How Prior Convictions Affect A Current Criminal Case In California
Walking into a new criminal case with a prior record is a fundamentally different experience than walking in as a first time defendant. The prior convictions don't just sit there quietly in the background. They get used, and sometimes in ways that defendants don't anticipate until they are already in the middle of the proceedings. Understanding how your history can be used before your case moves forward gives you and your attorney the opportunity to address it strategically.
Our friends at The Law Office of Elliott Kanter APC work through this with clients regularly, and what a criminal defense lawyer will tell you is that prior convictions affect a California criminal case at multiple stages, and the impact at each stage requires a different kind of preparation.
How Prior Convictions Affect Bail
The bail determination is often the first place a prior record makes its presence felt. Judges consider criminal history when setting bail, and a record that includes prior failures to appear or prior convictions for serious offenses can result in a significantly higher bail amount or a denial of bail entirely.
That's one reason why having an attorney involved from the very beginning of the process matters. An attorney can contextualize the prior record for the court, highlight relevant positive factors, and argue for a bail determination that reflects the full picture rather than just the defendant's history.
How Prior Convictions Affect Charging Decisions
Prosecutors have discretion in how they charge a case, and prior convictions directly affect how that discretion gets exercised. A defendant with a prior record may face enhanced charges, additional counts, or a more aggressive prosecution strategy than a first time offender in an otherwise comparable situation.
California's sentencing laws include several enhancement provisions that are triggered by prior convictions. Some prior felonies can result in additional prison time being added to a sentence for a new offense. The Three Strikes law adds significant consequences for defendants with qualifying prior serious or violent felony convictions.
How Prior Convictions Can Be Used as Evidence
Depending on the nature of the prior conviction and how it relates to the current charge, prosecutors may seek to introduce evidence of that history at trial. California Evidence Code Section 1101 generally prohibits using prior bad acts to show a defendant has a propensity to commit crimes. But there are meaningful exceptions.
Prior convictions that are relevant to proving intent, identity, a common plan, or absence of mistake may be admissible. Prior felony convictions can also be used to impeach a defendant who takes the stand, meaning the jury may learn about the prior record if the defendant testifies.
Your attorney needs to know about your full history early in the representation so they can anticipate these issues and address them proactively through pretrial motions if appropriate.
How Sentencing Is Affected
If a conviction occurs, prior history shapes the sentencing outcome significantly. California uses a determinate sentencing system for many offenses, with lower, middle, and upper terms available. Prior convictions are among the aggravating factors that can push a sentence toward the upper term.
Probation eligibility is also affected. Many defendants with prior records are ineligible for probation on new offenses, meaning a conviction is more likely to result in actual custody time rather than a supervised release alternative.
Getting Ahead of the Issue
Prior convictions are a reality that can be addressed but not ignored. The earlier your attorney understands your full history, the more effectively they can build a strategy that accounts for how that history will be used at every stage of the case. If you are facing new charges and have prior convictions on your record, reaching out to a criminal defense attorney as soon as possible gives your case the foundation it needs.