How to Protect Your Rights After an Arrest in Wisconsin

February 24, 2025 | Criminal Defense Attorney

What you do after an arrest in Wisconsin matters. There are certain mistakes that you can make that can put you in an even more precarious legal position. Once you make these mistakes, it can be extremely hard to undo them. However, you may not know that you have made an error until after the damage has been done. The best way to avoid damaging your own defense is to contact an attorney as soon as possible after you have been arrested. The criminal defense lawyers at Hogan Eickhoff can fight to protect your legal rights and work for the best possible outcome in your case.

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How to Choose the Right Criminal Defense Attorney for Your Case

May 7, 2024 | Criminal Defense Attorney

Your choice of criminal defense attorney is crucial to your case. Your freedom is literally on the line, and you should leave no stone unturned in defending the charges filed against you. However, you need to decide on a criminal defense attorney relatively early in your case, perhaps even before you have been charged with a crime. You need to reach the right decision for you in a short amount of time. There are numerous things that you need to consider before you settle on the attorney who will represent you in your case. The criminal defense attorneys at Hogan Eickhoff are here to provide our expert services whenever you need us.

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Preliminary Hearings in Wisconsin

October 27, 2020 | Court Hearings

If you have been charged with a felony offense, you have a legal right to a preliminary hearing in your case. In felony cases, a preliminary hearing is the court appearance that follows the initial appearance hearing. In misdemeanor criminal cases, there is no preliminary hearing. Preliminary hearings are also known as preliminary examinations, probable cause hearings, or simply as ‘prelims.’ As the individual who is accused of committing a criminal offense, you do not have a right to testify at a preliminary hearing. In other words, you cannot take the witness stand and talk about your version of events. However, your lawyer has the right cross-examine any witnesses, including police officers and others, whom the prosecuting attorney calls as a witness. The court will then make a determination about whether probable cause exists to charge you with the felony offense. If you are facing a felony criminal charge, it … Continued

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