Tampa Disorderly Intoxication Attorney
A night that gets out of hand can follow someone for years. Tampa disorderly intoxication attorney Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm defends people charged under Florida’s disorderly intoxication statute, a charge that many people dismiss until they see the consequences waiting on the other side of a conviction. Omar handles every case personally, which means you speak directly with the attorney managing your defense from the first call through the final resolution.
What Florida Law Actually Says About Disorderly Intoxication
Florida Statute Section 856.011 makes it a second-degree misdemeanor to be intoxicated and endanger the safety of another person, or to be intoxicated or drink in a public place and cause a public disturbance. That language sounds simple, but there is real legal territory inside it that matters for how a case gets built or attacked.
The statute requires more than just being drunk in public. An officer has to be able to point to specific conduct, something observable, something that actually endangered someone or created a disturbance. A person sitting quietly on a bench, even visibly impaired, does not automatically satisfy that standard. The word “disturbance” in the law has to mean something real, not just the officer’s subjective discomfort with someone’s condition.
A second-degree misdemeanor in Florida carries up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine. If a person is convicted three or more times under this statute within a 12-month period, the third conviction becomes a civil commitment proceeding rather than a criminal prosecution, which opens a separate set of legal consequences. That escalation path is one reason a first or second charge should never be treated as too minor to defend.
Where These Arrests Happen in Tampa and Why It Matters
Ybor City is the most common source of disorderly intoxication arrests in the Tampa area. The density of bars and clubs along 7th Avenue, combined with active law enforcement presence on weekends, means officers are regularly making judgment calls about whether someone’s behavior crosses the line the statute requires. The same dynamic plays out along Channelside, in Hyde Park Village, and near the Riverwalk corridor.
Events at Amalie Arena, Raymond James Stadium, and the Florida State Fairgrounds also generate these charges, often in situations where someone may have been removed from a venue and encountered a patrol officer outside. Spring and summer months, including Gasparilla season, historically produce spikes in disorderly intoxication arrests across Hillsborough County.
Geography matters to the defense because it affects what evidence exists. Ybor City has extensive surveillance camera coverage. If the alleged conduct happened on a stretch with camera visibility, that footage can either support or undercut the officer’s account. Knowing where to look for that evidence, and how quickly it disappears, is part of how these cases get worked.
How the Defense Actually Works
Omar reviews the arresting officer’s report against what the statute requires. Not every arrest memo accurately describes conduct that actually satisfies the legal elements. Officers sometimes document intoxication clearly but describe the surrounding behavior in general terms that do not amount to a legal “disturbance” or documented endangerment. That gap is worth examining carefully.
Body camera footage has changed how these cases get litigated. Hillsborough County law enforcement agencies use body cameras, and the footage often tells a different story than the written report. Omar requests this footage early in the process, because it can show demeanor, context, bystander reactions, and the actual exchange between officer and defendant in a way that a written summary cannot.
Constitutional challenges also arise in disorderly intoxication cases. If an officer stopped, detained, or searched a person without adequate legal basis, evidence from that encounter may be challengeable. Florida courts have addressed the limits of police authority in public intoxication situations, and those decisions shape what defenses are viable in Hillsborough County cases.
Beyond the legal elements, there are practical paths that matter. First-time offenders in Tampa may be eligible for diversion programs through the Hillsborough County State Attorney’s Office. Successful completion of diversion can result in the charge being dropped, which keeps a conviction off the record entirely. Omar has worked these cases at all levels, from outright dismissal to diversion to trial, and the approach is built around what actually serves the client’s situation rather than a default strategy applied to everyone.
The Record Consequences That Are Easy to Overlook
People charged with disorderly intoxication sometimes focus only on avoiding jail. That is understandable, since jail is the most visible threat. But a misdemeanor conviction in Florida creates a permanent criminal record that shows up in background checks run by employers, landlords, professional licensing boards, and graduate school admissions offices. Many people do not realize this until after they have already accepted a plea that seemed minor at the time.
For people holding professional licenses in Florida, including healthcare workers, teachers, contractors, and real estate agents, a misdemeanor conviction may trigger a reporting obligation or a licensing board review. The Florida Department of Health and other licensing agencies have their own standards for moral character determinations, and even a second-degree misdemeanor can prompt scrutiny.
For non-citizens, any criminal conviction, including a misdemeanor, can carry immigration consequences depending on visa status and the specific charge. The intersection of Florida criminal law and federal immigration law is technical, and it is worth understanding that exposure before making any decisions about a plea.
Questions Worth Asking About This Charge
Can a disorderly intoxication charge be expunged from my Florida record?
It depends on how the case resolves. A charge that is dropped or dismissed, including through a diversion program, may be eligible for expungement. A conviction typically cannot be expunged under Florida law unless it is first sealed, and even sealing has eligibility limitations. Getting the right outcome at the front end of the case is the best way to preserve expungement as an option.
What if I was not actually dangerous or disruptive? Can I still be arrested?
Officers make judgment calls in the field, and not every arrest reflects conduct that will hold up to legal scrutiny. The statute requires more than the presence of intoxication. Whether the specific facts of your arrest actually satisfy the elements of the charge is exactly what needs to be analyzed, and that analysis starts with the police report, the body camera footage, and your account of what happened.
Is disorderly intoxication the same as public intoxication in Florida?
Florida does not have a separate “public intoxication” statute in the way some other states do. The disorderly intoxication law under Section 856.011 is what covers this category of conduct in Florida. The specific language in that statute, focused on endangerment and disturbance, is what gives the charge its legal shape and what creates room for defense arguments.
What happens if I have a prior disorderly intoxication conviction?
A second conviction is still charged as a second-degree misdemeanor, but a third within 12 months can trigger civil commitment proceedings rather than criminal prosecution. That makes defending the second charge meaningfully important, not just for the immediate consequences but for what it prevents going forward.
Do I have to appear in court for a misdemeanor charge like this?
Generally, yes. Florida courts require defendants to appear for misdemeanor proceedings, although there are situations where an attorney can appear on a client’s behalf for certain hearings. Omar will explain what your specific case requires and handle the court appearances as part of the representation.
How long does a disorderly intoxication case typically take to resolve?
Misdemeanor cases in Hillsborough County can move relatively quickly compared to felony matters, but the timeline depends on whether the case is going toward a diversion program, a negotiated plea, or a contested hearing. Diversion programs have their own completion timelines. Omar will give you a realistic picture once the details of your situation are on the table.
Should I say anything to the officer at the time of arrest?
The right to remain silent applies from the moment of contact with law enforcement. Anything said to an officer can be documented in the arrest report and used in the prosecution’s case. Providing your identification when legally required is one thing. Explaining yourself, defending your behavior, or answering questions about what you were doing is something else entirely, and it rarely helps.
Speak Directly With a Tampa Intoxication Defense Lawyer
OA Law Firm handles criminal defense cases throughout Tampa and the surrounding Hillsborough County area. Omar Abdelghany is licensed in Florida state courts and federal courts in the Middle and Northern Districts of Florida. When you retain this firm, you work with Omar directly, not a paralegal or associate. He returns calls and emails promptly, explains the strategy clearly, and handles the details from start to finish. If you are facing a disorderly intoxication charge in the Tampa area, contact OA Law Firm to schedule a consultation with a Tampa intoxication defense attorney who will give your case the attention it requires.
