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You have received a summons for a CRPC. What the letter does not say clearly is that this procedure commits your future: your criminal record, your employment, sometimes your liberty, and that it is largely decided before you even step into the prosecutor's office.
The CRPC is not a formality. It is a negotiation. And in a negotiation, showing up unprepared means showing up without arguments.
Mr. Charles Bruguière, criminal defense attorney in Paris, intervenes at every stage of this procedure: file analysis, preparation for the meeting with the prosecutor, criminal coaching, study of the documents, sentence negotiation, assistance at the homologation hearing.
Summoned for a CRPC? Call the firm now
01 84 60 92 47What is the CRPC? What no one really explains
The "comparution sur reconnaissance préalable de culpabilité", or CRPC, often called a "guilty plea", is a criminal procedure by which the public prosecutor offers you a sentence without going through a classic trial. In exchange, you acknowledge the facts.
On paper, it looks like an arrangement. In practice, it is much more subtle than that.
The prosecutor comes to that meeting with an offer already built. They know the file. They know what they can obtain. If you arrive unprepared or with a lawyer who has not taken the time to study the file and your situation, the offer on the table will rarely be the best for you.
The CRPC applies to almost all offenses punishable by less than 10 years of imprisonment: traffic offenses, violence, economic offenses, misuse of corporate assets, drug offenses, tax fraud, cybercrime. It is today one of the most frequent procedures before French correctional courts.
Three key points to remember
- The presence of a lawyer is legally mandatory. Without one, the procedure cannot take place.
- You can refuse the prosecutor's offer. Your refusal cannot be held against you.
- You have a 10-day reflection period before giving your answer.
What really plays out during the meeting with the prosecutor
The meeting with the prosecutor is the central moment of the CRPC. That is where everything is decided: the nature of the sentence, its length, any additional penalties, and whether or not it is recorded on Bulletin B2 of the criminal record.
It is not a simple administrative formality. It is a power balance.
The prosecutor is not your enemy, but they defend the public interest, not yours. Their initial offer reflects what they consider fair based on the file in their hands. Not necessarily what is fair in light of your personal situation, your background, your professional or family constraints.
Mr. Bruguière intervenes before this meeting to dissect the file, identify the flaws, the mitigating circumstances, and the arguments likely to shift the offer. He stands by your side during the meeting to defend your position. And if the offer is not acceptable, he advises you to refuse and prepares your defense before the correctional court - an intervention close to our work in immediate appearance.
Prepare your CRPC meeting today
01 84 60 92 47Accept or refuse: the decision that changes everything
This is the question every client asks Mr. Bruguière at the first contact: "Should I accept?"
The honest answer: it depends. And anyone who answers differently without having read your file is lying.
Accepting the CRPC may be the best decision if the offered sentence is measured, if the incriminating evidence is solid, and if a classic trial would carry a higher risk. Refusing is often the right strategy if the file has procedural flaws, if the legal classification is debatable, or if the prosecutor's offer is disproportionate.
What the CRPC also does not say: a homologation order is a criminal conviction. It is recorded on the criminal record. It may lead to losing a clearance, an approval, a professional card. For a company manager, a healthcare professional, or a civil servant, the stakes go well beyond the sentence itself.
This is what Mr. Bruguière measures for you before you make any decision.
Why choose Mr. Bruguière for your CRPC
Mr. Charles Bruguière is not a generalist who handles criminal law between two divorce files. Criminal law is his only area of practice, from the start of his career.
This exclusive specialization has a direct consequence: he knows the practices of all prosecutor's offices in the Paris region. He knows how prosecutors build their offers, which arguments shift the lines, and where the negotiation margins lie that non-specialists do not see.
Concrete results obtained in CRPC procedures
- Firm imprisonment sentences converted into suspended sentences or community service
- Fines significantly reduced after negotiation with the prosecution
- Additional penalties (license suspension, professional ban) avoided
- Refusals advised that led to acquittals or dismissals at the correctional court
Offenses most frequently concerned by the CRPC
The CRPC may be offered for almost all offenses. The firm's caseload notably includes:
- Driving under the influence of alcohol or narcotics
- Economic and financial offenses (misuse of corporate assets, fraud, breach of trust, undeclared work) - see our page on business criminal law
- Simple or aggravated intentional violence
- Offenses under drug legislation
- Computer offenses and cybercrime
- Customs and tax offenses
- Theft and misappropriation of property
- Sexual assaults, exhibition, and any other sexual-natured facts
- Receiving stolen goods, forgery, and use of forged documents
For the general context of these procedures, see our page on general criminal law. If you have been placed in police custody before the CRPC, the defense strategy must be designed as a continuum.
Frequently asked questions about CRPC
A question about CRPC?
Summoned for a CRPC? Contact Mr. Bruguière before your meeting with the prosecutor.
