What to Do After a Federal Indictment

If you follow my work, you know I start super earlyโ€”usually around 4 a.m. I have this goal of accomplishing as much as I can before my kids get up.

When I sat at my desk just after 4 a.m. this morning, I had a text that said:

โ€œHi. I googled info about my situation and your site came up. I am watching your videos, thanks. Do you have one about what to do if you just got indicted and like what to do next? I think a few people are indicted, but not 100% sure. Can you help?โ€

I wrote back:

โ€œHiโ€”thank you for writing. I know this is a difficult and confusing time. Now is the time for due diligence and for making strategic, principled decisions that move you toward the outcome you want. And 17 years into this, I know what outcome you want. It starts by not making things worseโ€”as most people do, including me.

Iโ€™ve covered these topics, but Iโ€™ll re-film a long video today and send it to you. After you watch it, weโ€™ll have a call and lay out a plan. I know you have a million questions; thatโ€™s normal. Weโ€™ll work through it together, step by step.

As an aside, I encourage you to spend time on PrisonProfessors.org. Tayana on my team will also send you the Audible version of Earning Freedom.โ€

That text is why Iโ€™m writing this blog.

Because right after an indictmentโ€”if youโ€™re honestโ€”your mind goes straight to one question:

“Should I talk? Should I stay silent? Should I cooperate?”

If youโ€™re searching what to do after a federal indictment, you want something you can use today, before you accidentally make things worse.

Iโ€™m sharing what Iโ€™ve learned from living through it and from years of watching people make avoidable mistakes.

Step One: What to Do After a Federal Indictment Starts With One Goal

Hereโ€™s the first thing I tell anyone who asks what to do after a federal indictment:

Your first goal is not โ€œwinning.โ€
Your first goal is not โ€œexplaining.โ€
Your first goal is not โ€œclearing it up.โ€

Your first goal is not making it worse.

Most people do the opposite. They start talking fast because silence feels like guilt. They text people โ€œinvolved.โ€ They try to โ€œget ahead of it.โ€ They delete messages.

Those moves donโ€™t help. They create new problems you didnโ€™t have yesterday.

โ€œShould I Talk?โ€ What That Actually Means

When someone asks me what to do after a federal indictment, โ€œtalkโ€ can mean several different things.

1) Talking to agents

This is where smart people ruin themselves.

An agent interview is not therapy. Itโ€™s not a debate. Itโ€™s not your chance to โ€œtell your side.โ€

Itโ€™s an evidence-gathering tool.

2) Talking to the prosecutor (through counsel)

This can be strategicโ€”if itโ€™s controlled. It becomes a disaster when it turns into emotional, open-ended confession without clarity on what youโ€™re admitting or not admitting.

3) Talking in a proffer

A proffer is a specific step. Itโ€™s not casual. Itโ€™s not improv. Itโ€™s often the doorway to cooperation.

4) Talking to probation later

Probation is part of the PSR and sentencing picture. Agents and prosecutors are focused on guilt, scope, leverage, and exposure.

5) Talking to everyone else

Family. Friends. Employees. Group chats. Text threads.

This is the easiest way to create new evidence. Screenshots donโ€™t forget.

So the first question isnโ€™t โ€œshould I talk?โ€ Itโ€™s: Who am I planning to talk to, and what is the goal?

Thatโ€™s part of what to do after a federal indictmentโ€”defining the decision before you make it.

The โ€œDonโ€™t Make It Worseโ€ Rules I Follow

If you want a practical list of what to do after a federal indictment, start here:

  • I do not contact co-defendants or witnesses to โ€œcompare stories.โ€
  • I do not send โ€œjust checking inโ€ texts to anyone involved.
  • I do not delete anything. Not emails. Not texts. Not Signal. Not WhatsApp. Not DMs.
  • I do not vent in group chats. Somebody screenshots. Somebody forwards.
  • I do not write long explanations to staff or clients. Keep it short and boring.
  • I do not start my own โ€œinvestigation.โ€ No calling people for statements or reassurance.

This is still what to do after a federal indictment: control your behavior so the government doesnโ€™t get new material from you.

Why Talking to Agents Is Usually the Trap

By the time youโ€™re indicted, the government didnโ€™t guess. They charged you because they believe they can prove a storyโ€”often with emails, texts, bank records, and witnesses. Sometimes they already have someone cooperating. To learn more watch my interview with FBI Agent Paul Bertrand (yes, he is the one who arrested me.)

So when you walk into an interview thinking, โ€œIโ€™ll explain,โ€ youโ€™re assuming theyโ€™re still deciding what happened.

Theyโ€™re not.

Theyโ€™re deciding whether youโ€™ll contradict documents, minimize, guess, or expand the scope.

If youโ€™re looking for what to do after a federal indictment in one sentence, here it is:

โ€œIโ€™m represented by counsel. Any communication goes through my lawyer.โ€

Staying Silent Doesnโ€™t Mean Doing Nothing

A lot of people hear โ€œstay silentโ€ and translate it into โ€œhide.โ€

Silenceโ€”done correctlyโ€”means your lawyer gets discovery, you stop creating new facts, you build a timeline, and you decide your lane based on reality.

