Penalties for Drug Possession in Maine: Probation, Fines, and Early Termination
One year of probation and they're not letting her off early, here's what controls early termination and what stalls it.
Legal information that actually helps. No jargon, no fluff.
97% of criminal cases end in plea deals (Bureau of Justice Statistics). In most of those cases, nobody gave the defendant the questions before it was too late. That's what this blog is for. Every article below is built on documented defense methodologies from 40+ elite defense pioneers — applied to the situations defendants actually face.
7 evidence problems real cases hide — and the questions that expose them. Based on a real case we reviewed. Used by defendants who refuse to go into court blind.
Download Discovery Checklist →One year of probation and they're not letting her off early, here's what controls early termination and what stalls it.
Nobody tells you what the person in the robe is actually watching for. In a DUI or drug case, the judge sees the same charge a hundred times a month, what separates defendants in their eyes is rarely the facts of the stop. Here is what a judge does at each stage, what tends to move them, and what quietly works against you.
Facing domestic violence charges? What the charge actually means, the collateral consequences most defendants do not see coming, and the questions to bring to your attorney this week.
You were charged with theft. Here is how the dollar value decides misdemeanor vs felony, what the prosecutor already knows before your first court date, and the three moves first-time defendants make in the first 72 hours to keep their options open.
You were arrested for DUI. Here are the two tracks your case runs on, the three deadlines that actually decide the outcome, and the specific actions first-time defendants take in the first 72 hours to keep their options open.
The officer said you failed. But field sobriety tests are scored on a subjective checklist, and the accuracy rates are lower than most defendants realize. Here is what the test actually measures, what the numbers say, and what you can do about it.
Federal judges have sentencing patterns. 595,851 records across 22 years prove it. Some depart downward more than 60% of the time. Others almost never do. You should know which one you have before your sentencing hearing.
The bench vs. jury decision is one of the most consequential choices a defendant makes, and most make it on instinct alone. Federal sentencing data across 595,851 cases shows real outcome differences depending on the judge, the charge, and the district.
94% of federal criminal cases end in guilty pleas. The prosecutors know the math. The defendants usually do not. Here is what 595,851 sentencing records reveal about the plea machine and why the discount is real but the risk of pleading blind is worse.
The Fatal Encounters database documents over 30,000 incidents where police encounters turned fatal. Most defendants do not know their rights during an encounter. The data shows patterns in which agencies, which circumstances, and which procedures matter most.
Officers get fired for misconduct and hired at the next department within months. The National Police Index tracks employment histories across departments, and some of what it reveals is directly relevant to your defense.
Federal sentencing data reveals significant disparities by defendant demographics. Same charge, same criminal history, different judge , different outcome. The data is public. Most defendants never see it.
Your attorney has the evidence file and you haven't seen it. Here's what discovery delays actually mean, 3 things to do this week, and the mistake that costs months.
You blew a number. The cop wrote it down. Everyone in the courtroom treats it like a confession. Here is what the machine actually measures, where it fails, and the calibration gaps that turn a hard number into a soft one.
The test came back positive. You know you didn't use. Here's what nobody tells you about drug tests, field kits, lab protocols, and chain-of-custody gaps fail at documented rates, and every failure mode can be challenged.
Your brother got arrested last night and you're the one finding a lawyer, Googling the charge at 3 AM, holding it together. Here's how to hire the right attorney and manage the case without accidentally hurting it.
Arrest happens at midnight. Bail hearing is tomorrow morning. The public defender spent four minutes on the phone. Here's the system for turning 18 panicked hours into a prepared hearing, the factors judges actually weigh, the documents that move the needle, and the questions that matter.
The arrest report is the prosecution's first draft of the story. Here's how to read it line by line and find the inconsistencies, timeline gaps, and procedural holes your attorney should be investigating.
The felony becomes a misdemeanor. Your attorney says take it. Nobody mentions the job you lose, the license that gets revoked, the apartment you can't rent, or the deportation hearing that starts the day you plead.
NHTSA's own validation studies say the three standardized field sobriety tests are 77%, 68%, and 65% accurate under perfect lab conditions. Your stop wasn't a lab. Here's what that gap means.
Trial is over. Or you took a plea. Now there's a date on a calendar and nobody has told you what happens in that courtroom, or what's being written about you in the weeks before you walk in.
Your case ended. Your record didn't. Whether you can expunge it comes down to four published criteria most people never find, and one timing mistake that kills more petitions than bad facts.
Your criminal case and your licensing board are two different systems that don't talk to each other. Your criminal attorney handles one. Nobody may be handling the other. That's how a DUI plea that keeps you out of jail triggers a nursing license revocation three months later.
Your criminal case runs in one system. Your clearance runs in another. Different people, different rules, different standards of proof. A win in one can still be a loss in the other. Here is how the two tracks actually work.
You were arrested for DUI last night. The clock is already running on deadlines that can determine whether you keep your license, your job, and your options. Here is exactly what to do in the first 72 hours.
You relapsed. You failed a UA. Your PO says it's a violation. Before you assume the worst, judges have more discretion than your PO is telling you, and one failed test after months of compliance tells a very different story than chronic non-compliance. Here's what actually happens next.
A missed appointment, a failed drug test, or a new charge can trigger a probation violation, but violations are a process, not an instant sentence. This is the complete defense guide: how violations work, what judges consider, what you can do right now, and how to prepare for the revocation hearing.
You missed a meeting. Now there's a warrant. Before you panic, technical violations are not the same as new charges, and judges have more discretion than your PO is telling you. Here's what actually happens between the violation and the hearing, and what you can do right now.
After 'will I go to jail,' the second question every defendant asks is 'will I lose my job.' The answer depends on your state, your employer type, and whether you have a professional license. Here is what the law actually says.
