Posted by Bulldog Law | May 26, 2026 |
Drug trafficking in Yolo County often turns on what happened during a vehicle stop on Interstate 80 and whether prosecutors can prove transportation for sale under California Health and Safety Code section 11352. Because Yolo County sits between the Bay Area and Sacramento, law enforcement may tr...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 26, 2026 |
Drug possession in Trinity County often begins with a roadside contact on Highway 299, a county road, or a remote property near state or federal land. When prosecutors file a Health and Safety Code section 11350 case, the defense should not focus only on the substance. It should also examine why ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 25, 2026 |
SIM swap crypto theft happens when a criminal hijacks a victim's mobile phone number, uses that number to bypass account security, and then drains cryptocurrency from exchanges, wallets, lending platforms, DeFi accounts, or connected financial accounts. For California victims, the key legal quest...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 25, 2026 |
Drug Sales in Yolo County are prosecuted differently from simple possession cases. A person accused of possessing drugs for personal use may face one set of defenses and consequences, while a person accused of possessing drugs for sale under Health and Safety Code § 11351 faces felony exposure, i...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 25, 2026 |
Manslaughter Charges in Trinity County can arise from fatal crashes on Highway 299, boating incidents on Trinity Lake, logging and timber operations, hunting-related accidents, and remote mountain confrontations. These cases are serious because a death occurred, but manslaughter is not the same a...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 24, 2026 |
Pig butchering crypto scams are long-form investment fraud schemes where criminals build trust over time, persuade victims to invest through fake crypto platforms, show false profits, and then block withdrawals or demand more payments. For California victims, the legal response should begin quick...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 24, 2026 |
Weapons Charges in Trinity County often arise from facts that look different from urban firearms cases. A rifle in a truck during hunting season, a handgun on a remote homestead road, a firearm found during a Highway 299 stop, or a weapon discovered near Shasta-Trinity National Forest land can al...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 23, 2026 |
Recover stolen cryptocurrency efforts should begin immediately after a wallet drain, exchange hack, phishing attack, fake investment platform, SIM swap, seed phrase compromise, or romance-related crypto scam. Crypto transfers can move quickly across wallets, bridges, mixers, decentralized exchang...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 22, 2026 |
DeFi tax reporting is one of the most difficult areas of crypto tax compliance because decentralized finance transactions often combine trading, income, lending, staking, wrapping, and smart contract activity in a single wallet history. California crypto investors may use a decentralized exchange...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 21, 2026 |
Staking rewards tax questions are becoming more common as California crypto investors earn rewards through proof-of-stake networks, exchanges, liquid staking protocols, and decentralized finance platforms. The general federal rule is that staking rewards are taxable when you receive rewards and h...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 21, 2026 |
Crypto tax audit defense starts before you send anything to the IRS. If you receive an IRS letter about Bitcoin, Ethereum, NFTs, DeFi transactions, staking rewards, exchange activity, or unreported digital asset income, your first response can shape the entire case. A notice does not always me...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 21, 2026 |
Felony DUI in Yolo County often begins as a traffic collision, not as a routine DUI stop. When alcohol or drugs are alleged and another person is injured, prosecutors may file charges under California Vehicle Code § 23153. That changes the case from a standard misdemeanor DUI into a much more ser...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 21, 2026 |
Manslaughter Charges in Yolo County can arise from fatal crashes on I-80, boating or vessel incidents on Cache Creek, agricultural freight accidents, intoxication-related collisions, and serious confrontations in Woodland, Davis, West Sacramento, Winters, and surrounding communities. These cases ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 20, 2026 |
How to report cryptocurrency losses is an important question for investors who sold, traded, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of digital assets at a loss. A drop in market value alone is usually not enough. For tax purposes, the loss generally matters when there is a taxable disposition, such as ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
Crypto Taxes in 2026: What Investors Need to Know Before Filing
Crypto taxes in 2026 are more visible, more document-driven, and more likely to create IRS questions for investors who traded, sold, earned, spent, or exchanged digital assets during the tax year. For California taxpayers, the issue...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
There is a Red Bluff rancher whose CDL and a DUI conviction from seven years ago probation completed five years back keeps surfacing in the agricultural transport company's background check every time a lead driver position opens up. There is a Corning olive industry worker who completed a drug d...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
Tehama County's no-drop domestic violence prosecution policy places charging authority with the DA, not the alleged victim. When Red Bluff PD, Corning PD, or Tehama County Sheriff deputies respond to a DV call and document injuries, the 911 recording, body camera footage, and statements made befo...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
The defense objective in every Tehama County drug sales case is the same: challenge the upgrade from simple possession to possession for sale. Reduce from HS § 11351 to HS § 11350 and Prop 47's misdemeanor framework returns. PC 1000 diversion eligibility returns. For Corning's H-2A agricultural w...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
California's PC § 25400 concealed carry prohibition and PC § 25850 loaded firearm prohibition apply uniformly throughout Tehama County on I-5 through Red Bluff, on the county roads connecting ranch properties north of Corning, on the access roads to the Tehama Wildlife Area, and on every Californ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
Form 1099-DA: Crypto Tax Reporting Rules Explained
Form 1099-DA is the IRS information return for digital asset proceeds from broker transactions. For crypto investors, NFT sellers, payment users, founders, and California taxpayers, the form can affect how sales, exchanges, redemptions, and cert...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
PC § 192: I-5 Watson CDL Upgrade Risk for Tehama County's Agricultural Freight Workforce, Sacramento River Boating Vehicular Defense Under VC § 192.5, Red Bluff's Extreme Summer Heat Gross Negligence Challenge, and the Ranching Community Confrontation Context That Builds Voluntary Manslaughter Re...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
Red Bluff holds a distinction that shapes every summer DUI case in Tehama County: it is one of the hottest cities in California, with average July temperatures exceeding 100 degrees Fahrenheit and frequent days above 110 degrees. When CHP Tehama Area administers field sobriety tests on an I-5 sho...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
HS § 11350 After Proposition 47: The I-5 Stop Challenge, the Upgrade Risk in an Active Enforcement Corridor, and Why PC 1000 Diversion Matters More in a County of 65,000 People Than Most Defendants Initially Understand
Three questions determine every drug possession case in Tehama County, as the...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
Simple battery under PC § 242 is a misdemeanor up to six months, no strike, manageable consequences. PC § 245 assault with a deadly weapon or force likely to produce great bodily injury is a wobbler carrying up to four years as a felony and a permanent serious felony strike. The escalation from o...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 19, 2026 |
Tehama County's grand theft cases arise from an unusual economic range from the olive and almond processing operations that define Corning's agricultural identity to the cattle auction market at the Red Bluff Bull and Gelding Sale that defines the county seat's ranching economy. The legal standar...