Mesa Endangerment Lawyer
Endangerment charges arise when conduct creates substantial risk of harm to another person—even when no actual injury occurs. Under ARS § 13-1201, endangerment can be either a felony or misdemeanor depending entirely on the type of risk created: risk of death is a Class 6 Felony, while risk of physical injury alone is a Class 1 Misdemeanor. In Mesa, endangerment charges frequently accompany DUI cases involving passengers, reckless driving incidents, child welfare situations, firearm incidents, and domestic violence cases. Understanding the distinction between felony and misdemeanor endangerment is critical to defense strategy.
Attorney Josh Lopez represents clients throughout Mesa facing endangerment charges.
→ For comprehensive Arizona endangerment information, see: Arizona Endangerment Laws
Endangerment Under Arizona Law (ARS § 13-1201)
“A person commits endangerment by recklessly endangering another person with a substantial risk of imminent death or physical injury.”
Elements the Prosecution Must Prove
- Recklessly
The defendant must have been aware of and consciously disregarded a substantial and unjustifiable risk. This is more than mere negligence or carelessness—it requires:
- Awareness that conduct creates risk
- Conscious choice to disregard that risk
- The risk must be substantial and unjustifiable
- Disregarding the risk is a gross deviation from reasonable conduct
- Endangering Another Person
- Conduct must create risk to another person (not just the defendant)
- The other person must actually be placed at risk
- Can be a specific individual or members of the public
- Multiple victims = multiple potential counts
- Substantial Risk
- Not minor, remote, or speculative
- Real, significant possibility of harm
- Objectively dangerous situation
- Reasonable person would recognize the danger
- Imminent
- Risk is immediate and present
- Danger exists now, not in the future
- Harm could occur without intervention
- Not theoretical or eventual risk
- Death or Physical Injury
The type of risk determines classification:
- Risk of death = Class 6 Felony
- Risk of physical injury only = Class 1 Misdemeanor
Classifications and Penalties
Felony Endangerment (Risk of Death)
When conduct creates substantial risk of imminent death:
| Classification | Prison Range (First Offense) | Probation |
| Class 6 Felony | 4 months – 2 years | Eligible |
Misdemeanor Endangerment (Risk of Injury Only)
When conduct creates substantial risk of physical injury but not death:
| Classification | Maximum Jail | Maximum Fine | Probation |
| Class 1 Misdemeanor | 6 months | $2,500 | Up to 3 years |
Prior Felony Enhancement
For felony endangerment with prior felony convictions:
| Prior Felonies | Sentence Range |
| 1 prior | 9 months – 2.75 years |
| 2+ priors | 2.25 – 5.75 years |
Felony vs. Misdemeanor: The Critical Distinction
The distinction between felony and misdemeanor endangerment depends on the type of risk created—NOT whether injury actually occurred:
Factors Courts Consider
Felony (Risk of Death) Factors:
- High speeds or extreme recklessness
- Involvement of deadly weapons
- Vulnerable victims (children, elderly)
- Conduct that could realistically cause death
- Similar conduct that has caused deaths in other cases
Misdemeanor (Risk of Injury Only) Factors:
- Lower-level reckless conduct
- Risk of harm but not fatal harm
- Less extreme circumstances
- Safety factors that reduced death risk
Examples of Felony Endangerment (Risk of Death)
- DUI at high speeds with passengers
- Wrong-way driving
- Reckless driving at extreme speeds
- Discharging firearms near occupied areas
- Leaving young children in hot vehicles
- Creating explosion or fire risks
- DUI with small children in vehicle
Examples of Misdemeanor Endangerment (Risk of Injury)
- Reckless driving at moderate speeds
- Creating fall hazards
- Unsafe conditions causing injury risk
- Minor reckless conduct in confined areas
- Lower-level dangerous behavior
Defense Strategy: Challenging the felony classification—arguing risk was of injury only, not death—can reduce exposure from felony to misdemeanor.
Common Endangerment Scenarios in Mesa
DUI with Passengers
Driving under the influence with passengers is one of the most common endangerment scenarios:
- Each passenger may constitute a separate endangerment count
- Children present typically triggers felony classification (risk of death)
- Often accompanies Aggravated DUI charges under ARS § 28-1383
- Passengers don’t need to be injured—the risk alone supports charges
- BAC level and driving behavior affect classification arguments
→ See: Mesa DUI Lawyer
Reckless Driving
Dangerous driving that creates risk to others on Mesa roads:
- Excessive speeding on US-60 or Loop 202
- Racing on public roads
- Aggressive driving near pedestrians or other vehicles
- Running red lights at high speed
- Weaving through traffic at dangerous speeds
→ See: Mesa Reckless Driving Lawyer
Child Endangerment
Conduct placing children at substantial risk:
- Leaving children in vehicles — Especially dangerous in Arizona heat; can be charged as felony
- Exposing children to dangerous environments — Drug activity, domestic violence, unsafe conditions
- Reckless driving with children present — Often charged as felony endangerment
- Drug use or manufacturing around children — Additional charges often apply
- Domestic violence in presence of children — Each child may be separate count
Firearm Incidents
Reckless handling of weapons creating risk to others:
- Discharging firearms in populated areas
- Brandishing weapons during confrontations
- Unsafe firearm handling creating risk
- Accidental discharge near others
- Celebratory gunfire in residential areas
Domestic Violence Context
Endangerment between domestic partners or involving household members:
- Reckless conduct during domestic disputes
- Creating risk to children present during incidents
- Dangerous driving during domestic arguments
- Often charged alongside other DV offenses
→ See: Mesa Domestic Violence Lawyer
Domestic Violence Designation
When endangerment occurs between people with a qualifying domestic relationship, it carries a domestic violence designation under ARS § 13-3601.
