Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 05, 2026 |
Crypto Pump and Dump Schemes can turn a token launch, meme coin promotion, trading group, influencer campaign, or private Discord chat into a federal investigation. The core allegation is usually simple: insiders or promoters hyped a digital asset, helped inflate the price, and then sold into the...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 05, 2026 |
Drug Possession in Yuba County under Health and Safety Code 11350 can begin with a CHP stop on Highway 20 or Highway 70, a probation contact in Marysville, a search near Wheatland, a Beale AFB-related investigation, or a passenger-side discovery during a traffic stop. Even a small quantity of a c...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 04, 2026 |
DUI in Yuba County can begin with a CHP stop on Highway 20 or Highway 70, a late-night drive through Marysville, a stop near Beale Air Force Base, or a boating investigation on the Feather River or Englebright Lake. A first-time DUI may look routine at first, but it can create court deadlines, DM...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 04, 2026 |
Grand Theft in Yolo County under Penal Code 487 can depend on one question that sounds simple but often decides the entire case: what was the property actually worth at the time of the taking? In Yolo County, that question can involve Woodland tomatoes, almonds, sunflower crops, West Sacramento P...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 04, 2026 |
Assault and Battery in Yolo County can begin as a misdemeanor allegation after a fight, campus dispute, workplace confrontation, bar incident, family argument, or self-defense situation. The case can become much more serious if prosecutors claim the conduct involved a deadly weapon, force likely ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 04, 2026 |
Drug Possession in Yolo County under Health and Safety Code 11350 can start with a traffic stop on I-80, a search near UC Davis, a probation contact in Woodland, a call in West Sacramento, or a passenger-side discovery during a CHP investigation. A small quantity of a controlled substance can sti...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 04, 2026 |
Murder Charges in Yolo County are among the most serious cases a person can face in California. Under Penal Code 187, murder is the unlawful killing of a human being, or fetus, with malice aforethought. That single phrase, malice aforethought, often becomes the center of the defense.
A Yolo Coun...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 03, 2026 |
Crypto Wire Fraud Charges can arise when federal prosecutors claim that digital assets, wallets, exchanges, smart contracts, websites, emails, social media messages, investor dashboards, or online transfers were used to carry out a scheme to defraud. These cases often involve Bitcoin, Ethereum, s...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 03, 2026 |
Restraining Order Violations in Yolo County can turn one text message, one campus encounter, one third-party warning, one social media reaction, or one accidental-looking appearance into a new criminal case. Under Penal Code 273.6, prosecutors must prove a knowing and intentional violation of a v...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 03, 2026 |
Hit and Run in Yolo County cases under Vehicle Code 20001 often turn on three different moments: what the driver knew at the moment of impact, what the driver knew or reasonably should have known about injury, and what the driver did after leaving or stopping. Those moments can decide whether the...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 02, 2026 |
Sex Crime Charges in Yolo County can create immediate criminal, immigration, school, family, employment, and registration consequences. A case involving Penal Code 288, sexual battery, digital communications, alleged contact with a minor, a UC Davis proceeding, or a custody dispute must be handle...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 02, 2026 |
DUI in Yolo County cases often begin with a traffic stop on I-80, Highway 113, Highway 16, downtown Davis, West Sacramento, Woodland, or rural agricultural roads. A charge under Vehicle Code 23152 can involve alcohol, drugs, a combination of both, a chemical test result, officer observations, fie...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 02, 2026 |
Robbery Charges in Yolo County can turn a fast-moving confrontation into a permanent strike case. Under California Penal Code 211, robbery is the felonious taking of personal property from another person or that person's immediate presence, against the person's will, accomplished by force or fear...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 02, 2026 |
Weapons Charges in Yolo County can arise from traffic stops on I-80, firearm transport mistakes near Cache Creek hunting areas, West Sacramento industrial work commutes, Davis student incidents, Woodland agricultural employment, or a prior conviction that makes firearm possession legally dangerou...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 02, 2026 |
Domestic Violence in Yolo County cases can move forward even when the alleged victim later does not want prosecution. Police reports, 911 recordings, body camera footage, injury photographs, medical records, witness statements, and officer observations may become the foundation of the case. The c...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 01, 2026 |
Crypto Money Laundering Charges can arise when prosecutors claim that digital assets were moved, swapped, bridged, converted, mixed, or cashed out to hide criminal proceeds, promote unlawful activity, avoid reporting rules, or disguise ownership and control. These cases often involve Bitcoin, Eth...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 01, 2026 |
Burglary in Yolo County cases often turn on one issue before anything else: what type of structure did the person enter? Under California Penal Code 459, burglary generally requires entry into a building, room, vehicle, or other covered structure with the intent to commit theft or another felony ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 01, 2026 |
Juvenile Charges in Yolo County can move quickly after an arrest, citation, school incident, or police contact. The first 48 hours can shape whether a child is released home, detained, referred to diversion, placed on informal supervision, or formally charged through a Welfare and Institutions Co...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Jun 01, 2026 |
Expungement in Yolo County can help people move forward after a conviction, especially when an old case is blocking employment, professional licensing, school applications, housing, immigration discretion, or career advancement. Under Penal Code 1203.4, eligible defendants may ask the court to se...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 31, 2026 |
What Happens When the Government Seizes Bitcoin in a Criminal Case? The short answer is that the Bitcoin may be frozen, transferred, held as evidence, restrained for forfeiture, sold with court approval, returned to a rightful owner, applied toward restitution, or permanently forfeited to the gov...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 30, 2026 |
Can Police or Federal Agents Seize Your Cryptocurrency? In some cases, yes. Local police, federal agents, and prosecutors may seize or freeze cryptocurrency when they claim the assets are evidence, criminal proceeds, property used in a crime, or property subject to forfeiture.
A seizure does not...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 30, 2026 |
White Collar and Fraud Charges in Yolo County often turn on documents, authorizations, accounting records, emails, contracts, invoices, grant files, payroll entries, and digital access logs. A case may begin as a billing dispute, employment issue, research compliance question, family account conf...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 30, 2026 |
Assault and Battery in Trinity County cases often turn on context. A fight outside a Weaverville business, a mining claim dispute near the Trinity River, a logging crew confrontation, a cannabis property security incident, or a family argument on a remote road can all lead to charges under Penal ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 30, 2026 |
DUI in Trinity County cases are shaped by California Vehicle Code 23152, but they are also shaped by Highway 299, mountain roads, remote properties, Trinity Lake, timber work, cannabis community gatherings, and the small-county court process in Weaverville. A DUI arrest near the Shasta County lin...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 30, 2026 |
Expungement in Trinity County can help people move forward after completing probation, especially in a small county where a conviction can affect work, licensing, family reputation, and community standing long after the case ends. Under Penal Code 1203.4, eligible defendants can ask the court to ...