Contra Costa County Residents Charged in Alameda County
Morris Law PC defends Contra Costa residents whose cases are heard in Alameda County. Alameda County-experienced defense from an Oakland office at 2744 E 11th Street and a Berkeley office at 2025 Rose Street.
Contra Costa County Residents Charged with Crimes in Alameda County
Every year, Contra Costa residents get arrested in Alameda County — often on Interstate 24, at the Bay Bridge approaches, on cross-county roads, or while visiting East Bay work, shopping, or nightlife. When that happens, your case is prosecuted by the Alameda County District Attorney’s Office, arraigned at Alameda County courthouses, and defended under Alameda County practice conventions — regardless of where you live.
This is why Contra Costa residents facing Alameda County charges often need an Alameda County-experienced criminal defense attorney rather than local Contra Costa counsel. Morris Law PC serves Contra Costa residents whose cases are heard in Alameda County.
Why Your Alameda County Case Requires Alameda County Experience
Criminal case venue in California follows where the alleged conduct occurred, not where the defendant lives. If you were arrested in Oakland, Berkeley, or anywhere in Alameda County, your case moves through the Alameda County system:
- Alameda County DA charging decisions — the Alameda County DA’s Office reviews your case within 48 hours of arrest and decides misdemeanor vs. felony filing. Different DA offices have different charging patterns; local knowledge matters.
- Alameda County judges — the judges at Wiley W. Manuel Courthouse and René C. Davidson Courthouse have their own bail patterns, plea preferences, and diversion approaches. Experienced local counsel navigates these more effectively.
- Alameda County specialty courts — Drug Court, Mental Health Court, and Veterans Treatment Court operate differently in each county. Alameda’s programs (PC 1000, PC 1001.36) have specific eligibility and administration.
- Local defense bar relationships — DDA-defense negotiations often depend on longstanding professional relationships within the Alameda County bar.
How Contra Costa Residents End Up in Alameda County Courts
The most common patterns we see for Contra Costa residents charged in Alameda County:
- Caldecott Tunnel corridor — DUI, reckless driving, and possession stops on I-24 approaching or exiting the tunnel
- Interstate 580 corridor — high-volume enforcement corridor connecting Contra Costa to Alameda through Oakland
- Highway 13 through the Berkeley/Oakland hills — connecting Orinda/Moraga to the East Bay
- Visit-based incidents — Oakland or Berkeley restaurants, nightlife, sports events at the Coliseum, concerts at the Fox Theater or Greek Theater
- Employment in Alameda County — Contra Costa residents working in downtown Oakland, Berkeley, or elsewhere in the East Bay
Where Your Case Will Be Heard
Alameda County criminal cases are heard at two primary courthouses in downtown Oakland:
- Wiley W. Manuel Courthouse — 661 Washington Street, Oakland. All Alameda County misdemeanor arraignments and trials.
- René C. Davidson Courthouse — 1225 Fallon Street, Oakland. All Alameda County felony arraignments, preliminary hearings, and trials.
From Contra Costa: Downtown Oakland courthouses are approximately 15-30 miles from most Contra Costa cities — 25-45 minutes via I-24, I-580, or Highway 4 depending on traffic. Santa Rita Jail (Dublin) is closer to Contra Costa’s central corridor.
If you were held in custody after arrest, you were likely booked at Santa Rita Jail in Dublin — the Alameda County Sheriff’s main custody facility. See our Santa Rita Jail guide for bail-out and visit information.
Diversion Programs Available to Contra Costa Residents
Alameda County offers strong pretrial diversion infrastructure. Contra Costa residents facing Alameda County charges are eligible for the same programs as Alameda County residents:
- PC 1000 pretrial drug diversion — simple possession cases, 18-month program, dismissal on completion
- PC 1001.36 mental health diversion — cases where a diagnosed mental health condition contributed
- PC 1001.95 judicial diversion — most misdemeanors regardless of history
- PC 1001.80 military diversion — for veterans
Residency in Contra Costa does not disqualify you from Alameda County diversion — venue determines eligibility, not residency. See our Alameda County Diversion Programs guide.
Charges We Defend for Contra Costa Residents in Alameda County
Morris Law represents Contra Costa residents facing every category of California criminal charge when the case is heard in Alameda County:
- DUI — VC §23152/§23153, common arrests on Interstate 24 (Caldecott Tunnel), Interstate 580, and Highway 13
- Drug crimes — possession, sale, diversion-eligible cases
- Domestic violence — PC 273.5, restraining-order defense
- Violent crimes — assault, battery, criminal threats
- Theft crimes — petty theft, grand theft, burglary, robbery
- Weapons charges — PC 25400 CCW, PC 25850, PC 29800 felon in possession
- Federal cases — Northern District of California prosecutions
- Felony defense — including strike offenses
- Misdemeanor defense — first-offense and repeat-offense representation
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to hire an Alameda County attorney if I live in Contra Costa?
Not required — any California attorney can appear at Alameda County courthouses — but it’s usually the right choice. Alameda County-experienced attorneys understand the local DA charging patterns, judge preferences, and diversion programs better than out-of-county counsel. That knowledge translates directly to case outcomes.
Can I appear at court by video since I live in Contra Costa?
Some proceedings allow video appearance (arraignments, some pretrial conferences), but jury trials, preliminary hearings, and sentencing typically require in-person appearance in Oakland. Morris Law handles video and in-person appearances as your case requires.
Where should I meet with my attorney if I’m from Contra Costa?
Morris Law’s Oakland office at 2744 E 11th Street or Berkeley office at 2025 Rose Street, Suite 200 are convenient meeting locations. We also handle client meetings by phone and video for Contra Costa residents who prefer that option.
Does bail work differently for out-of-county residents?
Bail terms are set by Alameda County judges regardless of residency. Alameda County Pretrial Services conducts risk assessments considering community ties — which typically means employment and family regardless of what county you live in. Own recognizance release is available to out-of-county defendants with stable ties.
Where will I be booked after arrest in Alameda County?
Most Alameda County arrests result in booking at Santa Rita Jail in Dublin. Some short-term holds occur at the arresting agency’s facility (Oakland PD, Berkeley PD, etc.) before Santa Rita transfer. See our Santa Rita Jail guide.
What is the fastest way to get legal help after an Alameda County arrest?
Call Morris Law PC at (510) 330-0814 — we answer 24/7. DA charging decisions happen within 48 hours; getting counsel involved early materially improves outcomes.
Talk to an Alameda County Criminal Defense Attorney
If you’re a Contra Costa resident facing Alameda County charges — whether from a stop on Interstate 24 (Caldecott Tunnel), Interstate 580, and Highway 13, an incident visiting Oakland or Berkeley, or any other reason — Morris Law PC handles Alameda County criminal cases as our primary practice. Founding attorney Seth Morris was a Deputy Public Defender in Alameda County, with 25+ jury trials in the same courthouses where your case will be heard.
Call (510) 330-0814 for a free 24/7 consultation. Oakland office: 2744 E 11th Street (510) 824-8831. Berkeley office: 2025 Rose Street, Suite 200 (510) 225-9955.