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Austin Federal Criminal Defense Lawyers

Last Updated on: 19th April 2025, 01:00 am

AUSTIN FEDERAL CRIMINAL DEFENSE LAWYERS

We are Spodek Law Group, we are nationwide, and we show up in Austin because federal charges here are rising daily, sometimes hourly, and if you wait, you bleed leverage. You found this page for a reason—someone thinks you broke a federal statute, that means a grand jury could already be working, the U.S. Attorney might be drafting an indictment, and the window for quiet damage control keeps shrinking every time you refresh your inbox. Ignore that reality, and the next knock on the door might be U.S. Marshals holding an arrest warrant. Silence is an option, but silence, in practice, is surrender, so choose differently.

Why Austin matters, yet feels underestimated

Austin sits inside the Western District of Texas, the courthouse at 501 West Fifth Street works six days a week, and sometimes seventh, because the docket is overflowing with narcotics conspiracies, wire‑fraud rings, immigration‑related felonies, and emerging cybercrime. Prosecutors here bring cases that stretch from the Rio Grande, into tech campuses, up through Dallas money‑laundering corridors, so venue jumps between divisions, venue fights therefore become tactical, and losing that skirmish means driving three hours to plead guilty instead of five minutes to fight a suppression motion. Small geography error, large strategic consequence. Understand the map, or the map buries you.

Common federal charges in Austin, and the punishment gaps most defendants ignore

Drug Trafficking (21 U.S.C. § 841) lands first because DEA task‑forces here coordinate with DPS troopers on I‑35, they seize kilos, then they stack enhancements for firearms and “manager roles.” Mandatory minimums start at five years, jump to ten with prior convictions, and judges, bound by Sentencing Guidelines, rarely slide below unless safety‑valve applies. Miss the safety‑valve paperwork, and you serve decade‑length terms—no parole in the federal system, only good‑time credits that shave 54 days per year, so mis‑calculating time means seeing children grow up through glass.

Wire Fraud (18 U.S.C. § 1343) feels “white‑collar,” yet carries potential penalties up to 20 years; add aggravated identity theft under § 1028A, and two extra, mandatory, consecutive years appear. One click in QuickBooks that looks like misclassification, and suddenly agents claim “scheme to defraud” worth $3 million, guideline level rockets, restitution follows, assets freeze, and bank accounts close before you even know an investigation existed. Pretending bookkeeping errors fix themselves is delusional; hire forensic accountants before the indictment, or figures hard‑wire in the plea agreement.

Money Laundering (18 U.S.C. § 1956) stacks on top of underlying crimes, doubles exposure, permits forfeiture actions, and prosecutors love it because juries, frankly, hate “dirty money,” they convict fast, and sentences climb when “sophisticated means” or “bulk‑cash smuggling” tags appear. Consequence: property—homes, crypto wallets, brokerage accounts—gets seized before verdict under civil‑forfeiture theories, so by the time you mount a defense your war‑chest vanished. That financial starvation is deliberate prosecutorial pressure; counter by filing hardship petitions early, or the case starves you instead.

Immigration Offenses (8 U.S.C. § 1326, illegal re‑entry) dominate Austin’s docket because ICE funnels Central‑Texas arrests here. Sentences hinge on prior removals and prior violent‑felony convictions. Level 24 after adjustments sometimes means four years for simply returning to feed family. Mitigation packets, built with social‑history experts, humanize the narrative and shave months, maybe years. Skip that, accept boilerplate plea, watch calendar pages fall slowly, painfully, in FCI Big Spring.

Cybercrime (18 U.S.C. § 1030), often “computer intrusion,” now includes cryptocurrency‑hacking and ransomware, handled by FBI Austin Cyber Task Force. Loss calculations balloon because agents count “customer‑data resale value,” figures explode into eight digits, guidelines become life‑sentence equivalents. Early engagement with digital‑forensics consultants challenges loss methodology; if you dispute numbers late, judges suspect stalling, increase obstruction points, and you hurt your own credibility. Delay equals harsher math.

