About Monroe Solomon
Monroe Solomon III earned his J.D. from Texas A&M University School of Law in 2014. He arrived at law school after undergraduate studies and finished his legal education at a time when criminal law in Texas was undergoing steady change. The diploma established a clear professional path and set the stage for a years-long involvement in criminal defense circles.
Early in his career Solomon joined several professional organizations. He has been a member of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association since 2014. He also belongs to the Tarrant County Criminal Defense Lawyers Association and the Texas Young Lawyers Association, affiliations he maintains to the present. Those memberships have given him regular access to local and statewide networks of defense lawyers, continuing legal education seminars, and the practical discussions that often shape courtroom strategy.
Solomon’s practice is based in Texas. He is admitted to practice in that jurisdiction and concentrates on criminal defense matters. His work covers typical trial preparation tasks: client interviews, evidence review, plea negotiation, and courtroom representation. He has handled a range of misdemeanor and felony matters, representing clients at various stages of the criminal process.
Colleagues describe him as methodical. He prefers to break cases into discrete issues and tackle them one at a time. That approach shows in how he prepares motions and lines up witnesses. It also informs how he communicates with clients. He explains options plainly and lays out the likely next steps so people know what to expect.
Solomon has taken part in local bar events and county-level defense association meetings. Those settings let him exchange tactics and procedural updates with fellow practitioners. He attends continuing education programs to stay current on developments in evidence handling and criminal procedure. He is especially attentive to changes in Texas statutes and court rulings that affect criminal sentencing and pretrial relief.
Outside of court, he manages casework that demands close attention to detail. He reviews police reports, consults with investigators when necessary, and coordinates discovery requests. That work often shapes the decision whether to pursue trial or negotiate a resolution. He currently focuses his practice on criminal defense in Texas.