Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 17, 2026 |
Expungement in El Dorado County can help people move forward after completing probation, finishing a sentence, or resolving an old conviction that still appears in background checks. A nurse in El Dorado Hills, a South Lake Tahoe hospitality worker, a construction employee with an old DUI, or a p...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 17, 2026 |
Sex Offender Registration in Butte County affects far more than a person's criminal record. Penal Code section 290 can affect housing, employment, travel, education, family life, community visibility, and the risk of a new criminal charge for an alleged registration mistake. For people living in ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 17, 2026 |
Juvenile Charges in Butte County can change quickly in the first 48 hours after a minor is cited, arrested, taken to juvenile hall, or contacted by probation. Those first decisions can affect whether the child goes home, whether a petition is filed under Welfare and Institutions Code section 602,...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 17, 2026 |
Manslaughter Charges in Butte County can arise from a fatal crash on Highway 99, a boating or recreation death on the Feather River, a confrontation in Chico or Oroville, a construction-site tragedy during the Paradise rebuild, or a domestic incident where prosecutors do not allege murder but sti...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 17, 2026 |
Title IX and CSU Chico cases can move quickly, even when a related criminal investigation is still developing. A student, faculty member, staff member, athlete, fraternity member, graduate applicant, or employee may face a campus complaint, interim restrictions, witness interviews, digital eviden...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 17, 2026 |
Camp Fire-Related Criminal Cases in Butte County require more than a generic criminal defense strategy. The 2018 Camp Fire destroyed thousands of homes and businesses across Paradise, Concow, Magalia, and surrounding communities. The years that followed produced insurance claims, contractor relat...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 16, 2026 |
Hit and Run in Butte County: VC § 20001, the Knowledge Element, and Three Different Moments
Hit and Run in Butte County can come from very different moments: a Highway 99 collision in tule fog, a parking-lot scrape in Gridley, a serious injury crash near Chico or Oroville, or a con...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 16, 2026 |
Sex Crime Charges in Butte County can affect a person's liberty, reputation, housing, employment, immigration status, education, and future registration duties long before a case reaches trial. A charge involving Penal Code section 288, sexual battery, assault with intent to commit a sexual offen...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 16, 2026 |
Burglary in Butte County often turns on one question before any other: was the structure inhabited at the time of entry? Under California Penal Code section 459, burglary is not limited to breaking a lock or stealing property. A person can be charged if prosecutors claim the person entered a cove...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 16, 2026 |
Grand Theft in Butte County often turns on value, intent, and context. A PC § 487 case involving rice, almonds, walnuts, peaches, livestock, farm equipment, catalytic converters, retail property, or a Paradise Camp Fire-related insurance dispute should not be treated like a generic theft case. Th...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 16, 2026 |
DUI in Butte County can begin with a downtown Chico stop after a CSU Chico night out, a Highway 99 traffic stop, a Lake Oroville recreation weekend, a Paradise Skyway commute, or a late-night arrest in Oroville, Gridley, Biggs, or another Butte County community. A misdemeanor DUI under Vehicle Co...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 15, 2026 |
Crypto Insider Trading can become a legal risk when someone trades, tips, promotes, or positions around material nonpublic information involving a token, exchange listing, protocol upgrade, airdrop, exploit, enforcement action, market-making plan, treasury sale, partnership, merger, token unlock,...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 15, 2026 |
Drug Possession in Butte County: HS § 11350, Highway 99, and PC 1000 Diversion for CSU Chico Students
Drug Possession in Butte County can move quickly from a Highway 99 stop to a court date, a student conduct issue, a professional licensing concern, or an immigration worry. For CSU Chico student...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 15, 2026 |
Assault and Battery in Butte County cases often begin with fast-moving facts: a bar fight near CSU Chico, a parking lot confrontation in Oroville, a family dispute in Gridley, a Paradise rebuild community conflict, or a student housing incident that turns into a police report. California law sepa...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 15, 2026 |
Domestic Violence in Butte County is often prosecuted from the evidence collected at the scene: 911 recordings, body camera footage, injury photographs, officer observations, emergency protective orders, statements from neighbors, and statements made in the first minutes after police arrive. A la...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 15, 2026 |
Robbery Charges in Butte County are prosecuted under Penal Code § 211 when the government claims that property was taken from another person, or from the person's immediate presence, against that person's will, by force or fear. Unlike shoplifting or many theft offenses affected by Proposition 47...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 15, 2026 |
Drug Sales in Butte County are prosecuted aggressively when officers claim that controlled substances were possessed, packaged, transported, or exchanged for sale. Proposition 47 changed many simple possession cases in California, but it did not turn possession for sale under Health and Safety Co...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 12, 2026 |
Token Airdrops and U.S. Law can create serious tax, securities, fraud, anti-money laundering, sanctions, and enforcement issues for founders, protocols, exchanges, promoters, investors, and recipients. An airdrop may look “free,” but U.S. regulators may treat the token distribution as taxable inc...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 12, 2026 |
Burglary in Amador County is charged under Penal Code § 459 when prosecutors claim a person entered a home, business, room, shop, vehicle, winery building, historic property, or other structure with the intent to commit theft or another felony inside. The entry does not have to involve breaking a...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 12, 2026 |
Sex Crime Charges in Amador County can change a person's life before the first court date. Allegations involving Penal Code § 288, internet communications, sexual assault, child exploitation, custody disputes, or conduct connected to Mule Creek State Prison can trigger arrest, protective orders, ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 12, 2026 |
Expungement in Amador County can help eligible people move forward after a conviction, but California expungement is not a complete erasure of the past. Under Penal Code § 1203.4, the court may allow a person to withdraw a guilty or no contest plea, or set aside a guilty verdict, enter a not guil...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 12, 2026 |
Assault and Battery in Amador County can begin with a bar argument in Jackson, a confrontation in Sutter Creek's historic downtown, a workplace dispute in Plymouth's winery community, a family conflict, a road-rage allegation, or an off-duty incident involving a Mule Creek State Prison employee. ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 12, 2026 |
Grand Theft in Amador County can arise from allegations involving wine grapes in Plymouth's Shenandoah Valley, ranch equipment, cattle, vehicles, catalytic converters, employer property, wage disputes, identity documents, or mining activity along the historic Mother Lode. Under Penal Code § 487, ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 12, 2026 |
Criminal Threats in Amador County are prosecuted under Penal Code § 422 when the government claims that words, texts, voicemails, social media messages, or other communications crossed the line from protected expression into a true threat of death or great bodily injury. A heated argument in Jack...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 11, 2026 |
Restraining Order Violations in Amador County are prosecuted under Penal Code § 273.6 when the government alleges that a person knowingly and willfully violated a valid court order. These cases can begin with a text message, phone call, social media post, accidental encounter in a small community...