Process timeline, imperfect but brutally real

1. Investigation: It begins quiet, subpoenas to banks, grand‑jury witness letters—ignorance here breeds disaster. Engage counsel, demand preservation of exculpatory evidence, or servers get overwritten, and you lose leverage.
2. Target Letter: The U.S. Attorney openly brands you a target, which means indictment is “probable.” React by producing a defense proffer, sometimes that derails charges; ignore it, and indictment follows, almost guaranteed.
3. Indictment & Arrest: Marshals arrest, initial appearance happens within 72 hours, magistrate sets detention or bond. If assets seized, you cannot post bond, so planning liquidity ahead is survival.
4. Discovery: Gigabytes drop via USAfx, often disorganized, deadlines short. Failure to process metadata means exculpatory chat logs hide in plain sight, lost.
5. Motions: File to suppress statements if Miranda violated, file Franks motions to attack search‑warrant affidavits. Win one motion, evidence collapses, prosecution recalibrates. Lose all, trial odds drop, plea leverage dies.
6. Plea or Trial: 97 percent plead. Trial is reserved for when guidelines exceed risk tolerance or when proof shockingly weak. Choose wrong path, face decades, no rewind.

Defense strategies we deploy, and the traps we refuse to tolerate

Pre‑Indictment Intervention works because evidence still liquid, narratives still malleable. We present compliance‑overhaul memos, show voluntary restitution payments, signal acceptance of responsibility without admissions. Outcome: felony charges sometimes drop to informations, sentences drop below guidelines. Delay this step, and the only story jurors hear is the prosecutor’s.

Venue Challenges: Western District spans Waco, Austin, San Antonio, El Paso. We file Rule 18 motions to move trial to divisions where jury pool leans less punitive; even a subtle demographic shift can drop conviction odds several points, which prosecutors hate because it weakens plea leverage. Failing to contest venue is free advantage wasted.

Expert‑Driven Counter‑Narratives: Cybercrime cases—deploy blockchain‑tracing experts to show “tainted” coins never touched your address. Drug conspiracy—biostatisticians break DEA phone‑mapping, show contact frequency innocent. White‑collar—economists rebut inflated loss. Hire cheap experts, lose cross‑examination, jury laughs, verdict guilty. Quality matters, cost up‑front is lower than decades in prison later.

Sentencing Mitigation: Judges in Austin respect § 3553(a) factors. We build packages: trauma evaluations, neuropsych testing, letters from employers, proof of community service. Each document shifts narrative from “greedy defendant” to “flawed human,” then sentences fall below guideline ranges. Skip mitigation, rely on lawyer whim, and court sees cardboard cut‑out—sentence stays high, life plans implode.

Table — State charges vs Federal charges, because confusion costs freedom

Dimension Texas State Federal Austin
Investigators APD, DPS Rangers FBI, DEA, IRS‑CI, HSI
Plea Bargain Flexibility Wide judge discretion Guidelines limit judges, mandatory minima apply
Parole Eligibility Yes, after fraction of term No parole, only supervised release
Discovery Volume Often moderate Terabytes, complex forensic data
Asset Forfeiture Requires conviction Can precede indictment under civil statutes

Study the table, spot the leverage delta, then exploit it, otherwise the system exploits you.

Brutally honest advisory — gaps that ruin most defendants before trial even starts

Gap 1 — Self‑Incrimination in “informal chats.” You keep talking to co‑workers, ex‑partners, or worse, federal agents without counsel, because you “have nothing to hide.” Reality: prosecutors weaponize every word, twist context, and introduce it as “admission of consciousness of guilt.” Stop speaking, start strategizing, or you dig your own digital grave.

Gap 2 — Cash‑flow denial. Defense costs, experts, investigators, pre‑trial electronic‑monitoring deposits—money bleeds faster than you predict. Clients postpone liquidity planning, then discover bank accounts frozen under a § 853 freeze order. Solution: shift liquid assets into exempt retirement plans early, create documented living‑expense funds, and retain counsel via irrevocable retainer. Ignore finances, and the defense you want becomes defense you cannot pay.

Gap 3 — Emotional paralysis. Indictments trigger shame, your family panics, you hide details, then depression sets in, and decision‑making quality collapses. That emotional spiral causes missed deadlines, weak proffer prep, and sentencing judges feel zero sympathy for self‑victimization. Hire therapists experienced with criminal‑defense clients, schedule weekly sessions, keep decision‑process sane, because juries notice composure, and composure convinces.

