Court Process Visualizer
Court Process Visualizer
A calm, educational walkthrough of the Florida criminal court process — from arrest to resolution. Tap a stage to learn more.
Arrest
A law-enforcement officer takes a person into custody. Miranda warnings are required only before custodial interrogation.
- What it means: A formal seizure of a person based on probable cause. An arrest is not a conviction — it is the start of a process the State must prove.
- How to prepare: Stay calm. Do not resist physically. Politely invoke the right to remain silent and the right to an attorney. Do not consent to searches you are unsure about. Do not give a statement.
- Common terms: Probable cause, Miranda warning, custodial interrogation, detention vs. arrest.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Booking
Identification, fingerprints, mugshot, and intake at the jail. Personal property is inventoried.
- What it means: Administrative intake. Identifying information, charges, and personal property are entered into the jail system. This is not a court hearing.
- How to prepare: Cooperate with identifying questions only. Avoid discussing the alleged offense with anyone — jail calls and messages are typically recorded. Family can usually look up custody status online once booking completes.
- Common terms: Inmate number, custody status, intake, property inventory, jail call recording.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
First Appearance
A judge reviews probable cause, sets bond conditions, and addresses representation. The accused does not enter a plea here.
- What it means: A short hearing — often by video — where the judge confirms the basis for the arrest, sets conditions of release, and ensures the accused has or will have counsel.
- How to prepare: If possible, retain or contact a defense attorney before this hearing so counsel can argue for reasonable release conditions. Family can attend or watch. Have employment, residence, and community-ties information ready.
- Common terms: Probable cause affidavit, bond, ROR (release on own recognizance), pretrial services, no-contact order.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Bond / Release
Conditions of release: cash bond, surety, ROR, supervised release, or pretrial detention for serious charges.
- What it means: The judge's release decision is carried out. Bond may be posted in cash or through a licensed bail-bond agent, or release may be conditional on supervision rules.
- How to prepare: Understand every condition before walking out — curfews, no-contact orders, no-alcohol clauses, and travel limits are common. Violating a condition can lead to immediate re-arrest.
- Common terms: Cash bond, surety bond, premium, bondsman, GPS monitoring, conditions of release, bond forfeiture.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Arraignment
The formal charging document is read. A plea is entered — typically not guilty so the defense can investigate.
- What it means: The first courtroom appearance on the formal charges. A plea is entered — most commonly Not Guilty — to preserve discovery and motion deadlines.
- How to prepare: Have counsel handle the plea entry. Dress respectfully. Bring case paperwork. Confirm any waiver of appearance with your attorney; do not skip without an entered waiver.
- Common terms: Information, indictment, plea of not guilty, written plea of not guilty, waiver of arraignment, speedy trial.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Discovery & Investigation
Exchange of evidence, witness depositions, motions to suppress, and investigation of the case.
- What it means: Both sides exchange the evidence they intend to use. The defense investigates witnesses, body-cam footage, lab reports, and may depose officers under Florida's broad criminal-discovery rules.
- How to prepare: Gather your own evidence: timeline notes, photos, medical records, witnesses. Stay off social media about the case. Do not contact alleged victims or witnesses directly.
- Common terms: Discovery, deposition, Brady material, motion to suppress, body-worn camera, chain of custody, exculpatory.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Pretrial / Plea Discussions
Plea negotiations, diversion options, motions hearings. Many cases resolve here.
- What it means: The negotiation phase. The defense and State exchange offers; the court rules on suppression and other motions; diversion or pretrial-intervention programs may be available.
- How to prepare: Discuss with your attorney exactly what each plea offer would mean — adjudication, conditions, fines, record impact, and collateral consequences for jobs, licenses, and immigration.
- Common terms: PTI (pretrial intervention), diversion, plea offer, nolo contendere, withhold of adjudication, motion in limine.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Trial
Jury or bench trial. Burden of proof rests on the State beyond a reasonable doubt.
- What it means: A jury (or judge in a bench trial) decides guilt. The State must prove every element of the charge beyond a reasonable doubt; the defendant has no obligation to testify.
- How to prepare: Prepare with your attorney on the theory of defense, exhibits, and witness order. Plan logistics: childcare, employment, dress code. Decide — with counsel — whether to testify.
- Common terms: Voir dire, opening statement, direct examination, cross-examination, jury instructions, verdict.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Sentencing
A judge imposes sentence — could include incarceration, probation, fines, community service, programs, or a withhold of adjudication.
- What it means: After a guilty plea or verdict, the court imposes a sentence based on the Florida criminal punishment code, the scoresheet, statutory minimums, and aggravating or mitigating factors.
- How to prepare: Bring mitigation: completion certificates, employer letters, character references, treatment records. Your attorney may file a sentencing memorandum. Prepare a brief statement to the court if appropriate.
- Common terms: Scoresheet, departure, mitigation, allocution, adjudication of guilt, probation, restitution.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
Appeal / Post-Conviction
Appellate review of legal errors. Post-conviction motions, modifications, and record sealing/expungement may follow.
- What it means: A higher court reviews whether legal errors affected the result. Other post-conviction options include sentence modification, early termination of probation, and eligibility-permitting, sealing or expungement of the record.
- How to prepare: Strict deadlines apply — typically 30 days for direct appeals. Consult counsel quickly. For sealing/expungement, gather final dispositions and certificate-of-eligibility documents.
- Common terms: Notice of appeal, brief, oral argument, mandate, Rule 3.850 motion, sealing, expungement, certificate of eligibility.
Consult a licensed attorney for legal advice.
This website is for informational purposes only and does not provide legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney for guidance about your specific situation.