Orange County & Los Angeles
Juvenile Defense Attorney
Free, confidential phone consultations 24/7/365. Payment plans available.
The Short Answer
The juvenile system is built around rehabilitation, not punishment, and that design gives a prepared defense real leverage: informal supervision, diversion, and deferred entry of judgment can all end a case with no sustained petition. The two fights that matter most are keeping serious cases out of adult court at the transfer hearing, and sealing the record afterward so one bad night does not follow your child into college applications and job interviews.
When your child is arrested or cited, you are suddenly navigating a system with its own courts, its own vocabulary, and its own stakes: not just consequences today, but records that can shadow college, careers, and licensing for decades.
Farris Law Firm defends minors throughout Orange County and Los Angeles, guides parents through every step, and finishes the job with record sealing so the case truly ends.
How We Help Families in the Juvenile System
Detention hearings
The first, urgent fight: getting your child released home rather than held, usually within days of arrest.
Informal supervision and diversion
Programs that resolve cases with no sustained petition at all, the juvenile equivalent of a dismissal. First offenses are strong candidates.
Contested jurisdiction hearings
The juvenile trial: challenging the evidence before a judge when the case should be fought rather than resolved.
Transfer (adult court) hearings
For serious allegations, prosecutors may seek to try minors 16 and older as adults. Winning this hearing keeps the case, and the stakes, in juvenile court.
Record sealing (WIC 781)
After the case, we petition to seal the record so it is treated as if it never happened for nearly all purposes.
Juvenile Outcomes, Best to Worst
Juvenile dispositions focus on rehabilitation, and the range of outcomes is wide, which is exactly why advocacy matters.
| Charge | Level | Exposure |
|---|---|---|
| Informal supervision / diversion | No petition sustained | Case dismissed after completion; strongest outcome |
| Deferred entry of judgment | Admission deferred | Dismissal after program completion |
| Wardship with probation at home | Petition sustained | Conditions and supervision while living at home |
| Out-of-home placement or secure track | Most serious | Reserved for grave cases; fighting transfer keeps kids out of adult prison |
What Strong Juvenile Defense Looks Like
Kids are not small adults, and the law increasingly agrees:
- Miranda and interrogation challenges: minors must consult counsel before waiving rights in many situations, and coerced statements are common
- School search and resource officer issues with their own legal standards
- Pushing for diversion and informal outcomes before a petition is ever sustained
- Fighting transfer to adult court with evidence of maturity, amenability, and context
- Coordinating the school discipline case alongside the court case
- Sealing the record when it ends, every agency copy of it
Frequently Asked Questions
Will my child be tried as an adult?
Only if the prosecutor seeks transfer for a serious offense and a judge grants it after a full hearing on maturity, history, and rehabilitation prospects; minors under 16 generally cannot be transferred at all. Winning the transfer hearing is the single highest-stakes fight in juvenile law, and it is winnable. Read our guide on when juveniles are charged as adults.
Do juvenile records disappear automatically at 18?
Not always. Some qualifying records are sealed automatically, but many require a petition under WIC 781, and unsealed records surface on background checks. We treat sealing as part of the case, not an afterthought. Our juvenile records guide covers the details.
Should my child talk to the police or school investigators?
Not before speaking with a lawyer, and California law now requires minors to consult counsel before police interrogation waivers in most cases. Politely decline on your child's behalf and call us: statements are where juvenile cases are lost.
Do parents attend juvenile court?
Yes, parents are expected at hearings and are part of the process throughout. We prepare both of you for what each hearing means and what the judge is looking for, so the family walks in composed and credible.
Charged or under investigation? Talk to a defense attorney tonight.
Free, confidential phone consultation any hour, any day. Payment plans available.