Should I Hire a Private Criminal Defense Attorney?
Yes — if you are facing criminal charges, under investigation, or believe police may be building a case against you, hiring a private criminal defense attorney can be one of the most important decisions you make.
A criminal case can threaten your freedom, your record, your career, your immigration status, your driver’s license, your reputation, and your future. Even a misdemeanor can create lasting consequences. A felony charge can change the direction of your life.
When the government is trying to convict you, you need someone whose job is to protect you, challenge the evidence, and fight for the best possible outcome.
Why Hire a Private Criminal Defense Attorney?
A private criminal defense attorney can begin working immediately to protect your rights. That may include reviewing the arrest, investigating the facts, challenging illegal searches or seizures, examining police reports, reviewing body camera or dash camera footage, interviewing witnesses, negotiating with prosecutors, filing motions, preparing for trial, and identifying weaknesses in the state’s case.
In many cases, the most important work happens early. Evidence can disappear. Witness memories can fade. Surveillance video can be deleted. Statements can be misinterpreted. Court deadlines can pass quickly.
Hiring a private criminal defense lawyer gives you someone focused on your case from the beginning.
Is a Public Defender Good Enough?
Public defenders are real lawyers, and many are experienced and dedicated. Michael Raheb knows this firsthand because he previously served as an Assistant Public Defender. However, public defenders often handle extremely heavy caseloads and may not have the same flexibility, time, or availability that a private attorney can provide.
When you hire a private criminal defense attorney, you are choosing the lawyer you want. You can select someone with the background, courtroom experience, communication style, and defense strategy that fits your case.
What Can a Private Criminal Defense Lawyer Do for Me?
A private criminal defense attorney can look for ways to attack the prosecution’s case from every angle, including:
Whether the police had legal grounds to stop, detain, search, or arrest you.
Whether your constitutional rights were violated.
Whether statements were taken illegally or unfairly.
Whether the evidence is reliable.
Whether witnesses are credible.
Whether the government can prove every element of the charge beyond a reasonable doubt.
Whether the case can be dismissed, reduced, diverted, negotiated, or taken to trial.
This kind of defense requires preparation, judgment, and aggressive advocacy.
Why Choose Michael M. Raheb?
Fort Myers criminal defense attorney Michael M. Raheb has successfully handled hundreds of cases in state and federal courts throughout Southern Florida in both criminal and civil matters. He believes in aggressively attacking all aspects of the opposing side’s case to obtain the most favorable outcome possible for his clients.
Mr. Raheb personally handles his clients’ cases and makes sure they have access to his skills and counsel when they need him. Criminal charges are stressful, and clients deserve a lawyer who is available, responsive, and prepared.
Mr. Raheb has handled jury trials involving DUI, BUI, murder, aggravated sex battery, and other serious criminal charges. He has filed dozens of writs of habeas corpus, has been involved in appellate litigation including Young v. Shoap, and has served as an Assistant Public Defender.
Proven Trial Experience in Serious Criminal Cases
Mr. Raheb served as lead defense counsel in one of Florida’s most publicized sexual battery cases, State v. Hiatt. The case received national attention, including personal interviews with Governor Bush and coverage through a Lifetime network documentary. Several state laws were passed in the victim’s name.
The prosecution offered the defendant life in prison without the possibility of parole. Mr. Raheb aggressively defended his client, and the jury acquitted the defendant in less than three hours.
That kind of courtroom experience matters when your freedom is at stake.
When Should I Hire a Criminal Defense Attorney?
You should contact a criminal defense attorney as soon as possible if:
You were arrested.
You received a notice to appear.
Police want to question you.
A detective called you.
You believe you are under investigation.
Your car, home, phone, or property was searched.
You were accused of DUI, drug possession, domestic violence, theft, assault, battery, sex crimes, weapons offenses, probation violations, or any felony or misdemeanor.
You have a court date coming up.
Do not wait until charges get worse. Do not wait until the prosecutor has already built the case. Early legal intervention can make a major difference.
What If I Think the Case Is Minor?
There is no such thing as a harmless criminal charge.
A “minor” case can still affect employment, housing, professional licensing, immigration, education, family court issues, background checks, and your ability to move forward with your life. Even if jail is unlikely, the record itself can become a serious problem.
Private criminal defense attorneys can help you understand the real risks and whether options exist to avoid a conviction, reduce the charge, seek diversion, challenge the evidence, or pursue sealing or expungement when legally available.
Contact Michael Raheb for a Free Consultation
If you are facing criminal charges in Fort Myers, Cape Coral, Lee County, Collier County, Broward County, or anywhere in Southern Florida, do not face the system alone.
Hiring a private criminal defense attorney is an investment in your freedom, your record, and your future.
Michael M. Raheb has the experience, trial background, and aggressive defense approach needed to challenge the government’s case and protect your rights.
Contact Michael M. Raheb today to arrange a free consultation and start planning your defense immediately.
Should I Hire a Private Criminal Defense Attorney Now That the Victim Is on My Side?
