Privacy Policy
Effective Date: May 23, 2026
Privacy is not a secondary concern at duijusticelaw.com. It is the foundation of our practice. When you face a DUI charge, the weight of the situation demands absolute discretion. We built this privacy policy to explain exactly how we handle your information. No dense legal jargon. No hidden clauses. Just the operational reality of how this website functions and what happens to your data when you visit.
We wrote this in plain English. You need to know who sees your information, why we collect it, and how you can control it.
The Information We Collect
We gather data in two distinct ways. You hand it to us directly. Or our systems log it automatically as you navigate the site.
When you reach out for help, you provide specific personal details. Our contact forms ask for your name, email address, phone number, and a brief description of your legal situation. We require this information to evaluate your case. We cannot call you back or assess your needs without it. You choose exactly how much detail to include in these initial forms.
Our website also collects technical data automatically. When you load a page, our servers log your IP address, your browser type, and your operating system. We track the specific pages you visit and the time you spend reading them. This happens in the background. It is standard practice for modern websites, but we want you to understand exactly why we do it.
How We Use Your Data
We use your contact information for one primary reason. We use it to communicate with you about your potential case. If you submit a form, a member of our team will call or email you. We do not add your email to generic marketing newsletters without your explicit consent. We respect the urgency of your situation.
The technical data serves a completely different purpose. We use analytics to improve content quality.
We rely on tools like Google Analytics and Google Search Console. These platforms show us the aggregate behavior of our visitors. We look at this data to understand what information actually helps people facing DUI charges. If we notice hundreds of visitors reading our guide on challenging breathalyzer calibration, we know that topic matters. We illuminate blind spots in our legal resources. We expand the pages that get heavy traffic. We rewrite the pages that cause confusion.
We do not use analytics to track your personal identity. We use the noise of aggregate data to find the signal. It tells us how to build a better, more accurate legal resource for the public.
Cookies and Tracking Technologies
This website uses cookies. Cookies are small text files placed on your device when you load our pages. They reduce the friction of navigating the site.
We use two types of cookies. Functional cookies keep the site running smoothly. They remember your preferences and keep our contact forms secure. Analytics cookies feed data back to Google Analytics. They tell us if you are a new visitor or a returning reader.
You have total control over this. You can disable cookies in your browser settings right now. The site will still work. You can read our articles and submit our forms without cookies enabled. You simply might not get the most optimized browsing experience.
Data Sharing and Third-Party Services
We refuse to sell your personal information. Data brokers have no place here. We have never sold client data. We never will.
We do share data with the essential vendors who keep this site operational. We use secure web hosting providers to store our site data. We use Google to process our analytics. These third-party service providers are bound by strict confidentiality agreements. They cannot legally use your personal information for their own marketing purposes. They only process data based on our direct instructions.
We will disclose your information if required by law. If a court issues a valid subpoena, we must comply. We will also share information if it is necessary to protect the safety of our staff or the public. These situations are exceedingly rare, but we must state the policy clearly.
Your Rights Regarding Your Data
You own your personal data. You retain specific rights regarding how we handle it.
- Right to Access: You can ask us for a complete copy of the personal data we hold about you.
- Right to Correction: If we have inaccurate information on file, you can ask us to fix it.
- Right to Deletion: You can demand that we erase your personal data from our active systems.
- Right to Restrict Processing: You can ask us to stop using your data for specific purposes.
To exercise any of these rights, send an email to our privacy team. We process these requests promptly. We will ask you to verify your identity before we release or delete any information. We do this to prevent unauthorized access to your files.
Data Security Realities
We protect your data diligently. We secure our website with standard SSL encryption. When you submit a contact form, the data travels over an encrypted connection. We restrict internal access to your inquiries. Only authorized personnel at duijusticelaw.com read the information you submit.
But let us state a hard truth.
No internet transmission is completely secure. No server is entirely impenetrable. We implement strong security measures, but we cannot guarantee absolute safety. You assume a baseline level of risk when submitting any information online. We want you to make an informed decision before you hit send.
Crucial Legal Disclaimer and Privilege
This is a law firm website. The content we publish is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney for guidance on your specific situation.
More importantly, you need to understand how attorney-client privilege works online. Submitting a contact form through this website does not create an attorney-client relationship. That relationship only begins after we agree to take your case and you sign a formal representation agreement.
Do not send confessions or highly sensitive case evidence through our web forms. The information you submit before hiring us is not automatically protected by attorney-client privilege. Keep your initial online inquiry brief. Tell us you need help with a DUI charge. Leave the granular details for a secure phone call or a closed-door meeting.
Changes to This Policy
We update this privacy policy as laws change and our technology evolves. When we make significant changes, we will update the effective date at the top of this page. We do not send individual emails for minor typographical updates. We recommend checking this page periodically to stay informed about our current data practices.
Contact Our Privacy Team
If you have questions about this policy, we want to hear from you. We do not hide behind automated replies. Real people manage this website and review these inquiries.
Email us at: [email protected]
We monitor this inbox during regular business hours. We aim to provide clear, direct answers to any concerns you have about your digital privacy on our platform.