Vestavia Hills
Vestavia Hills is one of the most desirable communities in the Birmingham metro. It's also a community where the stakes of a criminal charge are particularly high. Careers, professional licenses, reputations built over decades. When someone in Vestavia Hills gets arrested, the fallout reaches further than the courtroom.

There's a specific reason clients from Vestavia Hills, Mountain Brook, and the surrounding area consistently seek out Jim Parkman when they're facing charges. It's not a billboard or an advertisement. It's 45 years of results in Jefferson County courts, across every type of charge, at every level from misdemeanor to federal indictment. Jim graduated cum laude from Cumberland School of Law in 1979 and has been practicing criminal defense in Alabama ever since. He holds the AV Preeminent rating from Martindale-Hubbell, the highest peer rating available in the legal profession, verified by the judges and attorneys who have sat across from him for four and a half decades. The National Trial Lawyers has listed him in the Top 100. His most well-known case came right here in Birmingham. Richard Scrushy, CEO of HealthSouth, faced 36 federal counts in the first prosecution ever brought under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The government was certain. Jim Parkman secured not guilty verdicts on every single count. The case was featured in a Netflix documentary, covered by the Wall Street Journal, and prompted Fox News to call Jim "the greatest lawyer on the planet." That reputation brings clients from Vestavia Hills to his door. When the charge matters, people do their homework and they find Jim.
It depends on the charge level. Misdemeanors and ordinance violations stay in Vestavia Hills Municipal Court. Felony charges move into the Jefferson County court system, starting with a preliminary hearing in Jefferson County District Court before being bound over to Jefferson County Circuit Court for trial. Federal charges are handled at the Hugo L. Black United States Courthouse in downtown Birmingham, which houses the Northern District of Alabama.
The most important thing you can do is stop talking. Don't answer questions, don't try to explain the situation, and don't consent to any searches beyond what is legally required. Invoke your right to remain silent and ask for an attorney. Then call Jim Parkman. How you handle the first few hours after a Vestavia Hills arrest has a direct effect on your defense options going forward.
Yes. Convictions in Vestavia Hills Municipal Court create a criminal record that shows up in background checks for employment, housing, and professional licensing. Even a minor conviction carries consequences that can last far longer than any sentence imposed. Whether a prior conviction qualifies for expungement under Alabama Code 15-27-1 depends on the specific charge and the outcome of the case. Jim Parkman evaluates expungement eligibility during consultation.
Yes, and for many residents of Vestavia Hills this is the most serious consequence of all. Alabama's professional licensing boards for attorneys, physicians, nurses, pharmacists, real estate agents, financial advisors, and other regulated professions all have processes for reviewing criminal convictions. A felony conviction almost always triggers review. Even certain misdemeanor convictions can affect licensure depending on the profession. Jim Parkman considers these collateral consequences when developing a defense strategy, not just the criminal sentence itself.
Federal criminal cases involving Birmingham-area defendants are handled at the Hugo L. Black United States Courthouse at 1729 5th Avenue North in downtown Birmingham. This courthouse houses the Southern Division of the Northern District of Alabama. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District prosecutes these cases. Jim Parkman has appeared in this courthouse in some of the most significant federal criminal cases in Alabama's history.
Highway 31 through Vestavia Hills is one of the most actively policed stretches in Jefferson County, and DUI stops along this corridor are common. Your options depend heavily on the specific circumstances of the stop and arrest: whether the officer had proper grounds to pull you over, how field sobriety testing was conducted, the accuracy of any breath or blood test results, and whether your constitutional rights were respected throughout the encounter. Jim Parkman reviews all of these factors in every DUI case before advising on the best path forward.
Yes. Jim handles criminal cases in Vestavia Hills Municipal Court, Jefferson County state courts, and the Northern District of Alabama federal courthouse in Birmingham. He is licensed to appear in federal courts in multiple circuits and has defended federal cases in Alabama for decades.
850 Corporate Pkwy #100,
Birmingham, AL 35242
Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week