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Need a Lawyer?

Criminal defense attorney serving these areas:
  • Carroll County
    (Carrollton, Villa Rica)
  • Douglas County
    (Douglasville, Lithia Springs)
  • Paulding County
    (Dallas, Hiram)
  • Troup County
    (LaGrange, Hogansville)
  • Coweta County
    (Newnan)
  • Polk County
    (Cedartown, Rockmart)
  • Haralson County
    (Bremen, Tallapoosa, Buchanan)
  • Heard County
    (Franklin)

Press Coverage

Here’s what the magazines and newspapers have said about Allen Trapp.

Atlanta Magazine, March, 2009:

Allen Trapp has a reputation for groundbreaking legal research and thorough preparation and for connecting with juries.

Carrollton Times Georgian, March, 2005:

HAYES NOT GUILTY. ‘I feel a great deal of relief,” Trapp said. “There is much more stress defending an innocent man than a guilty man....”
Note: This followed a murder trial with jury deliberations that took only four hours.

Atlanta Journal-Constitution, February 20, 2007:

A 19-year old man indicted in the death of Amy Yates was released on bond Monday from the Carroll County jail. Until now Gossett had remained incarcerated pending the results of a psychiatric evaluation. On Monday a judge determined that Gossett did not pose a threat to the community, said his lawyer Allen Trapp.

Atlanta Journal-Constitution, April 27, 2005:

HIGH COURT LIMITS USE OF DUI TESTS. The Georgia Supreme Court on Tuesday curtailed the ability of police to collect evidence of drug and alcohol use by drivers involved in serious auto accidents. In a unanimous ruling, the court held that once a driver declines to give a blood and urine sample under the state’s “implied consent’ law, police cannot obtain a search warrant to force the driver to submit to the test. Carrollton attorney Allen Trapp, who took the case to the state Supreme Court, praised the ruling. “The decision was well reasoned,” said Trapp. “The courts did not change the law; they just clarified what the law is and has been.”

Carrollton Times-Georgian, November 21, 2003:

HIGH COURT REVERSES WOMAN’S CONVICTION. The Georgia Supreme Court has ruled in favor of a Carrollton woman who had challenged her conviction under a state law that earlier had been found unconstitutional. The Supreme Court ruled that the conviction on a charge of serious injury by vehicle must be reversed. Attorney Allen Trapp of Carrollton said the case will now go back to the Superior Court of Carroll County, where he expects the charges against his client will be dropped.

Champion Magazine, October, 2008:

Allen Trapp, who currently serves as the National College for DUI Defense Delegate from Georgia, was recently chosen to serve as a Georgia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers vice president.