Nashville, IL Lawyers
Facing a Legal Problem? We Fight for You.
- 100% Free Consultations: Talk to a Real Attorney, Not a Call Center
- Injured? You Pay Nothing Unless We Win!
- Arrested? We Defend All Criminal Charges in Washington County
- Traffic Ticket? We Fight to Keep Points Off Your License
Trial Attorneys Serving Nashville and Washington County
When you are dealing with a legal problem in Nashville, you want a lawyer who actually practices in Washington County, not a billboard operation hours away that has never set foot in the Washington County Judicial Center. Olson & Reeves is a Southern Illinois law firm built on a simple idea: clients deserve a real attorney they can reach, who knows the local courts, and who treats them like a person instead of a file number. When you hire us, your case is handled by the attorney you actually met.
Nashville sits at the 50-mile marker on Interstate 64, where Route 127 and Route 15 cross. That makes it a busy interstate corridor, with steady truck traffic and the crashes, arrests, and citations that come with it. Whether you were hurt in a wreck near the I-64 interchange, are facing a criminal charge, need to fight a DUI, or got a ticket you cannot afford on your record, our attorneys bring real courtroom experience and straight advice to every case we take.
Olson & Reeves is a team of Nashville, Illinois lawyers handling personal injury, criminal defense, DUI defense, and traffic cases throughout Washington County. We are real Southern Illinois trial lawyers, not a referral network, who appear at the Washington County Judicial Center in the 24th Judicial Circuit and offer free consultations to potential new clients.
Types of Cases Our Nashville, IL Attorneys Handle
Olson & Reeves focuses on the legal problems Washington County residents face most. Whether your case involves a civil injury claim or a criminal charge, you will work with an attorney who handles these matters regularly in the local courts.
Personal Injury & Car Accidents
A personal injury claim seeks compensation when someone is hurt because of another person’s negligence, most often in a car, truck, or motorcycle crash. Nashville’s spot at the I-64 interchange means heavy through-traffic and commercial trucking, and car accidents along Route 127 and Route 15 are common where local and highway traffic mix.
If you are hurt, your health comes first. Get evaluated promptly. The 24-hour emergency room at Washington County Hospital on South Grand Avenue can treat your injuries, and that medical documentation is critical to any claim.
Under Illinois law, you generally have two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit (735 ILCS 5/13-202). Shorter deadlines can apply. Claims against a city, county, or other government body often require notice within one year (745 ILCS 10/8-101). Do not wait to speak with a lawyer.
We handle injury cases on a contingency fee basis. That means you pay nothing unless we win. We deal with the insurance companies, the paperwork, and the negotiation so you can focus on recovering.
Criminal Defense
A criminal charge in Illinois, from a Class C misdemeanor to a Class X felony, puts your freedom, your record, and your future at stake. Olson & Reeves defends Nashville clients against charges including theft, drug offenses, assault, battery, domestic violence, weapons charges, and more. If you have been arrested and booked at the Washington County Jail, the decisions you make in the first hours and days matter.
The single most important thing you can do after an arrest: do not discuss the allegations with police without a lawyer present. Call an attorney as soon as you can. We review how the evidence was gathered, protect your constitutional rights, and build the strongest defense the facts allow.
Our criminal defense attorneys appear at the Washington County Judicial Center and understand how the Washington County State’s Attorney’s Office and the 24th Judicial Circuit handle these cases. Knowing the local procedures and the people who run the courtroom helps us move your case efficiently.
DUI Defense
A DUI in Illinois is defined as operating, or being in actual physical control of, a vehicle while impaired by alcohol, drugs, or any intoxicating substance (625 ILCS 5/11-501). A DUI carries both criminal penalties and an immediate threat to your driving privileges: a statutory summary suspension can take effect through the Illinois Secretary of State even before your court case is resolved.
The consequences reach into your job, your insurance rates, and your permanent record. A DUI conviction in Illinois cannot be expunged. It stays with you for life. That makes it critical to mount a defense early.
We examine every detail: the legality of the traffic stop, the calibration and administration of breath or field sobriety tests, the officer’s conduct, and the procedures used at arrest. Weaknesses in any of these areas can change the outcome of your case. Our DUI defense attorneys appear in Washington County regularly and know how these cases are prosecuted here.
Traffic Offenses
Traffic tickets are easy to underestimate, until the convictions pile up. Speeding, driving on a suspended or revoked license, reckless driving, operating without insurance, and similar offenses can raise your insurance rates, add points to your record, and put your license in jeopardy. For CDL holders, even a single ticket can threaten a livelihood.
