Rebecca J. Denison

  • Phone:501-476-7397
  • Fax:501-377-9197
  • Email Us
10515 West Markham St., Suite D7, Little Rock AR 72205-8372 U.S.A. View Map

Areas of Practice

  • Adoption
  • Child Abuse and Neglect
  • Child Custody
  • Criminal Law
  • Divorce
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Criminal Law

Mail Fraud
Mail fraud involves the use of the mail system to defraud other individuals. To be found guilty of mail fraud the following elements must be proved: The defendant's intent to defraud another individual; the defendant's scheme to defraud another individual; the defendant actually mailed the materials in question. More...
Principals and Accessories
A defendant in an action may be charged as a principal offender of the underlying offense or an accessory to the underlying offense. Depending upon the defendant's actions and role in the offense, the prosecution will decide to charge the defendant as a principal or an accessory. More...
Jury Selection in Capital Cases
In a case in which a defendant may face the death penalty, jury selection takes on additional and different concerns than those faced in jury selection generally. The nature of the case, penalty phase procedures and length of the case are all additional factors that must be taken into consideration. More...
CRIMINAL TRESPASS
A person commits the offense of criminal trespass when he or she enters or remains on property or in a building of another person without that person's consent after he or she has been given notice that entry was forbidden or that he or she must depart. The other person does not need to own the property in order to give notice to depart. The other person must only have a greater right of possession that the person who commits the offense. More...
Witnesses and Confidential or Classified Information
Prosecutions involving issues of war, national security or espionage may involve witness testimony and classified information. Classified information is defined as information that should not be disclosed to the public because of the sensitivity of the information or the source from which the information was derived. Prosecutors and defense attorneys should avoid divulging classified information during the witness's testimony. Under the Classified Information Procedures Act, the attorneys are to avoid any unnecessary or inadvertent disclosure of classified information. More...

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