Lewis & Ashworth, PLLC

Resources for Professionals & Clients

Practical checklists, verified links, and DFW-specific guidance for attorneys, counselors, bail bondsmen, probation officers, and mental health providers who work alongside our clients—and for individuals navigating the Texas criminal justice system.

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Lewis & Ashworth are former prosecutors with 26+ combined years of experience and 250+ jury trials in the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex. The resources below are designed to make it easier for the professionals around our clients—and clients themselves—to navigate the Texas criminal justice system. Select your audience above or scroll to explore.

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Family, Civil & Other Practice-Area Attorneys

Criminal charges surface inside family law, probate, and civil matters every day. Here’s how to recognize when a shared client needs criminal defense counsel—and what to expect when you refer to Lewis & Ashworth.

When to Refer a Family Law Client

  • Client was arrested or charged while a family law case is pending
  • A protective order (EPO, MOEP, or final PO) was issued against your client
  • Opposing counsel is leveraging a criminal allegation in custody or divorce proceedings
  • Client has a prior record eligible for expunction or non-disclosure
  • Client received a grand jury subpoena or is under criminal investigation
  • Client made statements to police without counsel and needs immediate representation

Texas Statutes & Court Resources

When to Refer a Civil / Business Litigation Client

  • Client faces a parallel criminal investigation alongside the civil suit
  • Client received a target letter from a DA or federal prosecutor
  • Employees were arrested in connection with a white-collar investigation
  • Corporate records were seized by law enforcement
  • Client needs a Fifth Amendment assertion strategy during a civil deposition
  • Business partner or co-defendant faces embezzlement, fraud, or theft charges

DFW County Court Links

Referral Coordination

Lewis & Ashworth welcome co-counsel conversations and will communicate status updates with referring attorneys who have a signed authorization from the shared client. Same-day consultations available. Call 214-239-8007 or contact us online.

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Supporting Clients Through the Criminal Process

Treatment providers are often the first professionals a client contacts. Your documentation and testimony can materially affect bond hearings, plea negotiations, and sentencing outcomes.

How Treatment Providers Support a Criminal Defense

  1. Document treatment engagement promptly. A letter on clinical letterhead confirming enrollment, attendance, and progress is powerful mitigation evidence at bond hearings and plea negotiations.
  2. Understand court-mandated standards. Texas deferred adjudication for drug offenses often requires a CSATP-compliant assessment. Courts accept documentation meeting this standard.
  3. Support DWI program referrals. Courts frequently mandate a DWI Education Program or DWI Intervention Program. Knowing approved providers ensures client compliance.
  4. Protect confidentiality correctly. 42 CFR Part 2 governs substance abuse record confidentiality. Releases must be specifically worded. Lewis & Ashworth can provide a compliant release form.
  5. Coordinate with probation requirements. Clients on community supervision must meet treatment conditions. Communicate proactively with CSCD officers.

Referral Checklist: Client Facing Criminal Charges

  • Confirm client has retained or been appointed criminal defense counsel
  • Obtain a properly worded 42 CFR Part 2 release before sharing any records
  • Document the date treatment began—pre-charge enrollment is viewed more favorably
  • Prepare a progress letter (attendance, compliance, prognosis) if requested by defense counsel
  • Assess whether client meets criteria for drug court diversion referral
  • Flag any court-mandated treatment conditions to avoid probation violations
  • Be available to testify as a mitigation witness at sentencing if requested
Note: Texas offers Drug Court programs in Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, and Denton counties that may allow clients to complete intensive treatment in lieu of incarceration. Lewis & Ashworth can assess eligibility.

Key Resources for Texas Treatment Providers

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Protect Your Investment With Coordinated Representation

Clients with competent legal representation appear in court. Referring clients to experienced criminal defense counsel is one of the most effective risk-management tools a bondsman has.

Texas Bond Conditions: What Bondsmen Need to Know

  • Magistrate warnings: After arrest, a magistrate sets bond and attaches conditions—no-contact orders, GPS monitoring, substance testing. Know them before writing the bond.
  • PR bonds: Dallas and Tarrant county judges increasingly issue personal recognizance bonds. Monitor your pipeline for impact on premium revenue.
  • Forfeiture timelines: Texas CCP Art. 22.02 requires bond forfeiture the day of an FTA. You then have 180 days (the “scire facias” period) to locate and surrender the defendant before final judgment.
  • New arrest = bond revocation: A client arrested on new charges while on bond almost always has the original bond revoked. Notify defense counsel immediately.

