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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
Texas Warrant Resource · by L&L Law Group

Texas Warrant Resources

Resource library

Four categories of free, sourced reference material — public-records data, interactive tools, plain-English guides, and a legal glossary. Each is designed to help you get oriented before you speak with a lawyer, not to replace that conversation.

What these resources are — and what they’re not

Everything here is general legal information sourced from public records, Texas statutes, and court procedure — not legal advice for your specific case. The right move after reviewing these materials is a conversation with a licensed Texas criminal-defense attorney.

The data report draws on publicly available records and agency sources. The tools run entirely in your browser and do not access court databases. The guides explain how Texas warrant law works at a procedural level. The glossary defines terms you will encounter when dealing with a warrant, a court clerk, or a bail bondsman.

None of these resources can tell you whether a warrant exists right now, what a judge will set as your bond, or what outcome your case will reach. For that, you need someone who can review the actual records and advise you directly. The attorneys at L&L Law Group handle warrant matters in North Texas courts regularly and offer a free initial consultation.

These resources do not confirm whether you have an active warrant.

The only reliable way to confirm an active warrant is to contact the issuing court, have an attorney run a confidential check, or review the relevant clerk’s records directly. Read the guide on how to find out if you have a warrant for the official methods.

How L&L Law Group helps

L and L Law Group is a Frisco criminal-defense firm led by Co-Founding Partners Reggie London and Njeri London. The firm confirms active warrants, arranges walk-through bonds where available, files motions to recall or quash, and appears with clients to resolve the underlying case.

These resources reflect the educational work the firm does to help people understand their situation. The next step — actual representation — is what moves a warrant toward resolution. The defense team at L&L Law Group confirms whether a warrant is active, negotiates bond, plans a voluntary surrender where that is the right approach, and appears in court on your behalf. A free consultation is the right next step once you have a sense of what you are facing.

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.

Frequently asked questions

Are these resources free to use?

Yes. All of the resources on this site — the data report, the tools, the guides, and the glossary — are free to access with no account required. There is nothing to download and no personal information is collected.

Is the warrant data current and properly sourced?

The data report cites its sources and the period the data covers. Public warrant records and agency reports are updated on different schedules, so the report notes the date of each source. For the most current figures, follow the source links in the report or contact the relevant court or agency directly.

Is anything on this site legal advice?

No. Everything here is general legal information about how Texas warrant law and court procedure work. It is not legal advice for your specific situation. The right next step is a conversation with a licensed Texas criminal-defense attorney who can review your actual case, confirm the warrant, and advise you on what to do.

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 20, 2026.

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