Explains federal cases in practical language.
Start with the charge, then move through the elements, the evidence, the defenses, and the likely procedural path after indictment or complaint.
Federal cases move fast once the government opens an investigation, files charges, or starts pushing for detention. This resource keeps the law organized around the questions that matter most: what the statute requires, what the government must prove, what defenses are available, and what happens next in court.
The page now carries images in multiple sections so the design has depth at the top, in the middle, and near the topic area. That makes the build feel intentional while still keeping the content useful and readable.
Start with the charge, then move through the elements, the evidence, the defenses, and the likely procedural path after indictment or complaint.
Readers can move from the broad overview into the exact statute or procedure they need without digging through a wall of unrelated text.
That means the attorney background, the legal issues, and the next-step guidance all stay visible at the same time.
Federal criminal law reads better when each section has a purpose: define the issue, show the elements, identify the defenses, and point the reader toward the next decision. The boxed layout gives those steps room to breathe while keeping the academic signal and federal focus visible.
A practical walkthrough of guidelines, objections, departures, and the issues that shape federal sentencing outcomes.
Open guideLearn how federal appeals work, what gets reviewed, and where strong written advocacy matters most.
Open guideStart here for a plain-English overview of federal charges, investigations, indictments, and early defense decisions.
Open guidePlain-English explanations of federal criminal laws, statutes, and legal concepts — written by a Cornell-educated federal defense attorney with decades of experience in federal courts nationwide.
Get experienced legal representation. Contact John Kirby for a confidential consultation.
Contact Kirby Criminal Law →Federal criminal procedure, sentencing, and post-conviction topics make more sense when the page groups them around the statute, the process, and the likely defense issues. That structure helps readers scan the page and helps search systems identify what the page covers.
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This should open the office review page, not a generic map result.
Leave a Google ReviewPhone and email should be obvious for both visitors and crawlers.
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