Silenceโ€”done poorlyโ€”means you spiral, ghost your lawyer, and keep texting people anyway.

So yes, staying silent can be smart. It just has to be disciplined. Thatโ€™s part of what to do after a federal indictment.

The Middle Lane People Miss: Negotiate Without Cooperating

Not everyone who pleads cooperates.

Negotiation without cooperation can look like:

  • counsel communicates with the government,
  • you explore plea terms,
  • you limit what you admit,
  • you avoid widening the case,
  • you avoid casual โ€œlet me clear something upโ€ conversations.

If youโ€™re researching what to do after a federal indictment, understand this: negotiation is controlled communication, not a confession session.

Cooperation and the Proffer: The Part People Donโ€™t Understand

If cooperation is even being discussed, you need to understand what a proffer is.

A proffer is typically a meeting with prosecutors (often with agents present) where you provide information under a written agreement. People call it โ€œqueen for a day,โ€ but that nickname can make it sound safer than it is.

A proffer can help. A proffer can also destroy leverage if you do it too early or unprepared.

Hereโ€™s what matters if youโ€™re searching what to do after a federal indictment and someone mentions a proffer:

A proffer is not casual. A proffer is not improv. A proffer is not where you guess.

If Iโ€™m even considering a proffer, I want:

  • a written proffer agreement before the meeting,
  • serious prep with counsel,
  • a clean timeline (names, dates, money, communications),
  • clarity on what I know vs. what Iโ€™m assuming,
  • discipline to say: โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t recall,โ€ โ€œI need to review records.โ€

And if youโ€™re at this stage, go deeper with our Proffer Series. We cover every angle of a profferโ€”what it is, risks, preparation, strategy, and the mistakes people make when they rush.

Where Iโ€™d Start Reading: Our Book Prepare (Chapters Are On Our Site)

After I answer โ€œtalk vs. silent vs. cooperate,โ€ the next thing people ask is: โ€œOkayโ€”what do I do next week?โ€

Thatโ€™s why we wrote Prepare.

We put each chapter up on our site because the early stage of a case is when people make the most expensive mistakesโ€”usually out of panic, not malice.

If youโ€™re serious about what to do after a federal indictment, start reading Prepare on the site. The chapters walk you through the exact questions people ask right after an indictment, including:

  • How to hire a lawyer (what to look for, what questions to ask, how to avoid the wrong fit)
  • What sentencing mitigation is (what it is, what it isnโ€™t, and why it changes outcomes)
  • Preparing for sentencing (how to think ahead instead of waiting for the system to define you)
  • And other chapters that deal with the practical realities of getting through a case without making it worse

Iโ€™m not saying a book solves your problems. Iโ€™m saying: if youโ€™re searching what to do after a federal indictment, the fastest way to calm down is to stop guessing and start learningโ€”chapter by chapterโ€”so your decisions are deliberate, not reactive.

A Simple Framework You Can Use Today

If youโ€™re overwhelmed, use this:

Step 1: Stop making it worse

No deleting. No venting. No โ€œjust checking inโ€ texts. No contacting witnesses or co-defendants.

Step 2: Put counsel between you and the government

One channel. One voice. No side conversations.

Step 3: Decide your lane

Fight, negotiate, or cooperateโ€”based on facts, not fear.

Step 4: If โ€œprofferโ€ is on the table, prepare

Do not improvise. Schedule a call to learn what to do next.

FAQs

Should I talk to agents after Iโ€™m indicted?

In many cases, talking directly to agents without a controlled strategy creates more risk than benefit. A common baseline is communication through counsel.

What is a proffer?

A proffer is a meeting where you provide information to the government under a written agreement. Itโ€™s often the first step toward cooperation. Preparation matters.

Is staying silent the same as doing nothing?

No. Silence is discipline. You stop freelancing while counsel evaluates evidence and options.

Where should I start if Iโ€™m new and overwhelmed?

Start with Prepare (chapters are on our site), especially the chapters on hiring a lawyer, sentencing mitigation, and preparing for sentencing. If a proffer is being discussed, go to our Proffer Series.

Final note

If youโ€™re reading this because you were indicted (or you think you might be), youโ€™re probably trying to figure out what to do after a federal indictment while your phone wonโ€™t stop buzzing.

Thatโ€™s normal.

But panic isnโ€™t a plan.

Start by not making it worse. Then choose a lane based on facts. And if โ€œprofferโ€ is being floated, get smart before you talkโ€”our Proffer Series exists for that exact moment, and Prepare will give you a structured starting point so you stop guessing.

Thank you,

Justin Paperny

Justin Paperny (yes, I am writing about myself in the third person!) is an ethics and compliance speaker and founder of White Collar Advice, a national crisis management firm that prepares individuals and companies for government investigations, sentencing, and prison. He is the author of Lessons From PrisonEthics in Motion, and the upcoming After the Fall. His work has been featured on Dr. Phil, Netflix, CNN, CNBC, Fox News, The Washington Post, and The New York Times.

Read Our New York Times Article

And Lessons From Prison, Free!

This is a staging environment