An arrest for a drug charge can turn an ordinary day upside down in minutes. Maybe it is you sitting in a holding cell, or maybe you are the parent or partner trying to figure out what a "Level 6 felony" means and what happens tomorrow. The system can feel deliberately confusing. It does not have to. Here is what an Indiana drug case actually looks like, step by step.
Drug Charges in Indiana: The Two Main Categories
Indiana's drug offenses are set out in Indiana Code § 35-48-4, and most fall into two broad buckets. Possession means having a controlled substance for personal use. Dealing means manufacturing, delivering, or possessing with intent to deliver — and it is treated far more seriously.
The level of a charge generally depends on the substance and the amount. Possessing a small amount of marijuana is often a misdemeanor. Possession of substances such as methamphetamine or cocaine is commonly charged as a Level 6 felony or higher. Dealing charges typically start at Level 5 and climb from there. One more thing worth knowing: "constructive possession" means drugs do not have to be in your pocket — if they were in your car or home and the State can show you knew about them and could control them, that can be enough to charge.
What Happens Immediately After an Arrest
After an arrest, you are booked and held. The most important thing to understand in this moment is your right to remain silent. You generally must identify yourself, but you do not have to answer questions about the allegations — and you should not, without a lawyer. Officers may be friendly or may suggest that talking will help. Politely asking for an attorney and declining to answer is not an admission of anything. It is the single best thing you can do to protect yourself.
The Initial Hearing: Bond and Charges
Shortly after arrest, you appear before a judge for an initial hearing. The court tells you the charges, advises you of your rights, and addresses bond — the conditions for being released while the case is pending. This is also where the question of representation comes up. If you cannot afford a lawyer, you can ask the court to appoint one. Having counsel involved early can shape bond and the direction of the case.
Pretrial: What Your Attorney Is Doing
Most of a case happens in the pretrial phase, out of public view. This is where a defense attorney does the real work: reviewing the evidence the State must turn over, examining how the stop and search were conducted, and looking for constitutional problems. If evidence was obtained through an unlawful search, a motion to suppress can ask the court to keep it out — and sometimes that reshapes or ends the case. Pretrial is also when negotiations happen, including discussions about diversion or a resolution that avoids the worst outcomes.
Diversion Programs and Drug Court — Alternatives to a Conviction
For many people — especially first-time or lower-level offenders — the best outcome is not "winning at trial" but avoiding a conviction altogether. Indiana offers two important paths:
- Pretrial diversion. Available in many counties for eligible offenses, diversion lets a person complete certain requirements in exchange for dismissal of the charge. Complete the program, and there is no conviction.
- Drug court. A problem-solving court that combines intensive supervision, regular testing, and treatment over an extended period. It is demanding, but completing it can lead to a reduced or dismissed charge — and can address the substance issue underneath the case.
Eligibility and terms vary by county, which is one reason local experience matters.
If the Case Goes to Trial
Not every case resolves before trial. At trial, the State must prove every element of the charge beyond a reasonable doubt, and you are presumed innocent until it does. The defense tests the State's evidence, challenges the chain of custody on the substance, and holds the prosecution to its burden. Whether trial is the right path depends entirely on the facts and the options on the table.
Sentencing for Drug Offenses in Indiana
If a case ends in a conviction, the sentence depends on the level of the offense. Indiana uses a six-level felony scheme, with Level 1 the most serious and Level 6 the least. A Level 6 felony — the level for many possession cases — carries an advisory range measured in months to a couple of years, while misdemeanors carry shorter maximums. Within those ranges, the court weighs aggravating and mitigating factors, and alternatives like probation or treatment may be available. The gap between a possession conviction and a dealing conviction can be enormous, which is why the charge level matters so much.
What Comes After: Expungement and Your Record
A case ends, but the record can linger. Indiana's Second Chance Law allows many people to expunge eligible drug convictions after a waiting period — a chance to keep an old mistake from following you into job and housing applications. Because that opportunity is generally a once-in-a-lifetime filing, it is worth understanding early. Our guide to Indiana expungement after a drug offense explains how it works.
Drug Charges Across Central Indiana
Hammond Legal defends people facing drug charges across Central Indiana, including Madison County (Anderson), Marion County (Indianapolis), Hamilton County (Noblesville), Hancock County (Greenfield), Shelby County (Shelbyville), Delaware County (Muncie), and Henry County (New Castle). Diversion options, drug-court programs, and local court practices differ from one county to the next, so knowing how a particular court handles these cases can make a real difference. If your charge is a felony, our felony defense page covers the broader process.
Common Questions
Have Questions About Your Case?
The earliest decisions in a drug case often matter the most. Attorney Emilee Hammond defends people facing drug charges across Central Indiana and can explain your options and what to expect.