With I-64, Route 127, and Route 15 all running through Washington County, traffic stops and citations are a constant. Many of them are worth fighting.
An attorney can often negotiate court supervision or a reduced charge that keeps the offense off your driving record. Before you pay a ticket, which is the same as pleading guilty, find out what it will actually cost you. Talk to our traffic lawyers first. We offer 100% free traffic ticket reviews.
How Much Does a Lawyer in Nashville, IL Cost?
Legal fees are one of the first things clients ask about, so we keep them clear from the start. The cost depends on the type of case. The initial consultation is always free.
| ✓ Contingency Fees: Injury Cases
Personal injury cases are handled on a contingency fee basis. You pay no attorney fee up front and no fee at all unless we recover compensation for you. Our fee is a percentage of the recovery. This keeps our interests aligned with yours: we only get paid when you do. |
Flat Fees: Criminal & Traffic Cases
For most criminal defense, DUI, and traffic matters, we charge a flat fee: a single, agreed-upon price for handling your case. No hourly meter. No surprise bills. We quote the fee after discussing your situation so you can decide with full information. |
Should You Pay a Nashville Traffic Ticket or Fight It?
Paying a traffic ticket feels like the easy way out, but in Illinois it counts as a guilty plea. Before you mail that check, it helps to see what each choice actually does to your record, your license, and your insurance.
| What’s at Stake | If You Just Pay | If You Fight It |
|---|---|---|
| Conviction on Your Record | ✗ A conviction is entered | ✓ May avoid a conviction |
| Points & Your License | ✗ Points added; risks suspension | ✓ Supervision can keep points off |
| Insurance Rates | ✗ Rates likely go up | ✓ Helps protect your rates |
| CDL & Future Options | ✗ Can threaten a CDL; option is gone | ✓ Preserves a clean record |
A short, free call will tell you whether your specific ticket is worth fighting. For many minor offenses, the answer is yes.
Why a Washington County Lawyer Makes a Difference
The statutes are statewide, but the courtroom is not. The gap between a lawyer who practices in Washington County and one who does not can shape your case.
A lawyer who is at the Washington County Judicial Center regularly knows the judges who will hear your case, the prosecutors at the State’s Attorney’s Office, the local court staff, and the everyday practices that vary from one courthouse to the next. That familiarity informs everything, from how a case is negotiated to how it is presented at trial.
A firm advertising across Southern Illinois or a billboard operation based hours away often has none of that. Some are not even law firms. They are lead generators that collect your information and sell your case to a local attorney after taking a referral fee. When you hire Olson & Reeves, you get the local attorney directly, with no middleman.
How to Request Police Reports and Accident Records in Nashville, Illinois
After a crash or an arrest, the official police report is one of the most important documents in your case. Here is how to get records in Nashville:
| Step | What to Do |
|---|---|
| 1. Identify the Right Agency | If Nashville city officers responded, the report is held by the Nashville Police Department at 875 S. Mill Street (phone: 618-327-8232). If the incident happened on a county road or in an unincorporated area, the report may be with the Washington County Sheriff’s Office at 245 N. Kaskaskia Street (phone: 618-327-8274). For interstate incidents on I-64, the Illinois State Police may hold the report. Copies can be requested online for a $5 fee. |
| 2. Contact the Records Division | Call or visit the agency’s records office. You will need the date of the incident, the location, and the names of the people involved. Reports are usually available within a few business days. |
| 3. Bring ID and a Fee | Most agencies require a valid photo ID and charge a small copying fee for the report. |
| 4. Let Your Attorney Handle It | If you have hired a lawyer, we request the police report, crash diagram, dash and body camera footage, 911 recordings, and any other evidence on your behalf. We know what to look for in them. |
What to Look for When Hiring a Nashville, IL Lawyer
Not every attorney is the right fit for every case. When choosing a lawyer in Nashville, look for these qualities:
| ✓ Trial Experience | Many cases settle, but you want an attorney who is prepared to go to trial if necessary. That willingness strengthens your position in every negotiation. |
| ✓ Local Presence | Choose a lawyer who actually practices in Washington County courts, not a firm that advertises here but litigates somewhere else. |
| ✓ Transparent Fees | A good lawyer explains costs clearly (contingency, flat fee, or otherwise) before you sign anything. |
| ✓ Focused Practice | A lawyer who concentrates on criminal defense, DUI, traffic, and personal injury brings depth to exactly the problems you are facing. |
| ✓ Honest Assessments | Be wary of anyone who promises a specific result. A trustworthy lawyer tells you what you need to hear, including the hard parts. |
You Do Not Have to Figure This Out Alone
A legal problem can feel overwhelming. An arrest, a serious injury, or a court date can bring stress, fear, and a flood of unfamiliar paperwork and deadlines, often all at once. If that is where you are right now, you are not alone.
