
Drug Possession Defense Attorney in Reynoldsburg, Ohio
Facing drug possession charges in Reynoldsburg? Jwayyed Law LLC defends clients in Reynoldsburg Mayor's Court and throughout Franklin County. Call (614) 285-5482.
Drug Possession Defense in Reynoldsburg, Ohio
Drug possession charges in Reynoldsburg range from a minor misdemeanor marijuana citation — carrying no jail time and a $150 maximum fine — to serious felony charges for possession of heroin, cocaine, fentanyl, or methamphetamine that can result in prison time and lasting career consequences. Ohio's 2023 adult-use marijuana law changed the landscape for cannabis possession, but it did not eliminate drug possession as a criminal matter, and possession of controlled substances other than marijuana in amounts above legal limits remains prosecutable. The Reynoldsburg Division of Police enforces Ohio drug laws vigorously, and traffic stops on US-40 / East Main Street and elsewhere in Reynoldsburg regularly produce drug possession charges when officers conduct searches incident to arrest or with claimed consent. Jwayyed Law LLC provides experienced criminal defense for drug possession charges throughout Franklin County, including Reynoldsburg. Call (614) 285-5482 to discuss your situation.
Reynoldsburg is a Franklin County community of approximately 40,000 residents. Drug possession cases here arise in a variety of settings: traffic stops on US-40 / East Main Street, searches of persons following an unrelated arrest, and in some cases searches of homes or vehicles pursuant to warrants. Each of these entry points presents different legal challenges and opportunities. Our firm begins every drug case by examining the origin of the search or seizure, because a successfully suppressed search often results in dismissal of the entire case.
Ohio's Adult-Use Marijuana Framework — What Is and Is Not Legal in Reynoldsburg
Ohio Issue 2, effective December 7, 2023, and implemented through House Bill 86, established a legal adult-use marijuana framework. Adults 21 and older may now legally possess up to 2.5 ounces of usable marijuana and up to 15 grams of marijuana concentrate without criminal liability. Home cultivation of up to 6 marijuana plants per adult is also permitted. These amounts are not criminal and are not subject to prosecution. Officers in Reynoldsburg are no longer permitted to treat possession within these limits as a criminal matter.
However, the legal framework does not make all marijuana possession legal. Possession above 2.5 oz (70.87 grams) up to 100 grams remains a minor misdemeanor — no jail, maximum $150 fine. Possession of 100–199 grams is a fourth-degree misdemeanor (up to 30 days jail, $250 fine). Possession of 200 grams or more reaches the bulk amount threshold and becomes aggravated possession — a fifth-degree felony carrying up to 12 months in prison and a $2,500 fine. Possession of 1,000–4,999 grams is an F3 felony; 5,000–19,999 grams is an F2; 20,000 grams or more is an F1. Persons under 21 are not covered by the adult-use framework and face the standard criminal possession laws. Consumption in public spaces, motor vehicles, or near schools is prohibited and subject to civil penalties.
Controlled Substance Possession — Penalties Under R.C. 2925.11
Possession of controlled substances other than marijuana — including cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, methamphetamine, and prescription drugs without a valid prescription — is governed by R.C. 2925.11 and carries felony penalties in most cases. The base offense for possession of cocaine, heroin, or methamphetamine in any amount is a fifth-degree felony (up to 12 months in prison, $2,500 fine). The charge escalates with the quantity of the substance: possession of bulk cocaine is F4; bulk heroin is F4; higher quantities escalate to F3, F2, and F1 felonies. Drug paraphernalia possession under R.C. 2925.14 is a fourth-degree misdemeanor on a first offense (up to 30 days jail, $250 fine), escalating to M2 on a second offense.
Where Your Reynoldsburg Drug Possession Case Is Heard
Minor misdemeanor marijuana possession citations from Reynoldsburg may be handled in Reynoldsburg Mayor's Court at 7232 E. Main Street, Reynoldsburg, OH 43068, (614) 322-6804 (Every Thursday at 8:30 AM (excluding holidays)). More serious misdemeanor drug charges and all felony drug possession matters transfer to Franklin County Municipal Court at 375 S. High Street, Columbus, OH 43215 for arraignment, and felonies are then bound over to Franklin County Court of Common Pleas. Franklin County Municipal Court also operates the HART Court (recovery docket for opioid-involved defendants) and offers ILC (Intervention in Lieu of Conviction) for eligible first-time drug defendants.
Defense Strategies — Suppression and Diversion
Drug possession cases present two major categories of defense. The first is constitutional — challenging the stop, search, or seizure that produced the evidence. If the Reynoldsburg Division of Police stopped a vehicle without reasonable suspicion of a traffic violation, searched without valid consent, or exceeded the scope of a warrant, a motion to suppress under the Fourth Amendment may exclude all drug evidence. Without the drugs, the prosecution has no case. Our firm reviews every traffic stop for articulated probable cause, every consent search for voluntariness, and every warrant for particularity and probable cause support.
The second category is diversion. Ohio's Intervention in Lieu of Conviction program (ORC 2951.041) allows eligible first-time defendants charged with drug possession to complete substance abuse treatment instead of being convicted. Successful ILC completion results in dismissal of all charges — no conviction, no record of guilt. Franklin County Municipal Court's HART Court (for opioid-involved defendants) provides a similar structured treatment path. Our firm evaluates ILC eligibility at the outset of every drug case and, where the defendant qualifies, advocates strongly for placement. A dismissal through ILC is always superior to any plea — even a plea to a reduced charge.
How We Can Help
- Suppression motions: Challenging the stop, search, or seizure that produced the drug evidence under the Fourth Amendment
- ILC and diversion: Pursuing Intervention in Lieu of Conviction or HART Court placement for eligible first-time defendants
- Marijuana law analysis: Confirming whether your possession was within Ohio's adult-use legal limits before any plea is entered
- Quantity challenges: Contesting the lab-reported weight used to determine the degree of the offense
- Chain-of-custody review: Scrutinizing laboratory procedures and handling of physical evidence
- Expungement planning: Advising on long-term record-sealing eligibility under ORC 2953.32 from the start
If you are facing drug possession charges in Reynoldsburg or elsewhere in Franklin County, contact Jwayyed Law LLC at (614) 285-5482 or schedule a consultation online. Drug cases move through the Franklin County system quickly, and early intervention — before a plea is entered — is when your options are widest.
Frequently Asked Questions
Franklin County & Ohio – Locations We Serve
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