Facing contact sex offense charges? What the law defines as a contact offense, how forensic evidence works for and against you, and what your defense attorney needs to investigate.
Facing sex offense charges? The conviction funnel, defense strategies elite attorneys use, collateral consequences most defendants learn about too late, and what to do right now.
Third continuance and still no progress? Here's why criminal cases get delayed, when delays help you, when they hurt you, and what to do when your attorney keeps pushing the date.
Facing drug charges? Every defense from illegal search to lab test errors , what your attorney should be challenging, what discovery reveals, and how weight calculations change everything.
Your family member was arrested. You feel helpless. Here's what you can actually do, from bail to attorney research to character letters, without overstepping or making things worse.
Sentencing is the one hearing where YOU control the narrative. Character letters, treatment records, and mitigation evidence can mean the difference between prison and probation.
Your public defender has 15 minutes and 200 cases. These are the questions that get real answers, strategy, discovery, deadlines, not just reassurance.
Missed a check-in, failed a drug test, or got a new charge? Here's what actually happens after a probation violation, and what you can do before the revocation hearing.
Arrested for DUI? Every stage from blue lights to resolution, 7 defenses that work, questions to ask your attorney, and deadlines that can make or break your case.
From the first knock on your door to sentencing, every stage of a federal white collar case, every defense worth exploring, and every question worth asking.
The prosecutor says 'cooperate and we'll help you.' But cooperation in a federal case is a legal minefield. Here's what proffer sessions, safety valve provisions, and substantial assistance motions actually mean.
You received a target letter. Or the FBI showed up. Or your business partner just got indicted. Here's what's actually happening and what you need to do in the next 48 hours.
A defendant opened his own 500-page discovery file and found four critical issues his attorney never mentioned. Here's what he found, and what it means for your case.
Wire fraud carries up to 20 years per count. If your attorney can't answer these 15 questions about your case, you need to know that before your next hearing.
The system isn't designed to explain itself to defendants. These 7 things are routinely hidden in plain sight, and each one pairs with a question you can ask right now.
Arrest. Booking. Arraignment. Discovery. Motions. Plea. Trial. Sentencing. Nobody explains what actually happens at each stage, or where cases are actually won and lost. Here's the map.
The business model of criminal defense creates incentives that don't always align with your interests. Understanding how attorneys get paid is the first step to evaluating whether yours is actually fighting for you.
In most states, you have roughly 10 days after a DUI arrest to request a DMV hearing, or your license gets suspended automatically. Most attorneys don't mention this until it's too late.
Breathalyzers aren't magic. They're machines that drift, malfunction, and produce wrong numbers when they're not maintained. Here are the four records your attorney needs to request.
The government's own research says field sobriety tests are wrong 23% of the time, even when administered perfectly. Officers rarely administer them perfectly.
The officer said it 'tested positive.' But a field test isn't what you think it is. Here's the difference between a presumptive positive and actual proof , and why your attorney should care.
Everyone has an opinion. Nobody gives you the real answer. Here's what actually matters when deciding between a private attorney and a public defender, and it's not what you think.
You got charged with trafficking but you've never sold anything in your life. The charge isn't about what you did, it's about what they weighed. Here's how that works and what to ask your attorney.
Your attorney expects you to sit quietly and trust the process. These 10 questions flip that dynamic, and might change the outcome of your case.
You're paying thousands. You have no idea what's happening. Here's how to tell if your defense attorney is actually working, or just collecting a check.
Motions are how your attorney fights for you before trial ever starts. If none have been filed, here's what you need to know, and what to ask.
Got a stack of police reports and lab results? Here's how to read criminal discovery, spot contradictions, timeline gaps, and missing evidence that matters.
Firing your criminal defense attorney feels terrifying. But keeping a bad one might be worse. Here's how to know when it's time, and how to make the switch without hurting your case.
You just got arrested for DUI. Your hands are still shaking. Here's exactly what happens next, the real version, not the sanitized lawyer website version.
Something feels wrong. Your attorney seems more interested in making the case go away than in defending you. Here's how to tell if it's a communication problem or something worse.
97% of cases end in plea deals, most defendants decide in the dark. The questions to ask, red flags to catch, and what to review before signing anything.
You're about to hand someone $5,000-$25,000 to defend your freedom. Here's how to make sure you're not hiring the wrong person.
You got charged with a DUI. You hired a lawyer. Now they want you to 'just trust the process.' Here are 5 questions that'll make sure there actually is a process.
Your attorney's deadline came and went. Nothing was filed. What now? Here's what you need to know about missed deadlines and your options.
It's been 8 months. Nothing seems to be happening. You're stuck in limbo, and nobody will tell you why. Here's how to tell if the delay is strategic or a sign your attorney isn't working.
You're staring at the word FELONY on a piece of paper with your name on it. Here's what elite defense attorneys say actually happens, and it's probably not what you're imagining.
You haven't heard from your attorney in weeks. Is that normal? Here's what actual communication standards look like, from what the bar requires to what good attorneys actually do.
Terrified of your first court date? Here's exactly what happens at arraignment, what to wear, what to say, and why you almost always plead not guilty.
The legal system has a file on you. Your attorney should too. Here's what discovery means, why it matters, and what to do if your lawyer isn't sharing.
Missed deadlines, zero communication, no work done? Here's how to file a state bar complaint step by step, and what actually happens after you submit it.
Everyone wants their charges dropped. But how does it actually happen? Here's the honest breakdown, who has the power, what makes it happen, and what your attorney should be doing to make it possible.
DUI cases get dismissed every day, illegal stops, breathalyzer errors, NHTSA violations. These are the defenses worth investigating before accepting any plea.
Paid thousands and can't get a callback? Document every attempt, escalate the right way, and know when it's time to file a bar complaint or switch counsel.