15110 Dallas Pkwy #400
Dallas, TX 75248
(972) 233-5700
15110 Dallas Pkwy #400
Dallas, TX 75248
972-233-5700
Years Defending Texans
Cases Dismissed
Criminal Cases Handled
Counties Served Across Texas
Available | Serving All of Texas
Being released at the scene doesn’t mean the case is over.
In Texas, cite and release allows an officer to issue a citation instead of making an arrest—but the charge still moves forward. You avoid jail that day, but you’re still facing a criminal case, court dates, and real consequences.
What you do next matters.
At the Law Offices of Richard C. McConathy, we represent clients across Dallas–Fort Worth who have been cited and released, and we know how these cases are handled from the start. It’s part of the broader Texas criminal process, where early decisions can affect the outcome.
This guide explains how cite and release works, what charges qualify, and how to protect your position after receiving a citation.
Cite and release is a procedure that lets a peace officer give a person a written promise-to-appear citation instead of taking them to jail. The legal authority is in Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 14.06(c).
Under that statute, an officer who is authorized to arrest a person for certain misdemeanor offenses may instead:
The case is filed in court the same way a custodial arrest case would be. The defendant must appear at the time and place stated on the citation.
Cite and release is discretionary. An officer may choose to make a custodial arrest even when the offense is technically eligible. Department policies, county practices, and the facts of the stop can all influence the decision.
Article 14.06(c) lists specific Class A and Class B misdemeanor offenses where cite and release is authorized. The list generally includes:
The exact list is set by statute and may be updated by the Legislature. Many local agencies publish their own lists of approved offenses based on county or city policy.

Even though state law authorizes cite and release across Texas, practice varies by county and by department. A few examples:
For drivers and residents in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, this means whether you are cited or arrested can depend on which agency stops you.
A citation under Article 14.06(c) is more than a traffic ticket. It is the start of a misdemeanor case. After the citation is issued you can generally expect:
Missing the listed court date can result in a failure to appear charge and an arrest warrant. The court may also revoke the cite and release option in any future case.
No. A citation is the start of a case, not the end. The person is still charged with a misdemeanor and is still presumed innocent. The case will end with a dismissal, a plea, or a trial verdict. Until that happens, no conviction has been entered on the record.
Even though the person did not go to jail at the scene, the offense will likely show up on:
A favorable result, including dismissal, deferred adjudication, or pretrial diversion, may make the person eligible for an expunction or order of nondisclosure to seal the record. The exact eligibility depends on Texas Government Code rules and the outcome of the case.
The lower-stress nature of cite and release sometimes leads people to underestimate the case. They show up at court intending to “just take care of it” and end up with a conviction that follows them for years.
A defense plan after a citation may include:
Our attorneys often resolve cite and release misdemeanor cases without a conviction, especially for first-time clients. Speak with our Criminal Defense attorney Dallas before pleading or signing any waiver at your first court setting.
Many people make the same avoidable errors after being released with a citation:
Treat the citation as a serious legal document and protect your defense from day one.
Our firm has more than 35 years of criminal defense experience in the Dallas–Fort Worth region. We have represented clients in cite and release cases involving marijuana, theft, criminal mischief, graffiti, and other qualifying misdemeanors.
To discuss a citation you received, call (972) 528-0116 or reach out through our contact page.
Cite and release is a process under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 14.06(c) that lets an officer issue a citation and release a person at the scene instead of making a custodial arrest. The case still continues in court.
No. A traffic ticket is usually a Class C misdemeanor handled in municipal or justice court. Cite and release citations under Article 14.06(c) are typically Class A or Class B misdemeanors with possible jail time, fines, and a permanent record if convicted.
Yes. The citation creates a case in the court system that may appear on background checks even before the case is resolved. A favorable outcome may make the person eligible to seal or expunge the record under Texas law.
In most cases, yes. The charge is still a misdemeanor with real consequences, including jail time, fines, and a record. Our attorneys can review the case, push for dismissal or diversion, and protect the long-term record where possible.
Missing the court date can result in a failure to appear charge and an arrest warrant. The original cite and release option no longer applies. If you have missed a court date, contact our attorneys before going to the courthouse to discuss the safest way to address the warrant.
3710 Rawlins St Ste 1408, Dallas, TX 75219
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