Bail Bondsman Quick-Reference Checklist

  • Confirm defendant has retained criminal defense counsel before writing bond
  • Review magistrate’s bond order for all attached conditions
  • Verify next court date and confirm with defendant’s attorney
  • Obtain signed indemnitor agreement with current contact information
  • Set up automated court-date reminders (text/email) for defendant
  • Know the scire facias deadline — 180 days from FTA under TX CCP Art. 22.06
  • If client misses court, contact Lewis & Ashworth — attorneys can sometimes resolve FTAs before forfeiture is final
  • Know your licensing obligations under TX Occ. Code Ch. 1704

Texas Bail Bond Resources

Quick Referral Line

When a client needs criminal defense counsel immediately after release, call Lewis & Ashworth at 214-239-8007. Same-day consultations are available and attorneys can often appear at the initial hearing within 24 hours.

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Defense Counsel as a Partner in Supervision

When communication is clear and coordinated, outcomes improve for clients, officers, and the community. Lewis & Ashworth routinely work with CSCD offices throughout DFW to resolve compliance issues before they escalate to revocation.

How Defense Attorneys Support Supervision Caseloads

  • Defense counsel can reinforce conditions and legal obligations, reducing officer time on basic compliance calls.
  • Attorneys facilitate access to treatment, employment, and counseling resources that keep clients compliant and reduce recidivism.
  • When a violation is being considered, defense counsel can negotiate graduated sanctions (TX CCP Art. 42A.751) that avoid a full revocation hearing.
  • Lewis & Ashworth appear at CSCD hearings throughout DFW and can expedite scheduling when requested.
Graduated Sanctions: Texas CCP Art. 42A.751 allows courts to impose sanctions short of revocation for technical violations—increased reporting, curfew, electronic monitoring. Lewis & Ashworth pursue these options first in every violation case.

Community Supervision Violation: Defense Checklist

  • Client received notice of alleged violation — retain counsel immediately
  • Review original conditions of supervision order in full
  • Gather documentation of compliance in other conditions (payments, classes, service)
  • Contact treatment providers for progress letters on substance-related violations
  • Request a pre-hearing conference with supervising officer and CSCD supervisor
  • Assess graduated sanctions as an alternative to revocation
  • If client tested positive, confirm chain-of-custody and request lab confirmation
  • Prepare mitigation evidence for revocation hearing if warranted

Texas CSCD & Probation Resources

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Mental Health & Criminal Defense in the DFW Courtroom

Mental health professionals are increasingly vital partners in criminal defense. Lewis & Ashworth work with LPCs, LCSWs, psychologists, and psychiatrists at every stage of the criminal process.

How Providers Contribute to Criminal Cases

  1. Mitigation letters & reports: Clinical summaries documenting diagnosis, treatment history, and prognosis are powerful at sentencing and plea negotiations, especially for domestic violence, assault, and DWI cases.
  2. Competency evaluations: If you have concerns about a client’s ability to understand proceedings or assist in their defense, notify defense counsel immediately. Texas CCP Art. 46B governs incompetency proceedings.
  3. Insanity defense support: Expert testimony regarding a defendant’s mental state at the time of the offense can be the cornerstone of an affirmative insanity defense (TX Penal Code § 8.01).
  4. Diversion program advocacy: Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, and Denton counties all have mental health court or co-occurring disorder court programs. Providers can facilitate referrals and provide required clinical documentation.
  5. Probation compliance support: Progress letters and condition-compliance documentation directly affect violation outcomes.

