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Denton Murder Defense Attorneys

With Offices in Dallas, Fort Worth, Allen, Denton, Waco & Rockwall

Do You Need Legal Help?



    Denton Murder Defense Attorneys

    With Offices in Dallas, Fort Worth, Allen, Denton, Waco & Rockwall

    Do You Need Legal Help?



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      "Deandra Grant Law fights hard for their clients and is always willing to go above and beyond. They are the best firm for DWI cases in DFW and beyond. Definitely hire them to represent you in any pending cases."

      - P. Williams

      "Deandra Grant made a tough situation so much better. She listened to my concerns and helped me so much with my case. I would recommend her to anyone needing legal services."

      - M. Haley

      "Deandra Grant Law handled my case with diligence and professionalism. Deandra Grant's reputation is stellar and now I know why. She has a team of individuals who provide quality service."

      - N. Coulter

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      Denton Murder Defense Attorneys

      Murder is a first-degree felony in Texas, with punishment of 5 to 99 years or life in prison. Capital murder is a capital felony, punishable by life without parole or death. These are the most serious cases in the Texas criminal justice system, and they operate under specialized rules including the bifurcated guilt/punishment trial structure, the capital voir dire process, the particular procedural protections that apply to capital cases, and the specific evidentiary rules that govern homicide prosecution. The defense of a homicide case requires resources, experience, and time that few practice areas demand.

      Deandra Grant Law represents people charged with murder and capital murder in Denton County. Call (214) 225-7117 to discuss your case.

      How Texas Defines Murder

      Murder is defined in Texas Penal Code § 19.02. Contrary to the common-law language many out-of-state resources still use, Texas murder does not require “malice aforethought.” It requires one of three culpable states of mind described in § 19.02(b):

      • Intentional or knowing conduct that causes the death of an individual (§ 19.02(b)(1)). The state must prove the defendant’s conscious objective was to cause death, or that the defendant was aware his conduct was reasonably certain to cause death.
      • Intent to cause serious bodily injury combined with an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes death (§ 19.02(b)(2)). The state does not have to prove the defendant intended death (only serious bodily injury plus a clearly dangerous act that resulted in death).
      • Felony murder (§ 19.02(b)(3)). A death caused during the commission, attempted commission, or immediate flight from a felony other than manslaughter, where the defendant committed an act clearly dangerous to human life. The state does not have to prove any intent to kill or injure. This is the doctrine by which a co-conspirator who never pulled a trigger can be convicted of murder.

      Punishment for Murder

      Murder is a first-degree felony. Under Texas Penal Code § 12.32, the punishment range is 5 to 99 years or life in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, and a fine of up to $10,000.

      Sudden Passion

      Texas Penal Code § 19.02(d) allows a defendant to raise sudden passion arising from adequate cause at the punishment phase. If the jury (or judge, in a bench trial on punishment) finds by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant caused the death under the immediate influence of sudden passion arising from an adequate cause, the offense is punished as a second-degree felony (2 to 20 years and a fine of up to $10,000). Sudden passion does not reduce the conviction; it reduces the punishment range. The jury still finds the defendant guilty of murder.

      Capital Murder

      Capital murder is defined in Texas Penal Code § 19.03. A person commits capital murder by committing murder under § 19.02(b)(1) (intentionally or knowingly causing death) plus one or more aggravating circumstances. As of the 2023 legislative session, there are ten aggravators:

      • Murder of a peace officer or fireman acting in the lawful discharge of an official duty, when the defendant knows the victim’s status (§ 19.03(a)(1)).
      • Intentional murder in the course of committing or attempting to commit kidnapping, burglary, robbery, aggravated sexual assault, arson, obstruction or retaliation, or a terroristic threat under § 22.07(a)(1), (3), (4), (5), or (6) (§ 19.03(a)(2)).
      • Murder for remuneration or the promise of remuneration, or hiring another to commit murder for remuneration (§ 19.03(a)(3)).
      • Murder while escaping or attempting to escape from a penal institution (§ 19.03(a)(4)).
      • Murder by a person incarcerated in a penal institution of an employee of the institution, or murder with intent to establish, maintain, or participate in a criminal combination (§ 19.03(a)(5)).
      • Murder by a person while incarcerated for capital murder, murder, or serving a life or 99-year sentence for aggravated kidnapping, aggravated sexual assault, or aggravated robbery (§ 19.03(a)(6)).
      • Murder of more than one person during the same criminal transaction, or during different transactions pursuant to the same scheme or course of conduct (§ 19.03(a)(7)).
      • Murder of an individual under 10 years of age (§ 19.03(a)(8)).
      • Murder of an individual 10 years of age or older but younger than 15 (§ 19.03(a)(9), added by Lauren’s Law). The death penalty is not available when this is the sole aggravating factor.
      • Murder in retaliation for or on account of the service or status of a judge or justice of any listed Texas court (§ 19.03(a)(10)).

