ANNE ARUNDEL, CALVERT, CHARLES, ST. MARY’S & PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTIES.

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The Sentence That Runs Consecutive: Section 4-204 Firearm Enhancement Defense in St. Mary’s County

Maryland's use of firearm in crime of violence statute, Criminal Law § 4-204, imposes a separate consecutive mandatory minimum sentence on top of the underlying conviction. The five year minimum cannot be suspended, and the sentence stacks rather than running concurrently. This guide walks through the qualifying underlying offenses, the use element that the State must prove, and the defense strategies that focus on attacking the use question or negotiating the enhancement out of the disposition entirely.

Two Lane Roads, One Long Night: DUI and Traffic Stops Around Mechanicsville and Loveville

DUI and traffic stops on the country roads around Mechanicsville, Loveville, Bushwood, and Chaptico carry the same Maryland exposure as stops in the busier corridors, but with different defense considerations. This guide walks through the rural enforcement pattern on MD 5, MD 6, MD 234, MD 236, and MD 471, why field sobriety tests often fail the NHTSA protocol on country shoulders, and what the path from a stop in northern St. Mary's County to a court date in Leonardtown actually looks like.

The Drive Home After the Final Whistle: FedEx Field Game Day DUI Defense in PG County

FedEx Field game days produce a predictable DUI enforcement pattern in Prince George's County. Hours of tailgating, alcohol service inside the stadium, and a post-game traffic surge along Brightseat Road, Arena Drive, Central Avenue, and the Beltway approaches combine to produce a consistent enforcement scene. This guide walks through the tailgate and game consumption pattern, the post-game traffic and stop dynamics, the witness pool that often surrounds these cases, and the defense strategies for game day DUI prosecutions.

What Happens When the Deputy Looks in the Glove Compartment: A Route 235 Handgun Defense Walkthrough

A handgun discovered during a Route 235 traffic stop in St. Mary's County turns a routine ticket into a Maryland weapons prosecution under Criminal Law § 4-203, with mandatory minimum incarceration on the table. This guide walks through the lawfulness of the stop, the bases for vehicle searches, what to say when the firearm is discovered, the transport exceptions that can defeat the charge, and the suppression motion that often ends the case before trial.

Past the PAX River Gate: How Lexington Park DUI Stops Move From Three Notch Road to Federal Court

Lexington Park drivers face a unique DUI puzzle: the same Friday night stop can produce a Maryland state charge in Leonardtown or a federal citation issued at the PAX River main gate. This guide walks through how to tell the difference, what each path means for the case and the license, and the additional security clearance and base access consequences that follow service members and civilian contractors who work on the installation.

From the Deer Stand to the Truck Bed: Lawful Firearm Transport for Hunters in St. Mary’s County

Hunting culture in rural St. Mary's County moves firearms across the county roads thousands of times each season. The legal framework that governs that movement is detailed and unforgiving. The transport exceptions in Criminal Law § 4-203 require unloaded firearms, separate ammunition storage, direct routes, and minimal deviation. This guide walks through the lawful transport rules for handguns and long guns, the routine stop pattern that produces most cases, the documentation that supports the defense, and the separate category of cases involving possession by a prohibited hunter.

The Other Case the State Files: Defending the MVA Administrative Hearing After a Maryland DUI Arrest

The Maryland MVA administrative hearing is the parallel proceeding that decides whether a driver keeps a license after a DUI arrest. The hearing operates on a ten day deadline that runs whether the driver acts or not. A driver who requests the hearing in time preserves the right to challenge the automatic suspension; a driver who misses the window forfeits that challenge entirely. This guide walks through the two track structure, the ten day window, the hearing procedure at the Office of Administrative Hearings, the procedural challenges that drive most successful outcomes, and the ignition interlock alternative.

The Brandished Gun Problem: First Degree Assault and Firearm Charges in St. Mary’s County

First degree assault in Maryland reaches twenty five years of incarceration. Most people think of the charge in terms of serious physical injury, but Criminal Law § 3-202 has a separate firearm route that produces felony exposure even when no one was hurt and no shot was fired. This guide walks through both routes, the related weapons counts under §§ 4-203 and 4-204 that typically stack on top, and the defense considerations specific to St. Mary's County, including the security clearance implications for the PAX River workforce.