The Law Office of Kristin R. Brown, PLLC

The Law Office of Kristin R. Brown, PLLC A full service criminal defense firm that will fight to protect your rights: before trial; at trial; Criminal Trials, Appeals, Habeas

03/30/2026

The courtroom is a solemn place, but the silence there is heavy. It’s the weight of a system refined over centuries, moving with a singular, crushing momentum. On one side of the aisle sits the State—an entity with limitless reach, a badge, and the power to undo a life with a single signature. On the other side sits a human being.

Today is a moment to recognize the only thing standing in the gap between those two forces.

Sixty-three years ago, Clarence Earl Gideon—a homeless drifter with an eighth-grade education—saw a wrong and sought to right it. On his own volition, Gideon asked the US Supreme Court to hear his case. From that moment on, the Sixth Amendment right to counsel was finally given real meaning.
.. I’ve learned there’s something profoundly honorable about standing up for the “little guy” against the immense, coercive power of the state. Those who stand at the defense table alongside the accused are often the most unpopular people in the room. To the casual observer, an evidentiary objection or a motion to suppress might look like a technicality or a delay tactic. But in a free society, those moments are among the only things holding back the slow creep of tyranny.

Tyranny doesn’t always arrive with fanfare; it arrives in the mundane shortcuts of a busy Monday morning. It’s found in the cases of individuals held over the weekend—often solely because they’re too poor to purchase their freedom—who finally get to see a judge and fight to go home to their kids or back to work. It’s found in a standard bail schedule that ignores a person’s individual circumstances. If the government is allowed to take a shortcut to a conviction today, those shortcuts become the new road tomorrow. We’ve already seen plea-driven mass adjudication displace the constitutionally prescribed mechanism for judging criminal cases—the citizen jury trial.

The job of a defense attorney is to be the friction in that machine—to disrupt business as usual. Dedicated defenders seek to restore the Framers’ ideal: that depriving a human being of their liberty should be arduous and costly, rather than easy and cheap as it is today. Defenders force the state to meet its evidentiary burden.

The Framers envisioned the criminal justice system as a place of last resort. But today, we’ve gotten dangerously good at locking up those we’re mad at while failing to restrain those we’re afraid of. The result is jails and prisons bursting at the seams with the wrong people, while clearance rates for serious crimes plummet. This leaves violent criminals free to offend again, while defense attorneys are left to pick up the pieces of those the system opted to target instead.

To sit next to someone who has the entire weight of the government pressed against them is a heavy burden. You feel the physical gravity of their fear. In that chair, defense attorneys are the last line of defense—the final barrier between a citizen and the absolute power of the state.

We’re taught that the Constitution is our shield, but a shield is just a piece of metal until someone has the courage to hold it up. Without a dedicated advocate to push back, to question, and to demand dignity for the accused, our constitutional rights are just ink on a page. Defense attorneys give those words meaning. They remind the state that it cannot simply steamroll over a human life because it’s convenient or efficient to do so.

If defense attorneys don’t fight for the person the world has already written off, our rights become meaningless. The strength of our republic isn’t measured by how we treat the powerful; it’s measured by how we treat those least positioned to fight back.

If you think you’d never be a criminal defendant, I invite you to think again. In a world where there are over 5,000 federal statutory crimes and some 400,000 regulatory crimes alone, we’re all essentially unconvicted criminals. I’m one dog walk on Supreme Court grounds away from a federal courtroom and 60 days in jail.
.. Criminal courtrooms are where constitutional rights clash with state power and policing prerogatives. I believe that the government must always be challenged. And I know that power, left unchecked, will always expand until it finds a limit.

Today, and every day, defense attorneys are that limit.

Author: Mike Fox (modified)

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If you have an Intoxilock device, you’re likely aware that they were hacked this week. If that’s causing issues for you, be advised that Smart start is offering: Free installation, Free first payment, Waived enrollment fee, Use code: SPRING26

01/21/2026
If only it were that easy.
09/09/2025

If only it were that easy.

Ms Brown is honored to be named to the 2024 Texas Super Lawyers list, and previously to SuperLawyers Rising Stars, Risin...
09/26/2024

Ms Brown is honored to be named to the 2024 Texas Super Lawyers list, and previously to SuperLawyers Rising Stars, Rising Stars Top 50 Women (2023) and Rising Stars Top 100 Attorneys (2023). Nominations are accepted by counsel in the practice area and then vetted by the Texas Monthly team. Super Lawyers awards are limited to not more than the top 5% of all attorneys who no longer qualify for Rising Stars.

Pro tip. If you are charged with driving on a suspended or invalid license, don’t appear on zoom court from the driver’s...
05/30/2024

Pro tip. If you are charged with driving on a suspended or invalid license, don’t appear on zoom court from the driver’s seat of the car. Bond revoked.

Ms Brown is honored to again be chosen by D Magazine for Best Attorney in Dallas.
04/18/2024

Ms Brown is honored to again be chosen by D Magazine for Best Attorney in Dallas.

Another good article on Richard Glossip’s fight for life and why the Oklahoma AG is joining in the fight to overturn Glo...
05/17/2023

Another good article on Richard Glossip’s fight for life and why the Oklahoma AG is joining in the fight to overturn Glossip’s conviction.

In a stunning rebuke to the state’s attorney general, the appeals court refused to vacate Glossip’s conviction, clearing the way for his ex*****on.

Ms. Brown has again been named a Best Lawyer in Dallas by D Magazine.   The honor begins with nominations from other att...
04/21/2023

Ms. Brown has again been named a Best Lawyer in Dallas by D Magazine. The honor begins with nominations from other attorneys in the same area of practice, and continues through a vetting process to final selections. Kristin has been selected each of the past three years.

Address

17304 Preston Road, Ste 1250
Dallas, TX
75252

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 7pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 7pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 7pm
Thursday 8:30am - 7pm
Friday 8:30am - 7pm

Telephone

+12144463909

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