What Questions Should I Ask a Potential Criminal Defense Attorney About Their Case Resolution Rates?
When you’re facing criminal charges, every website tells you to “ask about an attorney’s track record.” But what does that actually mean? And more importantly, what should you really be asking?
The truth is that simplistic questions like “What’s your win rate?” won’t give you the information you need to make an informed decision. Criminal defense is far more nuanced than wins and losses on a scoreboard. This guide will teach you the sophisticated questions that will actually reveal whether an attorney can deliver results for your specific situation.
Why Traditional “Win Rate” Questions Don’t Work in Criminal Defense
Before we get to the questions you should ask, it’s important to understand why the questions most people ask don’t work.
Unlike personal injury attorneys who track settlement amounts or civil litigators who can point to verdicts, criminal defense doesn’t have standardized metrics for success. Here’s why:
Success looks different in every case. For one client, success might mean complete dismissal of all charges. For another, it might mean negotiating a felony down to a misdemeanor that allows them to keep their job. For someone facing mandatory minimum sentences, getting probation instead of prison time represents a significant victory. These outcomes can’t be collapsed into a single “win rate” number.
Most cases never go to trial. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, roughly 90-97% of criminal cases are resolved through plea bargains, dismissals, or other pre-trial dispositions. If an attorney tells you they “win” 95% of their cases, that number is almost certainly including negotiated outcomes that may or may not represent actual victories for the clients involved.
Attorneys who only take easy cases can have perfect records. An attorney could theoretically achieve a 100% success rate simply by declining any case that isn’t a slam dunk. This doesn’t make them a better attorney—it just means they’re selective in ways that may not serve clients with difficult cases.
The same attorney might have very different results in different case types. An attorney who excels at OUI defense might have an average track record with assault cases. Aggregate statistics hide these important distinctions.
The Questions That Actually Matter for a criminal defense Attorney
Now that you understand why raw numbers don’t tell the full story, here are the questions that will actually help you evaluate an attorney’s ability to handle your case.
Questions About Experience With Your Specific Charges
“How many cases involving [your specific charge] have you handled in the past two years?”
This question forces specificity. You want to know about recent experience with your exact situation—not general criminal defense experience from a decade ago. Criminal law evolves, and so do prosecution strategies, sentencing guidelines, and evidentiary standards. An attorney who handled dozens of OUI cases last year will have current knowledge of how prosecutors in your jurisdiction are approaching these cases today.
“What are the typical outcomes you’ve achieved in cases like mine?”
Notice this doesn’t ask about “wins” or “success rates.” It asks for a realistic picture of what happens to cases like yours. A candid attorney will give you a range: some cases result in dismissals, others in reduced charges, others in not guilty verdicts, and yes, some result in convictions with minimized consequences. An attorney who claims every case ends in acquittal is either exaggerating or refusing cases that don’t guarantee easy victories.
“Can you describe a case similar to mine where the outcome was particularly good? What about one where the result was disappointing?”
This two-part question reveals more than any statistic could. The first part lets you see what “good” actually looks like in your type of case. The second part—asking about a disappointing outcome—tells you whether the attorney is honest with you and whether they’ve learned from difficult cases. Be wary of any attorney who claims they’ve never had a disappointing outcome. Either they lack experience or they lack candor.
Questions About Criminal Case Resolution Strategy
“Of your recent cases in [your charge type], approximately what percentage resulted in dismissals, what percentage in plea agreements, and what percentage went to trial?”
This breakdown is far more useful than a single win rate. High dismissal rates might indicate an attorney who’s skilled at identifying weaknesses in the prosecution’s case during preliminary stages. A willingness to go to trial (even if it’s only 3-5% of cases) suggests an attorney who won’t simply pressure you into taking bad deals. The mix tells you how the attorney actually practices.
“When you negotiate plea agreements, what concessions do you typically achieve compared to the original charges?”
In criminal defense, the quality of plea negotiations is often more important than trial skills, simply because most cases are resolved this way. Ask about specific types of concessions: charge reductions (felony to misdemeanor), sentence recommendations, alternative dispositions like diversion programs, and whether they’ve successfully negotiated for outcomes that protect immigration status, professional licenses, or other collateral consequences.
“How do you decide whether to recommend trial versus negotiation in a case like mine?”
The answer reveals the attorney’s judgment and decision-making process. You want an attorney who can articulate clear factors they consider: strength of evidence, risks and potential rewards of trial, client priorities, judge tendencies, and prosecutor practices. Be concerned if the answer is vague or suggests the attorney has a one-size-fits-all approach.
Questions About Local Courts Criminal Knowledge and Relationships
“How often do you appear in [the specific court where your case will be heard]?”
Criminal defense is intensely local. Attorneys who regularly appear in your courthouse know the prosecutors, understand the judges’ preferences and tendencies, and have established credibility with court staff. This familiarity translates into better outcomes—not through impropriety, but through understanding what arguments resonate with specific judges and how particular prosecutors approach negotiations.
“Who are the prosecutors who typically handle [your charge type] cases, and what’s your experience working with them?”
Prosecutors are not interchangeable. Some are reasonable negotiators; others take hard-line positions. Some respond well to certain types of arguments or evidence; others don’t. An attorney who knows the prosecutors handling your type of case can tailor their approach accordingly.
“Have you appeared before Judge [name] before? What should I know about how they run their courtroom?”
If you already know which judge is assigned to your case, this question is invaluable. A knowledgeable attorney can tell you about the judge’s sentencing tendencies, their patience for certain arguments, their procedural preferences, and how these factors might influence strategy.
