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What Should I Expect After Being Charged With A Tax Crime?

Quick Answer

After being charged with a tax crime, expect four distinct phases: (1) arraignment and initial appearance within 48-72 hours of charging; (2) discovery and pretrial motions during 6-12 month pretrial period; (3) plea negotiation or trial preparation; and (4) trial or plea, followed by sentencing. The short version is that federal criminal tax cases move slowly but relentlessly. In our experience, the outcome is often substantially determined by choices made in the first 30 days after charging.1

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Four phases after being charged with a tax crime.

The Four Post-Charging Phases

ArraignmentInitial
DiscoveryPretrial
Plea/PrepDecision
Trial/SentenceDisposition
Post-charge.
Phase Timeline2
Arraignment 48-72 hours
Discovery 6-12 months
Plea / Preparation Ongoing
Trial / Sentencing Disposition

Quick Reference

Jump to: arraignment, discovery, plea, or trial.

1. Arraignment and Initial Appearance

48-72 hours after charging.

If this is you: Just indicted or summoned. Initial appearance before magistrate. Bail / pretrial release determined. Plea entered (typically not guilty initially). Counsel must be engaged immediately.

Arraignment Strategy

  1. Engage criminal tax counsel.
  2. Prepare for initial appearance.
  3. Secure pretrial release.
  4. Plead not guilty.
  5. Preserve records.

2. Discovery and Pretrial Motions

6-12 month pretrial period for discovery and motions.

If this is you: Government produces evidence. Defense files motions to suppress, dismiss, for bill of particulars. Critical investigation phase. Trial strategy developed.

3. Plea Negotiation or Trial Preparation

Decision point: plea deal or trial.

If this is you: Evaluate evidence. Consider plea offers. 90%+ federal tax cases resolve by plea. Trial reserved for strong defense scenarios.

4. Trial or Sentencing

Trial typically 2-4 weeks; sentencing 60-90 days after verdict / plea.

If this is you: Trial preparation intensive. If plea, sentencing hearing. Guidelines + 3553(a) factors. Variance arguments. Restitution typically ordered.

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Post-Charge Document Lookup

Post-charge docs.
Document Purpose
Indictment / Information Formal charges
Bail / pretrial release order Initial restraint
Discovery disclosures Evidence
Pretrial motions Suppress / dismiss
Plea agreement Resolution
PSR Pre-sentence report

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Post-Charge Statute

  • Tax crimes typically 6-year statute.
  • Speedy Trial Act applies post-charge.
  • Appeal rights post-conviction.

Post-Charge Patterns

Post-charge outcomes. Source: Brotman Law practice.
Situation Outcome
Early counsel + cooperation Better plea terms
Strong defense facts Motion to dismiss possible
Plea negotiated Reduced charges / sentence
Trial conviction Guidelines + enhancements

Post-Charge Escalation

Arraignment

Initial appearance.

Pretrial

Discovery and motions.

Disposition

Plea or trial, then sentencing.

First 48 Hours

  1. Engage criminal tax counsel immediately.
  2. Prepare for initial appearance.
  3. Secure pretrial release.
  4. Preserve all records.
  5. Do not make statements.
Brotman Law defends criminal tax cases. Based in San Diego.

The ROI Question

Criminal tax cases involve liberty. Professional representation is not optional.

When to Engage

  • Indictment or information.
  • CI contact.
  • Grand jury subpoena.
  • Pre-charge investigation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What happens after I’m charged?

Four phases — arraignment (48-72 hours), discovery / pretrial motions (6-12 months), plea negotiation or trial preparation, trial or sentencing. Criminal tax counsel essential throughout.

Will I be arrested?

Sometimes. Federal tax cases often proceed by summons rather than arrest. Complex / serious cases more likely arrest. Attorney surrender typically available.

What happens at arraignment?

Formal charges read. Plea entered (not guilty). Bail / pretrial release determined. Next court date set. Counsel must be present.

Will I get out on bail?

Tax cases generally low flight risk. Pretrial release typical. Conditions may apply. Attorney preparation supports release.

What is discovery?

Government produces evidence — bank records, witness statements, expert reports. Defense reviews. Basis for motions and trial strategy.

Should I cooperate?

Facts-specific. Early cooperation can reduce exposure. Timing and scope critical. Attorney evaluation essential.

What is plea negotiation?

Agreement with prosecution for reduced charges / sentence in exchange for plea. 90%+ federal cases resolve by plea.

Can I still go to trial?

Always. Constitutional right. Evaluated based on evidence and exposure. Trial preparation takes months.

How long does trial take?

Federal tax trial typically 2-4 weeks. Complex cases longer. Jury or bench trial.

What is sentencing?

Post-conviction hearing. Guidelines + 3553(a) factors. Restitution. Presentence report (PSR) critical. Attorney-drafted sentencing memorandum essential.

What are the guidelines?

Federal Sentencing Guidelines — advisory since Booker. Tax loss drives base offense level. Enhancements for specifics. Downward variance possible.

Can I appeal?

Yes. Notice of appeal within 14 days. Appellate counsel recommended. Plea agreements may limit appeal rights.

What about civil tax while criminal pending?

Often stayed. Fifth Amendment issues. Coordinate civil and criminal counsel carefully.

If you have read this far, you have a notice and you are trying to understand it before doing anything that makes it worse. That instinct is correct.

The next right move is a 15-minute call. We will identify the audit type, confirm your deadline, and tell you honestly whether you need representation. There is no cost and no obligation.

Get a Candid Assessment — Free

Or call us directly at (619) 378-3138

Next Steps

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