Gap 4 — Lawyer shopping by cheapest quote. Federal court frightens general practitioners; they low‑ball retainers to sign cases, then drown under discovery, file late motions, miss critical Rule 12 deadlines, and you pay with liberty. Vet counsel: ask how many federal jury trials they ran in past five years, ask average guideline reductions achieved, ask for written trial calendar. If answers waffle, walk away.

Our philosophy, no false politeness

We accept clients selectively, because bandwidth equals performance. If we take you, we commit. We operate a digital client portal, upload discovery, invoices, mitigation drafts, so you track progress daily, not monthly. We work nationwide, yet maintain local Austin counsel-of‑record when venue demands, ensuring courtroom familiarity while preserving our strategic design. You get synergy of national resources and local nuance; you pay premium, but premium prevents prison. Choose cut‑rate, pay later with birthdays lost inside a BOP facility.

Case snap‑shots, imperfect headlines that still instruct

“Senior‑care owner cleared of health‑care fraud.” We dismantled $6 million loss claim by hiring a clinical‑coding expert who proved Medicare’s own manuals contradicted agent calculations. Loss fell below $1 million, client received probation, not prison. Miss that nuance, expect 41–51 months custody.

“Software engineer accused of crypto‑laundering gets dismissal.” Venue challenge forced transfer from Austin to Northern District of California; new prosecutors lost forensic witness, indictment dismissed for Speedy Trial violation. Delay strategy, executed correctly, liberated client. Attempt same tactic without relentless calendaring, case likely survives.

Penalties, collateral damage, and why early mitigation is non‑negotiable

Conviction brings fines up to $250,000 per count, or twice the gross gain, whichever higher; restitution attaches jointly and severally, wages garnished, passports revoked under 22 C.F.R. 51.60, professional licenses suspended automatically, and supervised release conditions ban certain employment categories. Consequence: careers collapse, housing loan approvals vanish, immigration visas canceled, and children’s college financial‑aid forms flag “parent incarcerated.” Every legal choice today echoes for decades, so treat each hearing like an investment committee meeting—you vet data, you model downside, you decide deliberately.

Frequently, imperfectly, asked questions

Q: If evidence was seized without a warrant, will it be thrown out?
A: Possibly, and if suppression succeeds, prosecution often loses key proof, then plea offers improve, or dismissal surfaces, yet win rates hinge on rapid scene‑inspection, affidavit analysis, and filing motions before Rule 12 deadlines; miss deadline, motion dies, evidence stays.

Q: Should I talk to media?
A: Rarely. Public statements satisfy ego, but anything you say becomes potential impeachment material, prosecutors love that. We control narrative through pleadings, not press sound‑bites. Violate that, expect blown plea negotiations.

Q: Can cooperating guarantee probation?
A: No. Substantial‑assistance motions under § 5K1.1 lower guidelines, yet ultimate sentence remains judicial discretion. We negotiate cooperation only when benefit outweighs retaliation risks; naïve cooperation creates enemies, sometimes lethal, inside prison yards.

Your next action, because reading without execution is worthless

1. Inventory every device, account, and document remotely connected to allegations, preserve them, because destroyed evidence becomes obstruction charge.
2. Schedule a risk‑free consultation with us within 24 hours—delay means forfeiture restraints tighten.
3. Compile financial statements, including retirement accounts; we plan funding strategies before prosecutors freeze liquidity.
4. Stop unprotected communication about the case; route all calls through counsel; metadata sinks cases.
5. Decide whether you fight or fold. Indecision equals paralysis, and paralysis equals conviction.

Contact Spodek Law Group — we answer 24/7

Call 888‑997‑5177 or use our encrypted portal link sent upon request. We respond fast, because speed wins.

Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information, not specific legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney‑client relationship. Every case differs; consult qualified counsel licensed in your jurisdiction before acting. Some links direct to government resources for reference; we do not control external content or guarantee its accuracy.

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Todd Spodek

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ELIZABETH GARVEY

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CLAIRE BANKS

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RAJESH BARUA

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CHAD LEWIN

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