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FBI Investigation vs. Arrest: Understanding the Process

The arrest is not the investigation. It is the investigation’s visible surface.

Most of what constitutes a federal criminal investigation is invisible to the person being investigated. Surveillance, document review, witness interviews, grand jury proceedings, and the extended internal deliberations of the prosecuting office all occur without the subject’s knowledge and without any formal event that signals to the subject that their situation has changed. The arrest, when it comes, arrives as a dramatic punctuation mark on a sentence that has been composing itself for months or years.

The Investigation Phase

A federal investigation typically begins with a predicate: a referral from a regulatory agency, a suspicious activity report filed by a financial institution, a tip from an informant, or a parallel civil investigation that reveals conduct warranting criminal examination. The FBI opens a matter and assigns agents. Subpoenas are issued to third parties. Financial records, communications, and business documents are gathered and reviewed.

At some stage, the investigation is presented to a federal prosecutor, who assesses whether the evidence supports a criminal charge. If it does, the matter proceeds to a grand jury. The grand jury reviews the evidence, hears witnesses, and votes on whether to return an indictment. That vote, if affirmative, produces the indictment that authorizes arrest.

The subject of this process may experience none of it as it occurs.

The Arrest

Federal arrests typically follow an indictment, though they may also follow the filing of a criminal complaint, a more preliminary charging document that authorizes arrest before a grand jury has voted. A complaint must be supported by probable cause, a lower standard than the evidence required for indictment, and is typically used where the government believes immediate arrest is necessary.

Indictments are filed under seal until the defendant is in custody or has been notified to appear. The unsealing of the indictment and the execution of an arrest warrant may occur simultaneously, or the defendant may be notified through counsel that an indictment has been returned and invited to surrender voluntarily. Voluntary surrender, arranged by counsel, is available in most cases and is substantially less disruptive than an arrest at home or at work.

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The difference between a client who surrenders voluntarily and one who is arrested at the office is sometimes just a phone call made at the right time to the right prosecutor. The investigation is the same. The experience of it is not.

The Period Between Investigation and Arrest

The interval between the initiation of an investigation and any arrest is, in most federal cases, the period during which the most consequential decisions are made. Pre-indictment intervention, if it is going to occur, occurs here. Cooperation agreements that precede indictment are structured here. The factual and legal assessments that might produce a declination are presented here.

Once an arrest occurs and an indictment is public, the strategic landscape changes. The government’s theory is disclosed. The defendant must enter a plea. The discovery process begins. The machinery of federal criminal litigation is in motion, and the options that existed in the quieter period before the arrest have been replaced by a different and more constrained set.

Todd Spodek
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Todd Spodek

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Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

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What the Process Means for the Subject

Understanding the sequence from investigation to arrest has practical implications for anyone who has reason to believe they may be the subject of federal inquiry. The investigation phase is long. It is invisible. It is the phase in which the evidence that will eventually support or fail to support a charge is being assembled. It is also the phase in which that evidence is most susceptible to being contextualized, supplemented, or challenged by counsel who engages the government before the charge is filed.

The arrest is not the moment to begin. It is the moment to continue what should have been started much earlier.

The consultation that begins the earlier process is available now, regardless of where in the sequence you currently find yourself.

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Todd Spodek
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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