Facing criminal charges in California can feel completely overwhelming, especially when your future hangs in the balance. Understanding what makes a crime a wobbler under California law is the first step toward reclaiming control over your life. If you or a loved one are dealing with an offense that could tilt toward a misdemeanor or a felony, the legal team at Grace Legal Group is here to help you navigate this complex crossroad.
Understanding the California “Wobbler” System
The Legal Definition of a Wobbler Offense
In California, a “wobbler” is a unique type of crime that can be prosecuted as either a misdemeanor or a felony. The law does not automatically fix these crimes into one permanent category. Instead, they “wobble” between the two based on the facts of the case, the defendant’s background, and the choices made by the prosecutor or judge.
Why a Felony Classification is Dominated by Harsh Lifelong Consequences
If a wobbler stays classified as a felony, the long-term impact on your life is severe. A felony conviction brings devastating consequences that follow you long after court is over. These penalties can destroy your personal stability and include:
- Time served in state prison rather than local county jail.
- The permanent loss of your constitutional right to own or possess firearms.
- A lifetime criminal record that flags background checks by future employers.
- Severe barriers to renting a home or securing safe housing.
- The loss of professional licenses, which can completely derail your career path.
How Misdemeanors Protect Your Liberty and Future
When a defense attorney successfully keeps a wobbler at the misdemeanor level, your future looks completely different. Misdemeanors generally cap jail time at a maximum of one year in a local county facility. They do not trigger the harsh societal penalties that strip away your civil liberties, making it much easier to move forward.
Common Examples of Wobbler Crimes We Defend

Domestic Violence and Assault Charges (e.g., PC 273.5 & PC 245)
Violent crimes often fall into the wobbler category. For example, Corporal Injury on a Spouse or Cohabitant (Penal Code 273.5) can easily wobble between a misdemeanor and a felony depending on the visible injuries reported. Assault with a Deadly Weapon (Penal Code 245) is also heavily dependent on the type of object used and the degree of force involved.
Property, Fraud, and Financial Theft Crimes
Financial crimes frequently cross over the wobbler threshold. Grand Theft (Penal Code 487) is triggered whenever stolen property or cash exceeds $950, giving the state the open option to file the charge as a heavy felony or a misdemeanor. Forgery and commercial burglary operate under similar sliding scales.
Drug Crimes and the Impact of California Classification Shifts
While historic legal reforms like Proposition 47 reduced many basic drug possession charges down to straight misdemeanors, certain offenses still wobble. Possession of controlled substances for sale or transporting dangerous drugs can scale up quickly based on the quantity found or the presence of a weapon.
Severe Traffic Offenses: When a DUI “Wobbles” into a Felony
Most first-time Driving Under the Influence (DUI) charges are standard misdemeanors. However, under California Vehicle Code 23153, a DUI wobbles directly into a felony if the driver causes an accident that injures another person. Repeat DUI offenses within a ten-year window can also trigger felony filings.
The Power of Filing: How Prosecutors Choose Your Initial Charge
Absolute Prosecutorial Discretion at the Filing Desk
When the police make an arrest for a wobbler offense, they submit their reports to the District Attorney’s office. A prosecutor reviews these files and holds absolute power over the initial choice. They can decide to look at the maximum possible penalty and charge the crime as a heavy felony right out of the gate.
The Factors that Trigger an Aggressive Felony Charge vs. a Misdemeanor
Prosecutors rarely give defendants the benefit of the doubt on their own. They routinely file the highest possible charges to gain maximum leverage. The factors that usually push a prosecutor to choose a felony include:
- A prior criminal record or history of similar offenses.
- The presence of vulnerability in the alleged victim (such as an elderly person or child).
- An uncooperative attitude documented by the arresting officers.
- The overall community impact of the specific crime.
The Judge’s Blueprint: Legal Standards for a Penal Code 17(b) Reduction

Evaluation of the Offense Severity and Mitigating Circumstances
Under California Penal Code Section 17(b), a judge holds the ultimate authority to override a prosecutor and reduce a felony wobbler down to a misdemeanor. The judge acts as a neutral party, carefully looking at the actual severity of the act. If the incident lacked planning, involved minor financial loss, or resulted from a clear misunderstanding, the judge has the framework to lean toward leniency.
The Defendant’s History, Character, and Background Profile
Judges do not just look at what happened during the incident; they look at who you are as a complete person. They evaluate your background much like a school admissions board or a bank reviewing credit history. They consider your steady employment, your deep ties to the community, and any absence of an existing criminal record. Showing the judge your human story is essential to securing a favorable reduction.
Performance on Probation and Compliance with Court Orders
If the court evaluates a reduction request after a conviction has already occurred, your behavioral track record is the main focal point. A judge will strictly examine how well you followed court-ordered terms. Paying off all restitution fines, completing community service hours early, and maintaining perfect attendance at mandated classes show the court that you are ready for a clean break.
Timeline of Relief: When Can a Charge Be Reduced?
Aggressive Defense Interventions at the Preliminary Hearing Stage
Your defense team does not have to wait until a trial to fight a felony designation. During a felony preliminary hearing, the prosecution must present their baseline evidence to the judge. This provides a critical window where a strategic defense attorney can cross-examine witnesses, expose weaknesses, and formally ask the judge to reduce the charge to a misdemeanor immediately.
Mitigating Arguments During Sentencing Hearings
If a case results in a plea deal or a conviction, the sentencing hearing serves as the final stop before formal judgment is entered. This is the moment where presenting a robust, comprehensive mitigation packet can change your trajectory. Highlighting personal hardships and showing meaningful steps toward personal rehabilitation can successfully convince a judge to issue a misdemeanor sentence instead of state prison.