      Punishment for Capital Murder

      Capital murder is a capital felony. Under Texas Penal Code § 12.31, if the state seeks the death penalty and the defendant was 18 or older at the time of the offense, punishment is either death or life without parole, determined by jury answers to the special issues in Code of Criminal Procedure Article 37.071. If the state does not seek death, or if the defendant was under 18 at the time of the offense (United States Supreme Court, Roper v. Simmons), the punishment is mandatory life without parole. There is no parole eligibility on a capital murder conviction.

      Lesser Included Homicide Offenses

      Chapter 19 of the Penal Code includes two homicide offenses that often become the actual focus of plea negotiation or a lesser-included instruction at trial.

      Manslaughter (§ 19.04)

      Recklessly causing the death of another. Second-degree felony; 2 to 20 years and a fine of up to $10,000.

      Criminally Negligent Homicide (§ 19.05)

      Causing the death of another by criminal negligence. State jail felony; 180 days to 2 years and a fine of up to $10,000.

      Intoxication Manslaughter (§ 49.08)

      A death caused by the defendant’s intoxication while operating a motor vehicle, watercraft, aircraft, or amusement ride. Second-degree felony; 2 to 20 years, a fine of up to $10,000, and 240 to 800 hours of community service. Enhanced to first-degree felony (5 to 99 years or life) if the victim is a peace officer, firefighter, or emergency medical services personnel on duty.

      Defenses to Murder Charges in Texas

      The fact that someone died does not mean someone committed murder. Chapter 9 of the Texas Penal Code codifies the justifications that remove criminal liability for conduct that would otherwise be a crime. In Denton County homicide cases, the following justifications and defenses are routinely in play:

      Self-Defense (§ 9.31) and Deadly Force in Defense of Person (§ 9.32)

      A person is justified in using force (and, in circumstances specified in § 9.32, deadly force) against another when and to the degree the actor reasonably believes the force is immediately necessary to protect against the other’s use or attempted use of unlawful force.

      Castle Doctrine and No Duty to Retreat

      Under § 9.32(b), a defendant’s belief that deadly force was immediately necessary is presumed reasonable when the other person was unlawfully and with force entering, or had unlawfully and with force entered, the defendant’s occupied habitation, vehicle, or place of business, subject to statutory conditions. Under § 9.31(e), a defendant who is in a place the defendant has a right to be, is not engaged in criminal activity, and did not provoke the other person has no duty to retreat before using force or deadly force.

      Defense of a Third Person (§ 9.33) and Defense of Property (§§ 9.41–9.43)

      Texas also justifies the use of force in defense of another person and, in specified circumstances, the use of force and deadly force to protect land or tangible, movable property.

      Other Defenses

      • Mistaken identification, which remains one of the leading causes of wrongful homicide convictions.
      • Challenges to forensic evidence (ex. DNA transfer and mixture interpretation, bullet and cartridge case comparison, bloodstain pattern analysis, autopsy findings, and cell-site location information).
      • Accomplice witness corroboration under Code of Criminal Procedure Article 38.14.
      • Alibi.
      • Insanity under Penal Code § 8.01, an affirmative defense that must be proved by a preponderance.
      • Involuntary intoxication under § 8.04 (not a defense but may be used in mitigation)

      Bail in Murder Cases

      Bail in a murder or capital murder case is set by the court based on the factors in Code of Criminal Procedure Article 17.15, which include the bail’s purpose to secure appearance, the nature of the offense and the circumstances under which it was committed, the ability of the defendant to make bail, the defendant’s work record and family and community ties, the length of residence in the county, prior criminal record, conformity with previous bond conditions, the existence of outstanding bonds, aggravating circumstances, the future safety of victims and the community, and the citizenship status of the defendant. In capital murder cases where the state seeks the death penalty, bail may be denied entirely under Article I, § 11a of the Texas Constitution.

