Criminal Defence Law

Experienced defence from FIR to acquittal

Facing a criminal charge is one of the most stressful situations in life. Our verified criminal lawyers provide aggressive, strategic defence — from the moment of arrest through trial and appeals.

Our Scope

What we handle.

FIR registration and quashing petitions in High Court
Anticipatory bail and regular bail applications
Trial defence across all criminal courts
Cheating, fraud, and white-collar crime cases
Domestic violence and dowry harassment cases (IPC 498A)
NDPS drug offences and excise cases
Cases under POCSO, SC/ST Atrocities Act
Cybercrime-related criminal complaints
Criminal appeals in High Court and Supreme Court
Compounding of minor offences and plea bargaining

Who We Serve

Who needs this service?

Accused Individuals

Get bail, build your defence, and protect your rights from the moment of FIR

Victims Filing Complaints

File FIRs, private complaints, and pursue justice against offenders

Businesses Facing Fraud Cases

Defend against false cheating cases and malicious criminal complaints

Families of Accused

Understand the charges, secure bail, and plan a defence strategy

Not sure if you need a criminal defence law specialist?

Talk to us for free guidance

FAQ

Frequently asked questions.

Engage a criminal lawyer immediately. Your lawyer will review the FIR, advise whether to apply for anticipatory bail (before arrest) or regular bail (after arrest), and start building your defence. Do not speak to police without your lawyer present.

Anticipatory bail (Section 438 CrPC) is applied BEFORE arrest — it protects you from being arrested. Regular bail (Section 439 CrPC) is applied AFTER arrest, while you are in custody. Anticipatory bail is time-sensitive; apply immediately if you learn an FIR has been filed.

Yes. If an FIR is filed maliciously or without factual basis, you can file a petition in the High Court under Section 482 CrPC to quash it. Courts will quash FIRs where no offence is made out or where proceedings are an abuse of process.

Criminal trials in India can take anywhere from 6 months (for simple cases tried summarily) to 10+ years for complex sessions cases. An experienced criminal lawyer can file for expedited hearing in appropriate cases and manage the trial process efficiently.

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