At Olson & Reeves, we see our role as guiding you through the process with steady, honest counsel. We explain what is happening in plain language, tell you what to expect at each step, and stand beside you as your advocate. We cannot promise a particular outcome, but we can promise that we will prepare thoroughly, communicate openly, and fight hard for the best result your case allows.
Washington County Courts & Local Resources
| Resource | Address / Contact | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Washington County Judicial Center | 125 E. Elm St., Nashville, IL 62263, (618) 327-4800 | Directions |
| Circuit Clerk’s Office | 125 E. Elm St., Nashville, IL 62263, (618) 327-4800 | Website |
| 24th Judicial Circuit | Covers Washington, Randolph, Monroe & Perry Counties | Website |
| Washington County State’s Attorney | 125 E. Elm St., Nashville, IL 62263, (618) 327-4800 | Website |
| Nashville Police Department | 875 S. Mill St., Nashville, IL 62263, (618) 327-8232 | Directions |
| Washington County Sheriff’s Office | 245 N. Kaskaskia St., Nashville, IL 62263, (618) 327-8274 | Directions |
| Washington County Hospital | 705 S. Grand Ave., Nashville, IL 62263, (618) 327-8236 | Directions |
| Illinois State Police: Crash Reports | Request copies of ISP-investigated crash reports online ($5 fee) | Website |
| Illinois Secretary of State | Driver’s license, vehicle registration & driving records | Website |
Proudly Serving Nashville and All of Washington County, Illinois
Olson & Reeves represents clients throughout Washington County, not just in Nashville, but in the smaller towns and rural communities where finding an experienced attorney can be hard. If you live, work, or were cited or injured anywhere in the county, we can help.
| Nashville | Okawville | Ashley |
| Addieville | Hoyleton | Irvington |
| Oakdale | Du Bois | Radom |
| Richview | New Minden | Venedy |
Frequently Asked Questions For Our Nashville, IL Lawyers
Answers to the questions Nashville clients ask us most. For advice specific to your situation, contact us for a free consultation.
Hiring a Lawyer & Court Appearances
Should I hire a local Nashville lawyer or a big firm from outside the area?
For a case in Washington County, a local Nashville attorney is almost always the better choice. Local lawyers appear at the Washington County Judicial Center regularly and know its judges, prosecutors, and procedures firsthand. They can meet with you in person and answer for the work they do in the community they serve.
A distant firm (whether from St. Louis, Belleville, or anywhere else) may never set foot in your courtroom. Many of those firms are really just referral services that collect your information and pass your case to a local attorney after taking a cut. At Olson & Reeves, your case is handled here in Southern Illinois by the attorney you actually meet, not passed down an anonymous chain.
Can an attorney guarantee a specific outcome for my case?
No. Under the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct, no ethical attorney can guarantee a specific result. Anyone who does should be treated as a serious red flag. What a good lawyer can offer is thorough preparation, honest advice, and aggressive advocacy for the best outcome your case allows.
Be cautious of any attorney who promises a dismissal or a specific dollar amount before reviewing the facts of your case; the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct bar that kind of guarantee. At Olson & Reeves, we give you a realistic picture from the start, including the hard parts.
Can my lawyer go to the Washington County Judicial Center for me so I don't miss work?
In many routine traffic and minor misdemeanor cases, yes. An Illinois attorney can appear at the Washington County Judicial Center on your behalf so you do not have to miss work, arrange childcare, or make a long drive. More serious charges, and most felony and DUI cases, require your personal appearance in court.
Once we review your case, we will tell you upfront which dates require you to be there and which ones we can cover for you.
Can I represent myself in Washington County court?
You have the legal right to represent yourself, but it is rarely a good idea. If you do, you will be going up against the Washington County State’s Attorney’s Office: full-time prosecutors who handle cases like yours every day and know the local rules of court inside and out.
Procedure, evidence rules, plea negotiations, and sentencing exposure are easy to get wrong, and mistakes can be permanent. Even a routine traffic ticket has consequences that are not always obvious until it is too late. A consultation costs nothing, so at minimum understand what you are facing before you decide to go it alone.