      Denton County Courts

      Felony homicide cases in Denton County are tried in the Denton County Criminal District Courts. The courts sit at the Denton County Courts Complex, 1450 E. McKinney Street, Denton. The Denton County Criminal District Attorney’s Office prosecutes. Misdemeanor homicide-adjacent charges (some assault-family-violence charges, for example) are heard in the Denton County Courts at Law.

      Frequently Asked Questions

      Can a murder charge be reduced to manslaughter?

      Sometimes. Manslaughter (§ 19.04) is a lesser included offense of murder in many fact patterns, and a jury may convict on manslaughter rather than murder if the evidence supports the lesser offense. Whether the jury is instructed on manslaughter depends on whether the evidence raises the issue of reckless (rather than intentional or knowing) conduct.

      Is the death penalty possible in my case?

      The death penalty is only available for capital murder under § 19.03 and only when the state formally notifies the defense that it seeks death. The state cannot seek death based solely on the § 19.03(a)(9) aggravator (child 10 to 14). Whether death is sought depends on the facts and the discretion of the elected district attorney.

      What if I acted in self-defense?

      Self-defense under Chapter 9 is a statutory justification, not a fact argument. When the evidence raises the defense, the state bears the burden of disproving it beyond a reasonable doubt. The specific provisions (§ 9.31 (self-defense), § 9.32 (deadly force, including Castle Doctrine and Stand Your Ground), § 9.33 (defense of a third person)) each have their own requirements, and the strategy depends on which applies.

      Will my case go to trial?

      Most Texas murder cases resolve without trial, but the resolution depends entirely on the specific case. The decision to go to trial versus accept a plea is driven by the strength of the state’s case, the available defenses, the punishment exposure, and the client’s informed decision after a full evaluation.

      How long will the case take?

      Texas murder cases typically take twelve to thirty-six months or longer to resolve. Capital murder cases regularly take three to five years. Complex forensic testing, mental-health evaluations, defense investigations, and pretrial motion practice all extend timelines.

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      About Deandra Grant Law

      Deandra Grant Law is a Texas criminal defense firm with offices in Denton, Dallas, Fort Worth, Allen, Waco, and Rockwall. Our criminal defense practice includes serious-felony and homicide representation across North Texas.

      Deandra M. Grant, Managing Partner

      • More than 30 years in practice
      • Former prosecutor, now dedicated to criminal defense
      • J.D.; M.S. in Pharmaceutical Sciences
      • Graduate Certificate in Forensic Toxicology
      • ACS-CHAL Forensic Lawyer-Scientist (the first attorney in Texas to earn this designation from the American Chemical Society / Chemistry and the Law division)
      • Texas Super Lawyer since 2011
      • Author of 17 law books including A First Offender’s Guide to Texas Criminal Courts
      • AV Preeminent rated by Martindale-Hubbell

      Douglas E. Huff, Partner

      • ACS-CHAL Forensic Lawyer-Scientist
      • Digital forensics and electronic evidence training
      • Extensive North Texas trial experience

      James Lee Bright, Of Counsel

      • National federal criminal defense practice, including serious-felony and capital-adjacent federal matters
      • Admitted to all four Texas federal districts, the District of Columbia, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court of the United States

      Contact Our Denton Murder Defense Attorneys

      In a murder or capital murder case, the first weeks and months matter. Witnesses need to be located while memories are fresh. Forensic evidence needs to be preserved and, where appropriate, independently tested. Bond arguments need to be prepared and presented. The defense strategy decided at the beginning frequently shapes the outcome at the end.

      Call Deandra Grant Law at (214) 225-7117 to schedule a consultation. We serve Denton County and surrounding North Texas counties from our Denton office.

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      “Deandra Grant Law – Criminal & DWI Defense handled my case with diligence and professionalism. Deandra Grant’s reputation is stellar and now I know why. She has a team of individuals who provide quality service.”

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