As a general rule, a plea bargain may not be appealedjust because the defendant did not get as good a deal as they expected.
Since it was a felony offense you HAD to have been represented by counsel (either your own or a public defender). No judge would have permitted you to plead guilty to a felony offense without benefit of counsel, and about the only way you could appeal the agreement would be if you were able to prove that your counsel was incompetent. Other than that there is very little chance you can withdraw, or appeal the deal.
Comment: It is not commonly understood that the court (the judge) has no part in arranging a plea bargain agreement. A plea agreement is worked out between the defendant and the prosecutor ONLY. The presiding judge is not required to honor, or abide by, the plea arrangement you worked out and they can reinstate the original charge brought against you if they believe the agreement does not serve the interests of justice. BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR!
If you were convicted, your attorney should be able to help you with evidence questions.
You don't appeal a charge - you appeal a conviction.
yes, it is a separate charge
If it was an arrest for a felony and not a conviction, the answer should be yes. An arrest should be meaningless. My father was arrested for a felony. It was a case of mistaken identity. A charge is now supposed to mean nothing. If it was a conviction. The answer is, it depends. Of course if a court overturned it on appeal, you are no longer convicted of a felony even if you served 40 years in prison. Your answer is no. Otherwise, It depends on what was the felony for? How long ago did it happen? What state are you in?
If it's an ongoing felony charge, or a felony conviction, no.
Depends on whether it's a misdemeanor or felony charge. If it's a felony charge, the answer is going to be no. If it's related to a domestic violence matter, the answer will also be no, whether it's a misdemeanor or felony charge.
no
No, it does require the felony charge
A non-proccessed felony charge means 1.) That a person has been accused of a felony crime (one that will result in a minimum of 5 years in prison if convicted) and is awaiting a preliminary hearing, or 2.) A felony charge that was dropped.
no
Yes Class 4 Felony
Yes, it is possible to appeal a felony conviction by filing a formal request with a higher court to review the case for legal errors or misconduct that may have affected the outcome of the trial.