Quid Pro Quo Risk: This site is built to separate ordinary public-service activity from the kind of quid-pro-quo theory federal prosecutors like to overread. This page, case timeline, keeps the focus on bribery so the site does not read like a recycled template.
This site is centered on public office, official-act evidence, and the federal-public-corruption lens that prosecutors use to reframe normal conduct.
Calendars, emails, meetings, and public records are the usual starting point for the government's theory.
The case gets stronger only when prosecutors can tie an exchange to a specific benefit and a specific act.
You want a defense lawyer who can separate lawful advocacy from the corruption story the government wants to tell.
A federal public corruption case follows a predictable timeline. Understanding each stage helps you prepare — and helps you make informed decisions at every step.
Federal agents investigate. Grand jury subpoenas go out. Witnesses are interviewed. You may or may not know you're under investigation. If you receive a target letter, search warrant, or subpoena, the investigation is active — and you need counsel immediately. Pre-indictment representation can sometimes prevent charges from being filed at all.
The indictment is unsealed. You are arrested (or self-surrender, if arranged by counsel). You're booked, fingerprinted, and processed. Within 24 hours, you'll have your initial appearance before a magistrate judge.
The magistrate judge advises you of the charges and your rights. The government states its position on detention. Your attorney argues for release. The judge sets conditions or schedules a detention hearing within 3-5 days.
If detention is contested, a hearing is held. Pretrial services presents its report. The judge rules on release or detention. At arraignment (often the same day or within days), you enter a plea. A not-guilty plea is standard at this stage.
The government produces discovery — reports, documents, recordings, forensic evidence. Your attorney reviews everything and begins identifying issues for motion practice.
Substantive motions are filed — motions to suppress, motions to dismiss, Brady challenges. Simultaneously, plea negotiations with the U.S. Attorney continue. This is often where cases resolve — the majority of federal cases end in a plea agreement.
Federal public corruption trials typically last 1-4 weeks. Jury selection, opening statements, government's case, defense case, closing arguments, jury instructions, deliberation, verdict.
If convicted (by plea or verdict), sentencing occurs 60-90 days after conviction. The Presentence Investigation Report (PSR) is prepared by Probation. The attorney objects to PSR errors. Sentencing memoranda are filed. The sentencing hearing is held.
If there are appealable issues, a notice of appeal is filed within 14 days of judgment. The appellate process — briefing, oral argument, decision — takes 12-18 months.
Skilled counsel can change the trajectory of a federal case at every stage. Don't wait to get representation.
Contact Kirby Law →Facing federal public corruption charges? Contact Kirby Law for a confidential consultation with a former federal prosecutor. Free case evaluation.
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Legal Disclaimer: This website provides general information about federal criminal defense. It does not constitute legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this content. Every case is different. Consult a qualified federal criminal defense attorney about your specific situation.
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More than 25 years defending clients, with over a decade as a federal prosecutor in the Southern District of California. Knows how the U.S. Attorney's Office builds cases — and exactly how to challenge them.
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Served over a decade as an Assistant United States Attorney. Since entering private practice, has defended clients in federal courts across the country — bringing prosecution-side insight to every defense strategy.