Qualifying Domestic Relationships
- Spouses or former spouses
- Current or former cohabitants
- People with child in common
- Related by blood or court order
- Current or former romantic/sexual relationship
DV Endangerment Consequences
- Mandatory arrest upon probable cause
- No-contact orders as release condition
- Federal firearm prohibition upon conviction (lifetime)
- DV offender treatment programs (26-52 weeks)
- Enhanced penalties for repeat DV offenses
Defense Strategies
Conduct Was Not “Reckless”
Endangerment requires conscious disregard of substantial risk—not mere negligence:
- Conduct was merely negligent or careless (not reckless)
- Reasonable conduct under the circumstances
- No awareness of the risk created
- Risk-taking was justifiable under circumstances
- Emergency situation required the conduct
Risk Was Not “Substantial”
The risk must be significant and real, not minor or speculative:
- Theoretical or speculative risk only
- Safety precautions minimized actual danger
- No real danger actually existed
- Risk was minimal given circumstances
- Prosecution is exaggerating the danger
Risk Was Not “Imminent”
The danger must be immediate and present:
- Risk was future, not present
- Intervening factors prevented immediate danger
- Situation was controlled before risk materialized
- Time existed to avoid any harm
- Danger was not immediate
No Risk to “Another Person”
Endangerment requires risk to someone other than defendant:
- Only the defendant was at risk
- No one else was actually present
- Alleged victim wasn’t endangered by the specific conduct
- Risk was to property only, not persons
Challenging Felony Classification
Arguing risk was of injury only, not death:
- Circumstances didn’t realistically create death risk
- Safety factors reduced risk severity
- Should be charged as misdemeanor rather than felony
- Prosecution is overcharging the offense
- Similar conduct typically charged as misdemeanor
Self-Defense / Defense of Others / Necessity
The reckless conduct was justified:
- Protecting yourself from harm
- Protecting others from threat
- Emergency circumstances required action
- Justified defensive action
- Lesser evil to prevent greater harm
Multiple Counts: Each Victim = Separate Charge
How Multiple Counts Work
Each person endangered can support a separate endangerment count:
- DUI with 3 passengers = potentially 3 endangerment counts
- Reckless driving near multiple pedestrians = count per person endangered
- Firearm discharge near multiple people = multiple counts possible
- Child endangerment with multiple children = count per child
Sentencing Implications
Multiple counts can result in:
- Concurrent sentences — Served at same time
- Consecutive sentences — Served one after another
- Significantly increased total exposure
- Felony counts dramatically increase risk
Mesa Courts
Mesa Municipal Court
Location: 225 E. Main Street, Mesa, AZ 85201
Handles misdemeanor endangerment charges (risk of injury only) arising within Mesa city limits.
Southeast Regional Superior Court
Location: 222 E. Javelina Avenue, Mesa, AZ 85210
Handles felony endangerment charges (risk of death) in the Southeast Valley.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is endangerment a felony in Arizona?
It depends entirely on the type of risk created. Endangerment involving risk of death is a Class 6 Felony with up to 2 years prison. Endangerment involving risk of physical injury only (but not death) is a Class 1 Misdemeanor with up to 6 months jail.
Can I be charged with endangerment if no one was hurt?
Yes. Endangerment punishes creating risk—actual injury is not required. You can be convicted even if no harm occurred, as long as your conduct created substantial risk of imminent harm to another person.
What if I was charged with endangerment alongside DUI?
This is very common when passengers were present during a DUI. Defense strategy may involve challenging both the DUI and endangerment charges, or arguing against the endangerment classification (felony vs. misdemeanor) based on the actual risk created.
Can multiple endangerment charges be filed for one incident?
Yes. Each person endangered can constitute a separate count. A DUI with three passengers could result in three separate endangerment charges, each carrying its own potential penalties.
Does endangerment carry a domestic violence designation?
Yes, when it occurs between people with a qualifying domestic relationship. DV endangerment triggers additional consequences including mandatory arrest, no-contact orders, and federal firearm prohibition upon conviction.
What is the difference between reckless and negligent conduct?
Reckless requires conscious awareness of risk and deliberate disregard—you knew the danger and proceeded anyway. Negligent means failing to perceive risk that a reasonable person would notice. Recklessness is a higher level of culpability and is required for endangerment charges. Mere negligence is insufficient.
Contact a Mesa Endangerment Defense Attorney
Endangerment charges—whether felony or misdemeanor—create permanent criminal records and can carry significant penalties, especially when multiple counts are charged for multiple victims. Understanding the distinction between felony and misdemeanor endangerment and challenging the prosecution’s classification can dramatically affect outcomes.
Attorney Josh Lopez represents clients facing endangerment charges throughout Mesa.
Scottsdale Office:
6991 East Camelback Rd, Suite D-300
Scottsdale, AZ 85251
Phoenix Office:
2601 N 3rd Street, Suite 301
Phoenix, AZ 85004
Call (480) 386-1824 for a free consultation.

