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A Texas Warrant Resource • by L&L Law Group
Active Texas warrant? Know your options — serving Collin • Dallas • Denton • Tarrant counties — Available 24/7
About · Who is behind this resource

About Lift My Warrant

What this site is

Lift My Warrant is a transparent, attorney-published educational resource about Texas warrants — not a directory, not a lead-generation front. It is operated by L and L Law Group, PLLC, a Frisco criminal-defense firm, and written to explain how warrants actually work in plain English.

The firm built this site because people searching about a warrant are often anxious and short on reliable answers. Much of what is online is thin, out of date, or designed only to capture a phone number. We wanted a place that explains the law honestly — what a warrant is, why it issued, and the lawful ways to clear it — whether or not you ever call us. Every guide is statute-anchored and written by the same lawyers who appear in North Texas courts, so the information reflects how these matters are handled in practice. Start with how to lift a warrant or browse the full guides library.

Who is behind it

Lift My Warrant is published by Co-Founding Partners Reggie London (Texas Bar No. 24043514) and Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266), criminal-defense attorneys at L and L Law Group, PLLC, in Frisco, Texas.

Reggie London and Njeri London are Co-Founding Partners of L and L Law Group, PLLC, both licensed by the State Bar of Texas and focused on criminal defense. They review the content on this site and handle warrant matters — bonds, motions to recall, and court appearances — for clients across Collin, Dallas, Denton, and Tarrant counties. You can read their full bios at Reggie London’s profile and Njeri London’s profile on the firm’s main site.

How we keep it accurate

Our content is statute-anchored, attorney-reviewed, and dated. Each guide links to the governing Texas statute, is reviewed by a licensed attorney, and carries a published date and a last-reviewed date so you can see how current it is.

Where a page describes the law, it links directly to the primary source at statutes.capitol.texas.gov — for example, the bail provisions in the Code of Criminal Procedure, Chapter 17 — so you can verify it yourself. The attorneys review pages before publication and revisit them as procedures change, and every page shows both a published and a last-reviewed date. Texas law and local court practice do change, so we update content as that happens; if you spot something that looks outdated, the contact details below reach the firm directly.

What this site is not

This site provides general legal information about Texas law, not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship, and nothing here is a guarantee about how your specific situation will turn out.

Every warrant, court, and county is different, and only a lawyer who reviews the specifics of your matter can advise you on what to do. The guides here are a starting point for understanding the process — they cannot substitute for that advice, and we make no promises about outcomes. If you need help with your own warrant, the right next step is to speak with an attorney, whether that is L and L Law Group or another licensed Texas lawyer.

How to reach us

You can reach L and L Law Group by phone or text at (972) 370-5060, by email at info@landllawgroup.com, or at the firm’s Frisco office. The main firm site has full contact options and a secure message form.

Call or text (972) 370-5060, email info@landllawgroup.com, or visit the office at 5899 Preston Rd, Suite 101, Frisco, TX 75034. To send a message, use the contact page; to learn more about the firm and its full range of criminal-defense services, visit the firm’s main site.

Worried about a warrant? Start here.

Tell us a little about the situation and a member of the L&L Law Group team will get back to you. This form is confidential and there is no charge for the initial consultation.

Submitting this form does not create an attorney–client relationship. Please do not share confidential details until a conflicts check is complete.

This page is general legal information about Texas law, not legal advice for your specific situation. Statutes and court procedures change; verify current requirements with the relevant court or a licensed Texas attorney. Last reviewed June 19, 2026.

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