Tewksbury Criminal Defense Lawyer
Strategic defense for Tewksbury residents and anyone arrested in Tewksbury, MA. Attorney Adela Aprodu represents clients in Lowell District Court and Middlesex Superior Court across OUI, drug crimes, firearm charges, restraining orders, and assault matters.
Criminal Defense in Tewksbury, Massachusetts
A Tewksbury arrest typically lands in Lowell District Court at 41 Hurd Street, the courthouse with jurisdiction over Tewksbury, Lowell, Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Dunstable, Tyngsborough, and Westford. Felony charges are indicted to Middlesex Superior Court, with cases heard in either East Cambridge or the Lowell session. Each forum has its own pace, motion practice, and prosecutor culture, and the choice of court has real consequences for plea options, trial dates, and pretrial release.
Attorney Adela Aprodu represents Tewksbury clients across the full range of criminal matters — from first-offense OUI through serious felony charges. Early defense decisions in the first 48 hours often determine whether you keep your license, whether bail is set or you are released on personal recognizance, and whether evidence can be challenged before the Commonwealth locks in its theory of the case.
- OUI / DUI Defense — first offense 24D, second/third offense, refusal suspensions, breath test challenges — see Tewksbury OUI page
- Drug Crimes — possession, possession with intent to distribute, distribution, school-zone enhancements — see Tewksbury drug crimes page
- Firearms Defense — illegal possession, unlicensed carry, LTC issues under M.G.L. c. 269 § 10 — see Tewksbury firearms page
- Restraining Orders — 209A abuse prevention orders, 258E harassment orders, defending against orders and against alleged violations — see Tewksbury restraining orders page
- Assault & Battery — simple A&B, A&B with a dangerous weapon, domestic A&B, defenses based on self-defense and consent
- Resisting Arrest — M.G.L. c. 268 § 32B — common companion charge that often turns on body-worn camera review and officer credibility
What to Expect in Lowell District Court
- Arraignment — the first appearance after arrest. Bail conditions are set, charges are read, and pretrial release terms (drug testing, no-contact orders, GPS) are imposed if the prosecutor requests them
- Pretrial Conferences — typically 4–8 weeks after arraignment. Discovery exchange, motion practice, and plea discussions happen here
- Motion Hearings — motions to suppress (4th Amendment, Miranda, identification), motions to dismiss (insufficient evidence, McCarthy challenges), and motions in limine
- Disposition — trial, plea agreement, dismissal, continuance without a finding (CWOF), or pretrial probation depending on the strength of the Commonwealth's case and the defendant's record
Defense Strategies That Apply Across Charges
- Challenging the stop or search — police need reasonable suspicion to stop and probable cause to arrest; without those, evidence can be suppressed under Commonwealth v. Mubdi and the Fourth Amendment
- Miranda and Article 12 — MA's Article 12 of the Declaration of Rights provides broader protection than the federal Fifth Amendment in some custodial-interrogation contexts
- Witness credibility and discovery — Tewksbury PD reports, Massachusetts State Police reports for I-93 stops, body cam, dispatch logs, and CAD records often reveal inconsistencies that disrupt the Commonwealth's narrative
- Mandatory minimums and enhancements — many MA criminal statutes carry mandatory minimums or sentencing enhancements (school zones, repeat offenders, firearms) — the early plea calculus depends heavily on whether enhancements apply
- Alternative dispositions — first offenders may qualify for CWOF, pretrial probation, or 24D-style alternatives that avoid a permanent conviction
Key Takeaways
- Tewksbury criminal cases are most often heard in Lowell District Court; felonies indicted to Middlesex Superior
- Lawyer involvement in the first 48 hours preserves evidence challenges and shapes pretrial release conditions
- Many Tewksbury arrests are MSP stops on I-93; report quality and trooper testimony often differ from local PD cases
- Mandatory minimums for firearms, drug-trafficking weights, and repeat OUIs make the early plea analysis critical
- Many Tewksbury charges resolve with CWOF, pretrial probation, or alternative dispositions for first offenders
Frequently Asked Questions
Misdemeanor cases are heard in Lowell District Court at 41 Hurd Street, which has jurisdiction over Tewksbury, Lowell, Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Dunstable, Tyngsborough, and Westford. Felony cases are indicted to Middlesex Superior Court (East Cambridge or the Lowell session). The court of arrest doesn't always determine where the case is ultimately tried.
Yes. Arraignment is where bail conditions, no-contact orders, and pretrial release terms are set. Conditions imposed at arraignment are difficult to modify later. Having counsel at arraignment also preserves objections and signals to the court that the defense is engaged.
A continuance without a finding (CWOF) is a disposition where the defendant admits to facts sufficient for a finding of guilt, but the case is continued without an actual finding. If the defendant completes probation successfully, the charge is dismissed. A CWOF is not a conviction for most purposes, but federal immigration authorities and licensing boards may treat it as one.
Misdemeanor cases often resolve in 4–9 months from arraignment. Cases involving motions to suppress, expert witnesses, or trials can extend to a year or more. Felony cases indicted to Middlesex Superior typically take 12–18 months from indictment.
It can. Massachusetts State Police make most I-93 stops, and MSP report formats, breath-test instruments, and supervisory chains differ from Tewksbury PD's. MSP also has its own training protocols for field sobriety tests. Cross-examination of MSP troopers often focuses on dispatch logs, cruiser cameras, and adherence to the OUI investigation manual.
Yes. Most misdemeanor convictions can be sealed 3 years after disposition or release; felony convictions after 7 years. CWOFs and dismissals can typically be sealed sooner. Sealing requires a petition under M.G.L. c. 276 § 100A and is not automatic.
Tewksbury Practice Areas
Free Consultation — (978) 406-9890
Speak directly with Attorney Adela Aprodu about your Tewksbury case. Initial consultations are free and confidential.
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