{"id":4225,"date":"2022-09-26T09:06:25","date_gmt":"2022-09-26T09:06:25","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wordpress-195849-4032129.cloudwaysapps.com\/michigan-criminal-and-dui-cases-keep-your-record-as-clean-as-possible\/"},"modified":"2025-01-07T11:21:30","modified_gmt":"2025-01-07T16:21:30","slug":"michigan-criminal-cases-and-keeping-your-record-cleam","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.randalawyers.com\/blog\/michigan-criminal-cases-and-keeping-your-record-cleam\/","title":{"rendered":"Michigan Criminal and DUI Cases – Keep your Record as Clean as Possible"},"content":{"rendered":"

Usually, the biggest concern for anyone facing a Michigan criminal charge is staying out of jail. My team and I see that in just about every case we handle. It doesn\u2019t matter if a person is facing a charge for assault, disorderly person, DUI, embezzlement, indecent exposure, or anything else. Everyone\u2019s first order of business is to avoid jail, and that\u2019s understandable. However, there is another important and even farther reaching concern, and that\u2019s what does (and doesn\u2019t) wind up on a person\u2019s record.<\/p>\n

\"AThe good news is that the fear of going to jail often misplaced. Avoiding it, at least in the kinds of cases our firm handles, is usually not too difficult. In many cases, it\u2019s because my team and I do good work. In other cases, however, it\u2019s because jail simply isn\u2019t on the menu in the first place. What is at issue in every<\/em> criminal case is the potential damage that can result from a conviction when it goes on a person\u2019s criminal record. We live in the Information Age now, so that can have a profound effect on one\u2019s future.<\/p>\n

The upshot, of course, is that it\u2019s critical for us to protect that record. The importance of this can sometimes get lost in all the panic over going to jail. Unless a person has a bad prior record, or has done something truly heinous, keeping him or her out of jail is easier than keeping his or her record clean. If a person is being considered for a job, and some kind of conviction that might make a difference to that employer shows up on a background check, the mere fact that he or she did\u00a0 or didn\u2019t go to jail isn\u2019t going to matter. Let me explain\u2026.<\/p>\n

Say Light-fingered Larry was working at a department store. One day, he helped himself to a few pairs of jeans. The store found out, fired Larry, and reported this to the police. Larry was charged with misdemeanor embezzlement. His lawyer wasn\u2019t too sharp, so although he didn\u2019t go to jail, Larry wound up with a conviction for embezzlement on his record.<\/p>\n

Now, he\u2019s interviewing a sales position at Honest Abe\u2019s Appliances. Once they check his record and see his embezzlement conviction, it\u2019s game over for Larry. Do you think that anyone cares that he didn\u2019t<\/strong>\u00a0go to jail for his embezzlement<\/a> offense? In fact, he\u2019d be far better off if he DID serve some time in jail, but then had nothing wind up on his record.<\/p>\n

I\u2019ve said this in passing before: A good lawyer has a good plan; a great lawyer has a better plan. That\u2019s not to say there is some secret strategy known only to a special group of criminal attorneys<\/a>. Instead, a lawyer has to begin work in a criminal case with the primary intention of keeping the client\u2019s record completely clean.<\/p>\n

If that can\u2019t be done, then it is imperative to keep it as clean as possible<\/em>, and minimize anything that does go on it. This applies to everyone, no matter what the charge(s) he or she is facing.<\/p>\n

This is particularly important to anyone with a professional license<\/a>, or who has an employer that requires reporting a criminal conviction. It also applies to anyone whose employer will run a background check. In most instances, just being charged with an offense doesn\u2019t count. Instead, it\u2019s the conviction that matters.<\/p>\n

There are, of course, all kinds of things that can and must be done to properly handle a criminal case. First and foremost, every shred of the evidence<\/a> must be carefully evaluated to see if there is a way out of the charge. One of the biggest mistakes some lawyers make is to just \u201clook things over.\u201d Essentially, that means the attorney is doing a cursory review to see if anything \u201cjumps out.\u201d<\/p>\n

That\u2019s not good enough<\/em>.<\/p>\n

When dealing with a criminal case, the lawyer needs to put the evidence under the proverbial microscope. He or she must go over it with a fine-tooth comb. The defense attorney must begin evaluating it with the mindset that there IS something wrong, either with the evidence itself, or how it was obtained.<\/p>\n

To be sure, that won\u2019t change the facts that do exist. Whatever is there is there, but by undertaking such a careful analysis, my team and I often find smaller things that might otherwise be overlooked. Maybe none of those smaller things, standing alone, is enough to get a case thrown out, but when taken together, they can add up in helpful ways.<\/p>\n

Ultimately, if a lawyer can\u2019t get a criminal case dismissed outright, then he or she has to work things over to produce the very best result possible. In the context of our discussion here, that means protecting the client’s record and keeping it as clean as possible. Whatever else, success in any criminal case is best measured by what does NOT happen to you.<\/p>\n

Of course, sometimes the evidence is clear, and strong, and there is no way to just get the whole criminal case tossed out of court. Although we could go over a million examples, here are a few of the more common ways we can successfully resolve such situations:<\/p>\n