St. Petersburg Public Intoxication Attorney
A public intoxication charge in St. Petersburg might seem minor on paper. For many people, it turns into something they carry for years. Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm has defended clients throughout the Tampa Bay area against St. Petersburg public intoxication charges and understands exactly where these cases can unravel for the prosecution. Whether this is a first encounter with the criminal justice system or part of a broader set of charges, how this gets handled from the start matters.
What Florida Law Actually Says About Public Intoxication
Florida does not have a standalone public intoxication statute in the traditional sense. What prosecutors in Pinellas County typically charge is disorderly intoxication under Florida Statute Section 856.011. That distinction is worth understanding.
Under Section 856.011, a person can be charged if they are intoxicated and endanger the safety of another person, or if they are intoxicated and cause a public disturbance. Simply being drunk in public is not, by itself, enough to sustain a charge under this statute. There has to be something more: threatening behavior, a confrontation, an incident that drew a response.
Disorderly intoxication is a second-degree misdemeanor in Florida. A conviction carries up to 60 days in jail and a fine of up to $500. A third conviction within 12 months triggers a mandatory 60-day treatment or incarceration period. Most people facing a first or second charge are not looking at jail time, but a conviction on the record still affects employment background checks, professional licensing, and can complicate future criminal matters if any arise.
How St. Petersburg Disorderly Intoxication Cases Actually Get Filed
A large portion of public intoxication arrests in St. Petersburg happen in predictable places: the downtown corridor around Beach Drive and Central Avenue, the Warehouse Arts District during events, and areas near Tropicana Field on game days. Officers responding to noise complaints, large gatherings, or calls from bar staff often make arrests in fast-moving situations where their observations are limited.
That matters for how the case is built. The arresting officer’s report is frequently the primary evidence. What the officer documented, how they described the behavior, and whether body camera footage is consistent with that description are all critical. Charges filed based on a brief interaction, with no independent witnesses, no video confirmation of the alleged conduct, and no objective measure of impairment, face real credibility challenges.
Disorderly intoxication cases in Pinellas County are handled in the Pinellas County Criminal Justice Center in Clearwater for circuit-level matters, though county court handles misdemeanors. Understanding which courtroom, which prosecutors, and what diversion programs exist at the local level is not generic knowledge. Omar practices in these courts regularly and handles these cases directly, not through an associate.
Defense Approaches That Actually Apply to This Charge
The element that distinguishes a viable disorderly intoxication charge from an unlawful arrest is conduct. If the State cannot show that the person posed a danger to others or caused a public disturbance, the charge lacks its essential foundation. That is not a technicality. That is what the statute requires.
Several specific issues arise in these cases. First, intoxication itself is subjective in the absence of a breathalyzer or blood test, neither of which is routinely administered in public intoxication stops. An officer’s observation that someone was slurring or unsteady is open to challenge, particularly when no objective testing was performed. Second, the “public disturbance” element often comes down to whether one person was upset versus whether there was a genuine disturbance affecting the community. Third, if police exceeded their authority during the stop or arrest, evidence and statements gathered during that interaction may be challengeable.
First-time offenders in Pinellas County may also qualify for diversion programs or deferred prosecution arrangements that keep a conviction off the record entirely. Whether that route is appropriate, and how to pursue it effectively, depends on the specifics of the case and the client’s background.
The Record Consequence People Underestimate
The most consistent mistake people make with a public intoxication charge is treating it as something to resolve quickly with a guilty plea just to be done with it. A second-degree misdemeanor conviction in Florida does not automatically seal or expunge itself. It sits on the public record and shows up on criminal background checks conducted by employers, landlords, and licensing boards.
Florida’s expungement and sealing laws allow many misdemeanor convictions to be sealed or expunged under the right circumstances, but a conviction makes that process significantly harder, and some conviction-based records are not eligible at all. If the case can be resolved without a conviction, whether through dismissal, diversion, or a not guilty verdict, the path to keeping the record clean remains open. That option disappears once a plea is entered.
For people holding professional licenses in healthcare, law, finance, or education, a misdemeanor conviction of any kind can trigger a licensing board review. St. Petersburg has a large population of healthcare professionals affiliated with Johns Hopkins All Children’s, BayCare, and related facilities. A disorderly intoxication conviction reported to a licensing board is not a routine matter for those individuals.
Questions About Public Intoxication Charges in St. Petersburg
Can I be charged with public intoxication for just being drunk in a bar parking lot?
Florida’s disorderly intoxication statute requires more than mere intoxication. Being in a public area while drunk is not enough on its own. The charge requires that you either endangered someone’s safety or caused a public disturbance. A parking lot incident would depend on what specific conduct was observed and documented.
Will this charge appear on my background check?
An arrest itself may appear on background checks depending on how the records are compiled. A conviction will appear on Florida’s public criminal record. If the case is resolved without a conviction and you later qualify to seal or expunge the record, you can lawfully deny the arrest in most contexts. An attorney can walk you through what your specific outcome would mean for your record.
What happens if this is my third public intoxication charge within a year?
Florida law mandates a minimum 60-day period of either incarceration or residential treatment for a third disorderly intoxication conviction within a 12-month period. This makes the stakes considerably higher for someone with prior charges, and it makes fighting the current charge more important, not less.
Does Omar Abdelghany handle misdemeanor cases personally?
Yes. Omar personally handles all matters at OA Law Firm. He does not hand cases off to associates or assistants. Clients deal directly with him, and he remains in direct contact throughout the case.
Is there a way to resolve this without a conviction?
In many cases, yes. Pinellas County has diversion options for eligible first-time offenders. The case may also be dismissible if the State’s evidence is weak or if constitutional violations occurred during the arrest. Every case depends on its specific facts, but avoiding a conviction is frequently achievable with early, focused attention on the case.
Should I say anything to police after being arrested for public intoxication?
You have the right to remain silent, and exercising that right is not an admission of anything. Statements made at the scene often end up in police reports and can be used in ways that complicate a defense later. Providing basic identifying information when lawfully required is different from giving a statement about what happened.
How long does a misdemeanor case like this typically take in Pinellas County?
Misdemeanor cases in Pinellas County vary. Some resolve within a few court appearances over a matter of weeks. Others, particularly if contested, can take longer. The timeline depends on the resolution path, court scheduling, and whether the case goes to trial. Your attorney should keep you informed at every step so you are not left guessing.
Speak With a St. Petersburg Public Intoxication Lawyer
OA Law Firm is available 24 hours a day to take calls about pending charges. Omar Abdelghany is licensed in all Florida courts and has handled criminal defense matters throughout the Tampa Bay area, including Pinellas County, for years. For anyone facing a disorderly intoxication charge in St. Petersburg, early legal involvement typically produces better outcomes than waiting, and dealing directly with an attorney from the start means the strategy for your defense begins the moment you call. Contact OA Law Firm to speak directly with a St. Petersburg public intoxication attorney about what the charge means for your situation and what can be done about it.
