Protecting Your Rights After Receiving a Subpoena
Setra Law Firm, PC represents individuals and entities served with grand jury subpoenas in Odessa & Midland, TX
Setra Law Firm, PC provides legal guidance for individuals and corporate entities who receive grand jury subpoenas requiring testimony or document production. A grand jury subpoena compels you to appear before a grand jury or to produce records related to a criminal investigation. The subpoena may target you as a witness or as a subject of the investigation itself. The firm reviews the subpoena, asserts privilege where appropriate, and negotiates scope and compliance deadlines to minimize your exposure before indictment.
Subpoenas often demand broad categories of documents, including financial records, emails, contracts, and communications. Compliance is legally required, but the firm ensures that you do not produce privileged materials or information that exceeds the subpoena's lawful scope. The firm also prepares you for testimony if the grand jury requires your appearance, protecting you from self-incrimination and procedural errors that could create additional criminal liability.
If you have been served with a grand jury subpoena in Odessa & Midland, TX, contact Setra Law Firm, PC to review the document and begin preparing your response.
How Document Review and Privilege Analysis Work
You will notice that the firm conducts a detailed review of every document the subpoena requests. The firm identifies materials that are protected by attorney-client privilege, work product doctrine, or other legal protections. A privilege log is prepared to describe withheld documents without disclosing their contents, and the firm negotiates with prosecutors to narrow the scope of production when the subpoena is overly broad.
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After the firm completes the document review, you produce only the materials that are legally required. This process prevents you from inadvertently providing evidence that could be used against you or others. Setra Law Firm, PC also negotiates deadlines when compliance within the original timeframe would be unreasonable or logistically difficult, particularly for corporate clients with large document repositories.
If the subpoena requires your testimony, the firm prepares you to answer questions truthfully while asserting your Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination when appropriate. The firm does not allow clients to testify without preparation, as even truthful answers can be misinterpreted or used to build a case against you. The firm may accompany you into the grand jury room in federal cases, but state grand jury proceedings in Texas typically do not allow counsel inside.
Clients often need clarity on what the subpoena requires and what rights they retain.
Understanding Grand Jury Subpoena Representation
Ignoring a grand jury subpoena can result in contempt charges, fines, and arrest. Compliance is mandatory unless the firm successfully quashes the subpoena or negotiates an alternative arrangement.
What happens if I ignore the subpoena?
The firm reviews each document to identify communications with attorneys, materials prepared in anticipation of litigation, and other protected categories. Privileged documents are withheld and listed on a privilege log.
How does the firm determine what documents are privileged?
Prosecutors often issue broad subpoenas to gather as much information as possible during an investigation. The firm negotiates to limit production to relevant materials and reasonable timeframes.
Why does the subpoena demand so many records?
What is the difference between a witness and a subject?
A witness is someone with information about the case but is not suspected of criminal conduct. A subject is someone whose actions are under investigation and who may be indicted.
State grand jury subpoenas in Texas follow different procedural rules, including restrictions on attorney presence during testimony, while federal grand jury practice allows more direct attorney involvement in certain phases.
How does subpoena representation differ in Odessa compared to federal cases?
If you have been served with a grand jury subpoena or expect to receive one, reach out to the firm to begin preparing your response and protecting your legal rights throughout the investigation.