Questions About How They Measure Success in Criminal representation
“How do you personally define a successful outcome in a case like mine?”
This open-ended question reveals the attorney’s values and approach. Listen for answers that center the client’s priorities—protecting your job, avoiding jail time, minimizing collateral consequences—rather than the attorney’s ego or statistics. The best attorneys define success by whether they achieved the best possible outcome given the specific circumstances, not by abstract metrics.
“What outcomes would you consider realistic possibilities in my case?”
A good attorney can give you a candid assessment after reviewing your case details. They should be able to outline best-case, worst-case, and most likely scenarios based on their experience with similar cases. If an attorney guarantees a specific outcome or refuses to discuss the possibility of unfavorable results, that’s a red flag.
“What would make my case more difficult to resolve favorably?”
This probes the attorney’s analytical ability and honesty. An experienced attorney can identify the weaknesses and challenges in your case—not to discourage you, but to prepare you for realistic expectations and to demonstrate that they’ve genuinely analyzed your situation.
Red Flags in Attorney Responses
As you ask these questions, watch for warning signs that suggest an attorney may not be the right choice.
Guaranteed outcomes. No ethical attorney can guarantee results in a criminal case. The variables are simply too numerous—witness availability, evidence rulings, judge discretion, and jury behavior in trial cases are all outside attorney control. Promises of specific outcomes should make you skeptical.
Reluctance to discuss unsuccessful cases. Every criminal defense attorney who handles significant caseloads has cases that didn’t turn out well. An attorney who claims otherwise either lacks experience or lacks honesty. Neither serves you well.
Vague or evasive answers about local experience. If an attorney can’t speak specifically about the court where your case will be heard, the prosecutors in that jurisdiction, or the judges who might preside over your case, they may not have the local presence that meaningful criminal defense requires.
Focus on aggregate statistics without context. An attorney who leads with statistics (“I’ve won 87% of my cases”) without explaining what “won” means, what types of cases are included, and how those numbers apply to your situation is prioritizing marketing over substance.
Inability to explain their approach. An attorney should be able to articulate how they would approach your case, what their initial priorities would be, and what factors would influence their strategy. Vague answers like “I’ll fight hard for you” without specifics suggest a lack of concrete planning.
What Good Answers Sound Like from a Seasoned Criminal Lawyer
To help you calibrate your expectations, here’s what thoughtful, candid responses might sound like:
On track record: “In the past two years, I’ve handled about forty OUI cases in this county. Roughly a quarter were dismissed or reduced to non-criminal violations, usually because of issues with the stop or problems with field sobriety testing. Most of the rest were resolved through plea negotiations—typically to reduced charges or with more favorable sentencing recommendations than the prosecution initially sought. I took three to trial; we won two, and one resulted in a conviction on a lesser charge. Every case is different, so I’d need to review your specific facts to give you a realistic assessment.”
On local knowledge: “I’m in [court name] three or four times a week. The prosecutor who handles first-offense OUI cases is someone I’ve worked with for years—she’s reasonable when the evidence supports negotiation but won’t budge without a good reason. If Judge [name] is assigned to your case, you should know he’s strict about procedural requirements for both sides, which can actually work in our favor if the arresting officer cut corners.”
On strategy: “I won’t know the right approach until I’ve reviewed the police reports, any video footage, and the chemical test results. If there are problems with how the evidence was obtained, we might file suppression motions before discussing any plea offers. If the evidence is strong, my focus will shift to what concessions we can achieve—maybe a continuance without finding if you’re eligible, or at minimum protecting your license and keeping this off your record in a way that matters for your job.”
Questions to Ask Yourself
Finally, remember that case resolution rates are only part of the picture. As you evaluate attorneys, also consider:
Do I understand what this attorney is telling me? Criminal law is complex, but a good attorney can explain your situation, options, and realistic outcomes in plain language. If you leave a consultation confused, that’s a communication problem that will only get worse.
Does this attorney seem genuinely interested in my case? Watch for signs that the attorney is engaged with your specific situation rather than treating you as a generic case. Did they ask detailed questions? Did they listen to your concerns? Did they explain how their approach would be tailored to your priorities?
Do I trust this person to make decisions on my behalf? Criminal cases often require quick judgment calls—during negotiations, in motions practice, at trial. You need to trust your attorney’s judgment and values, not just their statistics.
The Bottom Line
The question “What’s your win rate?” seems straightforward, but it’s the wrong question. Criminal defense success is too varied, too dependent on case-specific factors, and too nuanced to reduce to a single percentage.
Instead, focus on questions that reveal whether an attorney has recent, relevant experience with your type of case in your jurisdiction; understands the full range of possible outcomes and can discuss them honestly; has the local knowledge and relationships to navigate your court system effectively; and will measure success by what matters to you, not by abstract statistics.
I have been providing criminal defense services in Massachusetts for over Thirty (30) years. I have been named a “Top 100 Trial Lawyer” by The National Trial Lawyers, I have earned the “Clients’ Choice Award” by AVVO, the Client Champion Platinum Award by Martindale-Hubbell, I have been named a “Top Tier Lawyer” by the American Trial Academy, I have been named a “Superior DUI Attorney” by the National Advocacy for DUI Defense, one of the “Ten best attorneys for Massachusetts”, by the American institute of DUI/DWI attorneys and I have won over Ninety Percent (90%) of my trials.*
Call a Top Massachusetts Criminal Lawyer Now at: (508) 393-4162.
This blog is not intended to be legal advice, if you have been charged with a crime in Massachusetts you should call an experienced and successful Criminal Defense Attorney immediately.