Frisco is unusual: the city line runs across two counties, so an arrest a few miles apart can land in two completely different court systems. A case from the Collin County side is handled in McKinney; a case from the Denton County side goes to the courts in Denton. Ray Hindieh sorts out that jurisdiction question first — because in Frisco, where your case is heard shapes everything that follows.
Frisco straddles the Collin County–Denton County line, and that split is not a formality. Where the alleged offense occurred decides which county has the case — and each county has its own district attorney, its own judges and its own courts. A Frisco charge on the Collin County side is prosecuted in McKinney; the same charge on the Denton County side is heard in the Denton County courts. We pin down which side your case falls on before anything else, because that answer drives filing, bond and strategy.
Ray Hindieh built his career prosecuting cases for the State, and that experience carries across the North Texas county lines that meet in Frisco. He understands how the Collin County and Denton County DA offices evaluate a file, what each needs to see to reduce or dismiss a charge, and where their cases tend to be weakest. That inside perspective — applied to whichever county holds your case — is what we put to work for you.
We serve Frisco clients from our two Dallas offices — on Buckner Boulevard (1412 Buckner Blvd) and in Bishop Arts (304 W Twelfth St) — and travel north to the Collin and Denton courts as each case requires. We answer the phone around the clock, in English and Spanish. Arrests do not wait for business hours, and neither do we — call 214-960-1458 any time, day or night.