release — bail, own-recognizance release, or conditions. Cal. Penal Code § 825 requires that a person in custody be arraigned within 48 hours of arrest, excluding Sundays and holidays. It is also where counsel is appointed for defendants who cannot afford an attorney.

Can I get a conviction expunged in California?

Many convictions can be dismissed under Cal. Penal Code § 1203.4 after probation ends — the plea is withdrawn and the case dismissed, though the conviction still counts for some purposes (licensing disclosures, priors). Since 2023, Cal. Penal Code § 1203.425 also provides automatic record relief for many older non-serious convictions, and arrest records that ended without conviction can be sealed under § 851.91.

Do I have to talk to police if I am being investigated?

No. The Fifth Amendment and California law let you decline to answer questions, and anything volunteered can be used against you. You may state that you are exercising your right to remain silent and want an attorney; questioning of a person in custody must then stop under Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 384 U.S. 436. Providing identification during a lawful stop is a separate, narrower obligation.

What is the difference between a misdemeanor and a felony in California?

Chiefly the maximum punishment: misdemeanors carry up to a year in county jail (Cal. Penal Code § 19), while felonies are punishable by imprisonment (Cal. Penal Code § 17). Many offenses are "wobblers" that can be charged or later reduced either way under Penal Code § 17(b) — a frequent target of defense motions, since reduction restores rights and narrows collateral consequences.

Legal information, not legal advice.

From the answer files

Criminal Defense by city

Criminal Defense in Los AngelesLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCriminal Defense in Long BeachLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCriminal Defense in PasadenaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCriminal Defense in Santa MonicaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCriminal Defense in San DiegoSan Diego County · San DiegoCriminal Defense in Chula VistaSan Diego County · San DiegoCriminal Defense in San FranciscoSan Francisco County · Bay AreaCriminal Defense in OaklandAlameda County · Bay AreaCriminal Defense in San JoseSanta Clara County · Bay AreaCriminal Defense in Santa RosaSonoma County · North CoastCriminal Defense in EurekaHumboldt County · North CoastCriminal Defense in ReddingShasta County · Shasta CascadeCriminal Defense in SacramentoSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyCriminal Defense in DavisYolo County · Sacramento ValleyCriminal Defense in FolsomSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyCriminal Defense in SalinasMonterey County · Central CoastCriminal Defense in Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara County · Central CoastCriminal Defense in FresnoFresno County · San Joaquin ValleyCriminal Defense in BakersfieldKern County · San Joaquin ValleyCriminal Defense in South Lake TahoeEl Dorado County · SierraCriminal Defense in RiversideRiverside County · Inland EmpireCriminal Defense in San BernardinoSan Bernardino County · Inland EmpireCriminal Defense in IrvineOrange County · Orange CountyCriminal Defense in AnaheimOrange County · Orange CountyCriminal Defense in Santa AnaOrange County · Orange CountyCriminal Defense in Palm SpringsRiverside County · DesertCriminal Defense in StocktonSan Joaquin County · San Joaquin ValleyCriminal Defense in ModestoStanislaus County · San Joaquin ValleyCriminal Defense in OxnardVentura County · Central CoastCriminal Defense in FremontAlameda County · Bay AreaCriminal Defense in VisaliaTulare County · San Joaquin ValleyCriminal Defense in San Luis ObispoSan Luis Obispo County · Central Coast

Adjacent shelves of the law

Read the record. Then decide.

Describe your matter once, weigh the published scores, and place the call — the choice is always yours.

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195,000+ attorneys · 58 counties · Scored in the open