Illuminated classical building facade with Corinthian columns against twilight sky.

Drug Crimes Attorney in Murrieta, CA

California's drug laws have changed significantly over the past decade — but a drug charge is still a serious matter with consequences that extend well beyond the criminal case. Employment, professional licensing, immigration status, custody, and housing can all be affected by a drug conviction. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend clients facing drug charges in Murrieta and throughout Southwest Riverside County, and we approach each case knowing the full scope of what's at stake.

How California Drug Law Works

Possession, Sales, and Manufacturing: Understanding the Charges

California’s Controlled Substances Act, codified in Health and Safety Code § 11000 et seq., classifies drugs into schedules based on their potential for abuse and accepted medical use. The most serious charges involve Schedule I and II substances — heroin, methamphetamine, cocaine, fentanyl — though charges involving marijuana, prescription medications, and synthetic compounds also fall under the statute.

Simple possession under Health and Safety Code § 11350 (narcotics) or § 11377 (methamphetamine) is a misdemeanor for most substances following Proposition 47’s passage in 2014. That doesn’t make it minor. A misdemeanor conviction still creates a criminal record, triggers potential immigration consequences, and can affect professional licenses and background checks for years.

The charge that changes the entire character of a case is possession for sale, codified at § 11351 or § 11378 depending on the substance. Prosecutors look at factors beyond the drugs themselves — the quantity, the packaging, the presence of scales or baggies, cash in unusual amounts, text messages, and surveillance evidence. They argue those circumstances show intent to sell. But intent is something that must be proven, and it can be contested. A possession for sale charge can be reduced to simple possession if the evidence doesn’t hold up.

Manufacturing and transportation carry the most severe exposure. Health and Safety Code § 11379.6 governs drug manufacturing, and a conviction can result in three to seven years in state prison. Federal charges carry mandatory minimums and no possibility of probation — which is why any case with a federal dimension demands immediate attention.

What the Prosecution Has to Prove

Every drug charge has elements the state must establish beyond a reasonable doubt. For a possession charge, the prosecution must prove you had knowledge of the substance, that it was a controlled substance, that you had control over it, and that the amount was usable. Each element is a potential point of attack. We look at whether the search that uncovered the drugs was lawful, whether the evidence was properly handled, and whether the lab analysis that identified the substance was conducted correctly.

The exclusionary rule means that evidence obtained through an unlawful search or seizure cannot be used against you. If your car, home, or person was searched without a valid warrant or a recognized exception to the warrant requirement, a motion to suppress can eliminate that evidence from the case — and sometimes, eliminate the case itself.

How We Can Help with Drug Charges

Nic Cocis has handled drug cases ranging from misdemeanor possession to felony sales and manufacturing charges since 1999. He has appeared in the Southwest Justice Center on hundreds of criminal matters and knows how these cases are evaluated at every stage.

Our drug crimes defense services include:

Challenging the legality of searches, traffic stops, and seizures
Filing motions to suppress unlawfully obtained evidence
Challenging lab identification and chain of custody for seized substances
Negotiating for diversion programs or reduced charges where available
Defending against possession for sale and transportation charges
Representing clients facing federal drug charges

The Search and the Evidence: Where Cases Turn

Most drug cases begin with a search. Whether it was a traffic stop, a knock at the door, or a tip-based investigation, the Fourth Amendment governs what law enforcement was permitted to do. We review every detail of how the evidence was obtained. If it can't come in, the prosecution often can't proceed.

What to Expect When You Work with Us

01

Immediate Case Evaluation

We review the facts of the arrest, the search or stop that preceded it, the substances involved, and the charges filed. The initial evaluation identifies the most significant legal issues right away.

Two men at a desk, one in a suit taking notes, legal documents and scales of justice present.

02

Investigation and Discovery

We request everything the prosecution has — lab reports, surveillance footage, officer body cam, search warrant affidavits, and informant disclosures where applicable. Evidence that wasn't properly obtained doesn't belong in your case.

Two professionals engaged in discussion over documents and a clipboard in an office setting.

03

Motion Practice and Negotiation

Many drug cases are resolved at the motion stage. A successful suppression motion can end a case before it ever reaches trial. Where the evidence is solid, we negotiate from a position of knowing exactly what the prosecution can prove and what it can't.

Two individuals shaking hands over a wooden desk with legal documents, a pen, and a judge's gavel.

04

Trial if Necessary

If the case goes to trial, you have an attorney who trained inside a prosecutor's office and understands how the state builds its case. We present your defense clearly, challenge every element the prosecution must prove, and hold them to their burden.

Two individuals shaking hands over a wooden desk with legal documents, a pen, and a judge's gavel.

Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?

Former DA’s Office Intern

Understands the prosecution’s case-building strategy from the inside

Deep Southwest Justice Center Experience

Familiar with local prosecutors and judicial expectations

Full-Spectrum Drug Defense

From misdemeanor possession to felony manufacturing and federal charges

Multilingual Services

English, Romanian, and Spanish available

Frequently Asked Questions

The prosecution infers sales intent from circumstances — quantity, packaging, cash, messaging — but inference isn't proof. We examine every factor they relied on and challenge each one. If the quantity alone was borderline, if the packaging was ambiguous, or if the cash had a legitimate explanation, those arguments go before the court. A possession for sale charge can sometimes be reduced to simple possession, which carries significantly lighter consequences. Whether that's achievable depends on the evidence, and we give you an honest assessment of where things stand.

California has expanded its diversion options considerably. Drug diversion programs — available under Penal Code § 1000 for certain non-violent possession offenses — allow defendants to complete treatment rather than face prosecution. Successful completion results in dismissal of the charges with no conviction on your record. Not everyone qualifies, and the charges must meet specific criteria. We evaluate eligibility early and pursue diversion where it's available and in your best interest.

Yes — potentially severely. Many drug convictions, including some misdemeanors, constitute grounds for deportability or inadmissibility under federal immigration law. Aggravated felony drug trafficking offenses are among the most serious immigration consequences a non-citizen can face. Even lawful permanent residents can be subject to removal for certain drug convictions. Because immigration consequences are federal, they don't disappear just because California law treats the offense as minor. We take immigration exposure seriously in every drug case involving a non-citizen client, and coordinate the defense accordingly.

Constructive possession — legal control over drugs you didn't physically have on your person — is a legitimate theory of prosecution, but it requires the state to prove you knew about the drugs and had the ability and intent to exercise control over them. If drugs were found in a shared car, a shared residence, or a location accessible to multiple people, the prosecution's burden is harder. Who had access? Who knew they were there? These are questions that matter. We build the record around those facts.

Possession of a controlled substance without a valid prescription — even if someone else's prescription is in the bottle — is a criminal offense under Health and Safety Code § 11350 or § 11377. The state must prove you knew you didn't have a valid prescription and that the substance is a controlled one. In some cases, individuals have outdated or transferred prescriptions, or were in possession of medication legitimately prescribed to them that paperwork doesn't support. Context matters, and we present it.

Facing Drug Charges in Murrieta or the Surrounding Area?

A drug charge in California doesn't resolve itself. The sooner you have representation, the more options you have. Contact the Law Office of Nic Cocis to discuss your case. We serve clients in Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, Wildomar, Winchester, Canyon Lake, French Valley, and throughout Southwest Riverside County.

Illuminated neoclassical building facade with Corinthian columns at dusk, dark cloudy sky.