Checklist: When a Patient is Involved in a Criminal Matter

  • Verify client has criminal defense counsel — if not, refer to Lewis & Ashworth immediately
  • Obtain a HIPAA-compliant release before communicating with any attorney
  • Document diagnosis and treatment timeline — pre-charge treatment is viewed more favorably
  • Assess for competency concerns and flag to defense counsel if present
  • Prepare a clinical mitigation report if requested (diagnosis, treatment, prognosis)
  • Assess eligibility for mental health court diversion program
  • Coordinate with probation officer if client is on community supervision
  • Be available to testify as expert or fact witness at sentencing or revocation hearings
Forensic Collaboration: Lewis & Ashworth regularly retain mental health experts for mitigation, competency, and insanity matters. Contact us to discuss our collaboration process.

Mental Health Resources for DFW Providers

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Texas Criminal Process — Quick Reference

A plain-language overview of what happens after an arrest in Texas, designed for referring professionals and clients alike.

# Stage What Happens
1 Arrest Police make an arrest. Defendant is booked, fingerprinted, and magistrated within 24–48 hours (CCP Art. 14.06).
2 Magistration A magistrate sets bond, delivers rights warnings, and may attach conditions (no-contact orders, GPS monitoring, substance testing).
3 Arraignment Defendant formally enters a plea. In misdemeanor cases, this may happen at the first setting; in felonies, after indictment.
4 Indictment / Information A grand jury (felonies) or the DA’s office (misdemeanors) files the formal charging instrument. Typically 30–180 days from arrest.
5 Discovery Defense receives the State’s evidence under CCP Art. 39.14 (the Michael Morton Act). An ongoing process through trial.
6 Pre-Trial Motions Suppression motions, requests for exculpatory evidence, and other pre-trial hearings. This is where experience as former prosecutors provides a decisive advantage.
7 Plea / Diversion The majority of cases resolve here. Options include deferred adjudication, community supervision, drug court, or outright dismissal.
8 Trial Bench or jury trial. Lewis & Ashworth have tried 250+ cases in DFW. Possible outcomes: acquittal, hung jury, or conviction.
9 Sentencing If convicted, the court or jury assesses punishment. Mitigation evidence from treatment providers, mental health professionals, and character witnesses is crucial here.
10 Post-Conviction Includes direct appeals, writs of habeas corpus, expunctions, and non-disclosure petitions to seal the record.

Key Timelines

Counties We Serve

Lewis & Ashworth handle cases throughout the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex, including Dallas, Collin, Denton, Tarrant, Rockwall, Kaufman, and Hunt counties. Both attorneys are licensed in all Texas state courts.

As former Assistant District Attorneys, they have deep relationships with prosecutors and judges in every county—a meaningful advantage at every stage of the process above.

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Record Clearing: Expunctions & Non-Disclosures

A criminal record follows clients long after their case ends—affecting housing, employment, licensing, custody, and immigration. Learn which path is available and how to pursue it.

Expunction Eligibility Checklist (Texas CCP Ch. 55)

  • Arrest resulted in a dismissal, no-bill by grand jury, or acquittal at trial
  • Waiting period has elapsed: Class C misdemeanor — 180 days; Class A/B misdemeanor — 1 year; Felony — 3 years
  • No other charges from the same criminal episode are pending or resulted in a final conviction
  • Charge was under a law later found unconstitutional, or was a “mistake of fact”
  • Client completed a pre-trial diversion (PTD) program and charges were dismissed per agreement
Effect: Expunction destroys records. Agencies that received the record must return or destroy them. It is as if the arrest never occurred.

Non-Disclosure Eligibility Checklist (TX Gov’t Code Ch. 411)

  • Client received deferred adjudication community supervision and successfully completed it
  • Offense is not in the ineligible category (sex offenses with child victims, trafficking, murder, etc.)
  • Waiting period has elapsed: Misdemeanors — immediately upon discharge; State jail / 3rd degree felonies — 3 years; Higher felonies — 5 years
  • No subsequent criminal convictions or deferred adjudications after completion
  • SB 1995 (2017): some misdemeanor deferred adjudications are now eligible immediately upon discharge
Effect: Non-disclosure seals records from the public, but not from law enforcement and certain licensing agencies. Lewis & Ashworth can advise on which remedy is available and more beneficial.

Record-Clearing Resources

Ready to Make a Referral or Start a Case?

Both attorneys are available for direct conversations with referring professionals. Same-day consultations available. Virtual meetings offered.