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 ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 30, 2026 |
Grand Theft in Trinity County cases often turn on valuation, location, and intent. Under California Penal Code 487, theft can be charged as grand theft when the value of the property, money, labor, or real property taken exceeds $950, or when specific categories of property are involved, such as ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 29, 2026 |
Lost Crypto After Sending to the Wrong Wallet Address can feel unrecoverable because blockchain transactions are usually difficult or impossible to reverse once confirmed. But the legal answer depends on what happened, who controls the receiving wallet, whether an exchange or platform is involved...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 29, 2026 |
Federal Charges in Trinity County often begin with one question: did the alleged conduct happen on federal land? In a county where Shasta-Trinity National Forest covers large areas of remote mountain terrain, the answer can move a case from Trinity County Superior Court in Weaverville to federal ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 29, 2026 |
Cannabis Charges in Trinity County require a defense that starts with location, licensing, and jurisdiction. A cannabis case on private land in Trinity County may be handled under California law at the courthouse in Weaverville. A grow on Shasta-Trinity National Forest land may become a federal c...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 29, 2026 |
Domestic Violence in Trinity County cases are shaped by California law, but they are also shaped by Trinity County's geography, small population, remote properties, and tight community networks. A PC 273.5 arrest in Weaverville, Hayfork, Lewiston, Douglas City, or a remote mountain property can q...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 28, 2026 |
DUI in Amador County often begins with a local pattern: wine tasting along Highway 49, a Sierra recreation drive on Highway 88, an off-duty arrest involving the Mule Creek correctional officer community, or a summer boating stop on Amador County waterways. The charge may look routine at first, bu...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 28, 2026 |
Drug Possession in Amador County cases often begin with a traffic stop on Highway 49, a search near Highway 88, an arrest in Jackson or Sutter Creek, or a law enforcement contact in the eastern backcountry. A simple possession charge under Health and Safety Code section 11350 may be a misdemeanor...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 28, 2026 |
Crypto Wallet Drainers are malicious tools that trick a victim into approving a transaction, signing a message, or connecting a wallet to a fraudulent decentralized application. Once the victim authorizes the interaction, the attacker may use that approval to transfer tokens, NFTs, stablecoins, o...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 27, 2026 |
A crypto recovery scam is a follow-on fraud that targets people who have already lost cryptocurrency to theft, fake exchanges, pig butchering schemes, SIM swaps, DeFi exploits, or investment scams. The second scam often feels more convincing than the first because the victim is already searching ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 27, 2026 |
Robbery Charges in Amador County are felony cases with consequences that can reach far beyond jail or prison exposure. A PC § 211 conviction can create a California strike, limit custody credits, affect immigration status, threaten peace officer employment, and turn a low-value retail theft alleg...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 27, 2026 |
Robbery Charges in Yuba County: PC § 211, Permanent Strikes, and the Estes Trap in Marysville
Robbery charges in Yuba County are serious felony allegations that can carry prison exposure, strike consequences, immigration risks, military career consequences, and long-term employment damage. Under...
Posted by Bulldog Law | May 26, 2026 |
Fake crypto exchange scams are fraudulent platforms that imitate legitimate cryptocurrency exchanges, trading dashboards, wallet portals, or investment apps to trick victims into depositing digital assets or cash. These schemes often show fake profits, block withdrawals, demand additional payment...
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...