Pre-Trial Diversion: Preventing a Wobbler Charge from Sticking Entirely
In many instances, the best defense is preventing the charge from landing on your permanent record in the first place. California offers several pre-trial diversion programs for mental health care, drug treatment, or military veterans. Completing these specialized programs results in the complete dismissal of your charges, keeping your record pristine.
Post-Conviction Motions: Petitioning the Court After a Plea or Verdict
If you are already carrying a felony conviction for a wobbler offense, you are not completely out of options. As long as your sentence included probation instead of state prison, an attorney can file a retroactive motion under PC 17(b) once you successfully finish your probation terms. This retroactively changes the felony to a misdemeanor on your official record.
The Threat of California’s Three Strikes Law on Wobblers
How a Felony Wobbler Impacts Your Strike Count
California’s Three Strikes Law imposes massive, mandatory prison sentences for repeat offenders. If a wobbler offense is charged as a felony and matches the legal definition of a serious or violent crime, a conviction counts as a “strike.” This single mark leaves you highly vulnerable to doubled sentences or lifetime imprisonment if you ever face future legal trouble.
Fighting Back: Utilizing Romero Motions to Strike a Prior Strike
If an individual is facing a new wobbler charge while already carrying a prior strike on their record, prosecutors will often refuse to negotiate. However, a defense attorney can formally file what is known as a Romero Motion. This special motion asks the judge to completely disregard the old strike for sentencing purposes, opening the door to safely reduce the current wobbler.
Reclaiming Your Record: Expungements and Rights Restoration
The Dual-Step Process: Reducing to a Misdemeanor, Then Dismissing the Case
Clearing your name requires a precise, two-step legal procedure. First, your attorney files a petition to successfully downgrade the felony wobbler to a misdemeanor under PC 17(b). Once the court grants the reduction, the attorney immediately moves to expunge the case under Penal Code 1203.4, officially withdrawing your plea and dismissing the matter entirely.
Restoring Secondary Rights: Firearm Ownership and Professional Licensing Post-Reduction
An expungement provides an essential shield when applying for private employment, but reducing a felony to a misdemeanor accomplishes even more. By wiping away the felony status, you can successfully remove the automatic lifetime bans that block you from obtaining state professional licenses. In many cases, it also opens up the path to eventually petition for the restoration of your second amendment rights.
Understanding California “Wobblettes” (PC 19.8)
What Constitutes a Misdemeanor/Infraction Wobblette?
Just as some crimes wobble between felonies and misdemeanors, others drift between misdemeanors and minor infractions. Governed by California Penal Code Section 19.8, these lesser offenses are affectionately known as “wobblettes.” Common examples include driving on a suspended license, minor trespass, or disturbing the peace.
Why Defendants Must Formally Agree to a Wobblette Charge
While an infraction means you face absolutely zero jail time and no probation, it comes with a procedural trade-off. Infractions do not grant you the right to a jury trial or a public defender. Because you surrender these constitutional protections, California law requires your formal consent before a court can lower a misdemeanor down to an infraction.
Why Aggressive Representation is Required to Overturn a Felony Projection
How Grace Legal Group Attacks Overcharged Felony Offenses
The prosecution will always look at a wobbler offense through a lens of punishment. Defending your freedom requires a legal team that views your situation through a lens of restoration. At Grace Legal Group, the defense strategy is built around exploring every available angle, challenging weak police evidence, and presenting a compelling human narrative that proves a felony charge is completely uncalled for.
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Protect Your Freedom: Contact Our California Defense Team for a Free Consultation
You do not have to fight the heavy weight of the California criminal justice system completely alone. A single mistake or an unfair accusation should not be allowed to define the rest of your life. Contact the dedicated advocates at Grace Legal Group today to secure your 100% free legal consultation, protect your rights, and secure the true second chance you deserve.
People Also Ask (FAQs)
1. Who decides if a wobbler is a felony or a misdemeanor?
Initially, the prosecutor handling the filing desk makes the decision when they draft the formal criminal complaint. However, a judge retains the ultimate authority to override that decision and reduce the charge at later stages of the court process, even if the prosecutor objects.
2. Can a wobbler be reduced to a misdemeanor after sentencing?
Yes. If you were granted probation as part of your sentence, you can formally petition the court to reduce the felony wobbler to a misdemeanor. This can be done mid-way through your probation period or immediately after you successfully complete all of your court-ordered requirements.
3. Does a wobbler count as a strike in California?
A wobbler only counts as a strike if the prosecutor charges it as a felony, and the crime matches California’s specific legal definition of a serious or violent offense. If the charge is successfully reduced to a misdemeanor, it can never count as a strike against you.
4. What is the difference between a wobbler and a straight felony?
A straight felony can never be reduced to a misdemeanor under any circumstances because the legislature has determined it is too severe. A wobbler carries a flexible statutory penalty, meaning the law specifically permits the court to treat it as a misdemeanor if the circumstances warrant it.
5. Can I buy a gun if my felony wobbler was reduced to a misdemeanor?
In many cases, reducing a felony wobbler to a misdemeanor lifts the automatic federal ban on firearm ownership. However, you must be careful because certain misdemeanor offenses in California (such as domestic violence) still carry independent, lifelong weapon restrictions.
6. Will an expungement automatically reduce my felony wobbler?
No, an expungement does not automatically change a felony into a misdemeanor. They are two separate legal actions. Your attorney must first successfully file a motion to reduce the charge under PC 17(b) before filing the paperwork to dismiss the case under PC 1203.4.