Morris Margulis
Effective, Intelligent Advocacy
Morris earned his Juris Doctorate at Georgia State University's College of Law in 2013 and his Bachelor of Science in International Affairs from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 2006. After completing his undergraduate degree, Morris considered a career in academic philosophy. This plan changed after Morris completed the "Philosophy of Law" course at Georgia State University, when he realized that while philosophers typically end their discussions with journal entries, jurists end theirs with court orders backed by the power of the state.
Morris has wide-ranging litigation experience, including family law, criminal defense, and personal injury casework, with an overwhelmingly successful track record. He is a graduate of the Bill Daniel Trial Advocacy program, an intensive series of training courses led by the best criminal defense attorneys in the state, and he has specialized negotiation training from Georgia State University.
- Criminal Law
- Criminal Appeals, Drug Crimes, Expungement, Fraud, Gun Crimes, Internet Crimes, Sex Crimes, Theft, Violent Crimes
- DUI & DWI
- Personal Injury
- Animal & Dog Bites, Brain Injury, Car Accidents, Construction Accidents, Motorcycle Accidents, Premises Liability, Truck Accidents, Wrongful Death
- Traffic Tickets
- Suspended License
- Appeals & Appellate
- Civil Appeals
- Family Law
- Restraining Orders
- Credit Cards Accepted
- Contingent Fees
- Georgia
- State Bar of Georgia
- English: Spoken, Written
- Georgia State University College of Law
- J.D. | Law
- University System of Georgia - Georgia Institute of Technology
- B.S. | Politics & Philosophy
- Top 40 Under 40
- National Trial Lawyers
- State Bar of Georgia
- Member
- Current
- Court of Appeals
- Admitted for practice
- Current
- Supreme Court of Georgia
- Admitted for practice
- Current
- Bill Daniel Trial Advocacy
- Georgia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
- Q. I got a dui which was my third. It was 2 years and 1 month ago. I have not heard from the courts or got a letter.
- A: Sometimes cases do get lost in the shuffle, but it's never something to rely upon.
The citation likely gave you a court date. If you missed that, there's probably a warrant out for your arrest and a suspension on your driver's license.
Otherwise, see if you can find out the status of your case by looking on the court's website. Note that calling the court on the phone may rekindle the case if it is just dormant.
Let me know if you need more help. If you've lost the citation, you're probably going to have to check numerous websites.
- Q. Can a Georgia stat trooper pull your vehicle over for a missing signal light as being probable cause?
- A: Yes, vehicle equipment violations are permissible reasons to initiate a traffic pullover.
What happens after that point is not necessarily fair game, however.
- Q. My husband was charged with this, but was notdriving a bus. He was driving a pickup truck. Will the dui likely stand, ec
- A: That code section specifies an increased penalty for DUI while driving a school bus.
Your husband may still nevertheless be culpable for DUI with the more typical penalties.