Defence at every stage — from suspect to convict

Criminal law is where the state's coercive power confronts the citizen's fundamental rights. Real defence does not start in the courtroom; it starts the moment a statement is taken at the police station — sometimes earlier.

We accompany clients through custody, statement, interrogation, arrest, indictment review, trial and appeal. At every stage we explain options and risks plainly.

Investigation phase — the first hours matter

In a police statement, the right to silence, the right to counsel and the limits of self-incriminating evidence are decisive. A single sentence in the record can be turned against you later.

A 24/7-reachable lawyer means procedural safeguards can actually be used during statement, custody, prosecutorial directives and search of home or office. We are available for emergency defence in Iğdır and surrounding provinces.

Common offence types

Intentional injury, insult, threats, criminal damage, fraud, narcotics, traffic-accident negligent injury or homicide, sexual offences and offences linked to domestic violence are among the most common files we handle.

Each offence type calls for a different evidentiary structure and a different defence strategy. Traffic accidents hinge heavily on fault-share reports; sexual offences turn on the complainant's statement and psychosocial assessments.

Victim and intervener counsel

Effective representation is no less critical for victims. Alongside the criminal trial, civil-law compensation can deliver meaningful redress for years-long harm in cases of injury, negligent homicide and sexual assault.

When representing as intervener or victim counsel, we run a parallel strategy — evidence collection, witness summons, expert-report objections and damages claims.

FAQ

How can I reach a relative in custody?
Through their lawyer. Once counsel is appointed, station-meeting, file inspection and statement-stage presence are arranged.
If I drop the complaint, will the case end?
Only for offences pursued by complaint (e.g. simple insult). Offences prosecuted ex officio continue regardless of withdrawal.