Yes. You should still hire a private criminal defense attorney even if the alleged victim is now on your side.
Many people mistakenly believe that if the victim does not want to press charges, the case will automatically go away. That is not how criminal cases work in Florida. Once the police make an arrest or the State Attorney’s Office files charges, the case belongs to the government — not the victim.
The alleged victim’s position can matter, but it does not control the case. Prosecutors can still move forward even if the victim wants the charges dropped, refuses to cooperate, changes their story, or asks the court for leniency.
Why the Case May Continue Even If the Victim Supports You
In Florida criminal cases, the prosecutor represents the State of Florida. The prosecutor’s job is to decide whether to pursue the case based on the available evidence, public safety concerns, office policy, prior history, witness statements, police reports, photographs, 911 calls, body camera footage, medical records, text messages, social media posts, and other evidence.
That means a case may continue even when the alleged victim says:
“I do not want to press charges.”
“I exaggerated.”
“I was angry when I called the police.”
“I do not want him or her arrested.”
“I want the no-contact order lifted.”
“I want the case dismissed.”
Those statements may help the defense, but they do not automatically end the prosecution.
Why You Need a Lawyer Immediately
If the victim is on your side, that may create an opportunity — but it must be handled carefully. You should not contact the alleged victim directly if there is a no-contact order, bond condition, injunction, or court order in place. Even friendly contact can lead to a new arrest, a bond violation, or additional charges.
A private criminal defense attorney can communicate properly with the court and prosecutor, evaluate whether the alleged victim’s position can be used to help your defense, and seek relief from unfair or unnecessary restrictions when appropriate.
Michael M. Raheb can review whether there are grounds to challenge the arrest, attack the evidence, negotiate with prosecutors, seek modification of bond conditions, or push for dismissal, reduction, diversion, or another favorable resolution.
The Victim’s Support Must Be Used Strategically
An alleged victim’s support can be powerful when presented the right way. But it can also backfire if handled incorrectly.
For example, prosecutors may become suspicious if they believe the victim has been pressured, threatened, manipulated, or coached. They may rely even more heavily on body camera footage, 911 recordings, photographs, medical evidence, officer testimony, or prior statements.
That is why the defense needs to be organized, professional, and strategic. The goal is not simply to tell the prosecutor, “The victim is on my side.” The goal is to show why the government cannot prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt or why continuing the prosecution is not in the interests of justice.
What If This Is a Domestic Violence Case?
This issue comes up often in domestic violence cases. A spouse, partner, family member, or roommate may call police during an argument and later regret it. But once law enforcement is involved, the decision may no longer be theirs.
Domestic violence cases can involve no-contact orders, mandatory court appearances, counseling requirements, firearm restrictions, immigration consequences, employment concerns, and long-term damage to your record. Even if the alleged victim wants to reconcile, you must take the case seriously.
Do not assume the case is over. Do not violate a no-contact order. Do not ask the alleged victim to “drop the charges.” Do not discuss testimony. Call a criminal defense attorney immediately.
Why Choose Michael M. Raheb?
Fort Myers criminal defense attorney Michael M. Raheb has successfully handled hundreds of cases in state and federal courts throughout Southern Florida. He believes in aggressively attacking every aspect of the opposing side’s case to obtain the most favorable outcome possible for his clients.
Mr. Raheb personally handles his clients’ cases and makes sure they have access to his skills and counsel when they need him most. When your freedom, record, family, reputation, or career is at risk, you need an attorney who understands how to challenge the government’s case from every angle.
Mr. Raheb has handled jury trials ranging from DUI and BUI to murder and aggravated sex battery. He has served as an Assistant Public Defender, filed dozens of writs of habeas corpus, and has been involved in appellate litigation, including Young v. Shoap.
Proven Experience in High-Stakes Criminal Defense
Mr. Raheb served as lead defense counsel in one of Florida’s most publicized sexual battery cases, State v. Hiatt. The case received national attention, including interviews with Governor Bush and coverage through a Lifetime network documentary. Several state laws were passed in the victim’s name.
The prosecution offered the defendant life in prison without the possibility of parole. Mr. Raheb aggressively defended his client, and the jury acquitted the defendant in less than three hours.
That experience matters when the government is pursuing a case and the stakes are high.
Do Not Rely on the Victim Alone to Protect You
Even if the alleged victim is now on your side, you still need legal protection. The prosecutor may continue the case. The judge may keep restrictions in place. The police report may contain damaging allegations. Prior statements may be used against you. A no-contact violation can create a new criminal problem.
The victim’s support may help your defense, but it is not a defense strategy by itself.
Contact Michael Raheb for a Free Consultation
If you are facing criminal charges in Fort Myers, Cape Coral, Lee County, Collier County, Broward County, or anywhere in Southern Florida, do not assume the case will disappear because the victim supports you.
Hire a private criminal defense attorney now. Protect your rights before the case gets worse.
Contact Michael M. Raheb today to arrange a free consultation and start planning your defense immediately.




