Personal Injury & Car Accidents
I was in a crash on I-64 near Nashville but I live out of state. Can I still file a claim?
Yes. A crash on I-64 in Washington County is governed by Illinois law and handled through the Washington County courts, no matter where you live. A local Nashville attorney can manage the claim, deal with the insurance companies, and handle most steps so you rarely need to travel back.
This situation is common. Nashville sits at the I-64 interchange, and many drivers in crashes here are just passing through between St. Louis and Mt. Vernon, Evansville, or Louisville. Being out of state does not change your right to recover for your injuries.
What should I say if the other driver's insurance company calls me after a crash?
Be very careful. The other driver’s insurance company is not on your side. Its goal is to pay you as little as possible. You are not required to give a recorded statement. Politely decline to discuss fault or the extent of your injuries, tell them your attorney will follow up, and then call a lawyer.
Early recorded statements are routinely used later to minimize or deny otherwise valid claims. Insurance adjusters are trained to ask questions in ways that can hurt your case before you even realize it. Speak with an attorney first.
How long do I have to file an injury lawsuit in Illinois?
In most Illinois personal injury cases, you have two years from the date of the injury to file a lawsuit (735 ILCS 5/13-202). If you miss that deadline, the court will almost certainly dismiss your case permanently. Shorter deadlines can apply, so contact an attorney promptly.
Claims against a government body, such as a city or county, often require formal notice and a shorter window. Evidence also fades fast. Witness memories blur, footage gets overwritten, and the accident scene changes. The sooner you call, the stronger your case is likely to be.
Traffic Tickets & DUI Defense
Do I need an attorney for a traffic ticket in Nashville?
Not every ticket needs a lawyer, but many do. A conviction often costs more than people expect. Paying the ticket is a guilty plea: it can raise your insurance, add points to your record, and push you toward a suspension. An attorney can often secure court supervision or a reduced charge that keeps the offense off your record.
This is especially true for CDL holders, where a single moving violation can jeopardize a driving career. A short, free consultation will tell you whether your specific ticket is worth fighting.
Can I get court supervision for a traffic ticket in Washington County?
Often, yes. Court supervision is a disposition that, once completed, keeps the conviction off your public driving record. The Washington County State’s Attorney’s Office will generally agree to supervision if you have not received it on another citation in the prior twelve months and your driving record otherwise qualifies.
Supervision is not automatic. Eligibility depends on your history and the specific offense, and a judge must approve it. We review both with you before recommending a strategy, and in many cases we can handle the court appearance at the Judicial Center for you.
Can I just pay my speeding ticket instead of going to court?
You can. But paying a traffic ticket in Illinois is the same as pleading guilty. It places a conviction on your driving record, can add points, and will likely raise your insurance rates. Going to court, or sending an attorney in your place, gives you the chance to seek supervision or a reduction. Once you pay, that option is gone.
Before you pay anything, it is worth a free call to find out exactly what is at stake for your license and your insurance. The answer might surprise you.
How long does a DUI stay on my record in Illinois?
A DUI conviction stays on your Illinois driving and criminal record permanently. Illinois law does not allow DUI convictions to be expunged or sealed, which means they cannot be removed later, ever. This is why fighting the charge early and aggressively matters. On some first offenses, court supervision may keep a DUI off your public criminal record.
Court supervision is not a conviction, but it is not automatic. It must be argued for, and judges have discretion to deny it. Because the consequences of a DUI conviction are lifelong, experienced DUI defense is critical from the very first court date.
What should I do about a Washington County traffic ticket if I live out of state?
You usually will not have to return to Illinois. A local attorney can often handle an out-of-state driver’s Washington County ticket and appear at the Judicial Center on your behalf to resolve it. Do not ignore the ticket: an unresolved Illinois citation can follow you home and affect your license and insurance.
Nashville sits right on I-64, so many drivers cited here are just passing through. An Illinois citation does not disappear when you cross the state line. Most states share driving records through the Driver License Compact, so an unresolved ticket can reach your license and insurance back home. If you were ticketed traveling through Nashville, call us before you simply pay it.
Call For a Free Consultation With a Nashville, IL Attorney Today
If you are facing a criminal charge, a DUI, a traffic ticket, or an injury claim in Nashville or anywhere in Washington County, do not wait to get answers. At Olson & Reeves, the consultation is always free, the advice is always honest, and you will speak with a real local trial attorney about your case.
Call us at (618) 316-7322 or use the form below to schedule your free consultation. Let us put our experience to work for you.