City hub

Butler Solutions for Arlington criminal defense, bail, and investigation work.

Arlington practitioners operate in a Tarrant County city market sharing county criminal and bail authorities with Fort Worth while retaining distinct municipal court and city-market context. This hub explains the cross-vertical Texas landscape and routes teams into the Butler product that fits their work.

Quick answer

Butler Solutions in Arlington

Butler Solutions serves Arlington practitioners through Legal Core, Bail Core, and PI Core evaluation paths. Arlington fit is anchored in Tarrant County Criminal Courts, Tarrant County: Local Rules of the Courts, City of Arlington Municipal Court: Court Information, U.S. District Court: Northern District of Texas, Tarrant County Bail Bond Board, Tarrant County Sheriff's Office: Bond Information, Texas Department of Public Safety private security licensing, Texas Occupations Code Chapter 1702, and Texas Penal Code section 16.02 one-party recording-law context. Arlington is hub-only in this phase, so product cards route to product pricing rather than non-existent city+vertical pages. Pricing is uniform across products: $99, $149, $199, or custom by user count. Legal Core includes a 2-month free trial; Bail Core and PI Core include 3-month free trials. Texas permits commercial bail bonding, so Bail Core remains a valid product path. Migration support depends on vertical and source system.

Butler in Arlington

City context before product selection.

Arlington is part of the Texas city execution batch. The hub uses Tarrant County court, local-rule, municipal-court, bail-board, sheriff, bar, and investigation sources rather than treating Houston's Harris County structure as the statewide template.

Arlington and Fort Worth share the Tarrant County court and bail-board layer, so this hub keeps Arlington distinct through municipal-court, city-market, and practitioner-routing context rather than inventing separate county authority.

Arlington operating landscape

The cross-vertical context the product pages do not repeat.

Arlington's city hub is the cross-vertical view: court context, local legal market, county bail bond board posture, and PI operating considerations before choosing a product.

01

Tarrant County court anchor

Arlington criminal defense work is anchored in Tarrant County Criminal Courts, Tarrant County: Local Rules of the Courts, and local municipal court context. Legal Core evaluation should scope court, calendar, packet, and sensitive-record workflow around the actual county source rather than a generic Texas docket.

02

Local legal market

Tarrant County Bar Association and U.S. District Court: Northern District of Texas give the city a local legal-market signal. Butler treats those bar and courthouse sources as Arlington-specific routing context rather than statewide boilerplate.

03

County bail bond board context

Texas permits commercial bail bonding, while Tarrant County Bail Bond Board and Tarrant County Sheriff's Office: Bond Information frame local board, posting, and custody questions. Bail Core evaluation should track bond files, indemnitors, court dates, and forfeiture follow-up as agency-side workflow.

04

PI and one-party recording-law context

Arlington investigation work is governed by Texas DPS private security licensing and Texas Penal Code section 16.02 one-party recording-law context. PI Core evaluation emphasizes evidence handling and practitioner-reviewed recording-law workflow.

Product fit

Which Butler product fits which Arlington practitioner?

Legal Core for Arlington criminal defense

For defense teams evaluating Tarrant County criminal court workflow, local rules, eFileTexas context, Texas criminal procedure, sensitive records, and migration from legal practice systems.

Review Legal Core pricing

Bail Core for Arlington bail agencies

For agencies evaluating defendant records, bond files, indemnitors, court-date tracking, forfeiture follow-up, county bail bond board context, and sheriff or jail posting workflow.

Review Bail Core pricing

PI Core for Arlington investigators

For investigation firms evaluating surveillance records, evidence handling, attorney handoffs, DPS licensing context, and Texas one-party recording-law review.

Review PI Core pricing

Pricing and programs

Uniform pricing, city-specific evaluation.

Butler uses the same per-user pricing structure in Arlington as elsewhere: $99 per user per month, $149 per user per month, $199 per user per month, or custom pricing above 25 users. Legal Core includes a 2-month free trial. Bail Core and PI Core include 3-month free trials. Each product has founding cohort and design partner paths.

Migration

Switching support for Arlington teams.

Arlington migration planning depends on vertical and source system. Legal teams may start from Clio, MyCase, Smokeball, PracticePanther, or Filevine. Bail agencies may start from Captira, BailBooks, eBail, or Simply Bail. PI firms may start from CROSStrax, Trackops, or CaseFleet.

  • Clio
  • MyCase
  • Smokeball
  • PracticePanther
  • Filevine
  • Captira
  • BailBooks
  • eBail
  • Simply Bail
  • CROSStrax
  • Trackops
  • CaseFleet
Review migration

Arlington FAQ

City-level questions before choosing a product.

Does Arlington have city+vertical pages in this phase?

No. Arlington is hub-only in this phase. The product cards route to pricing pages rather than non-existent Arlington city+vertical pages.

Which court system does Arlington criminal work use?

Arlington criminal work is handled through Tarrant County Criminal Courts, Tarrant County: Local Rules of the Courts, and related Tarrant County court operations. The page does not claim a separate city court system where county court authority applies.

Does Arlington get Bail Core coverage?

Yes. Texas permits commercial bail bonding, and Arlington is not in a bail-restricted state. The hub routes to Bail Core pricing while county-specific bail board questions remain implementation scoping.

How does the hub handle Arlington PI work?

It frames PI work through Texas DPS private security licensing, Occupations Code Chapter 1702, Penal Code section 16.02 one-party recording-law context, local assignment context, evidence handling, and attorney handoffs.

Does Butler integrate directly with Tarrant County Criminal Courts?

No direct court integration is claimed. Butler organizes practitioner-side workflow, documents, assignments, status, and migration review.

Can Arlington teams migrate from existing systems?

Yes, where usable exports or records are available. Migration review depends on whether the source system is legal practice management, bail management, or investigation case management.

Is Arlington pricing different?

No. Butler pricing is not city-specific. Pricing, trial periods, founding cohort terms, and migration terms follow the same product-level structure used across the site.

Does the Arlington hub replace local professional review?

No. Lawyers, bail agents, and investigators remain responsible for court rules, court orders, licensing obligations, recording law, and professional judgment.

Why cite Tarrant County Bail Bond Board?

The source supports local bail board and county operating context for the city hub. Butler does not claim direct bail board, sheriff, jail, or court integration.

Where should a Arlington practitioner start?

Start with the product card for the relevant vertical. Use contact if the question is Tarrant County workflow, migration, local court context, county bail board posture, or multi-product fit.

Public sources cited

City-specific claims stay tied to public sources.

City-specific information cited from public sources current as of May 5, 2026. Butler updates city content as court, licensing, and local operating sources change. The source set combines local city and county authorities with state-level legal, bail, and investigation authorities where those sources support the cross-vertical claims above.

Arlington software evaluation

Start with the product page or talk through local workflow.

Use the product path if you already know the vertical. Use contact if the important question is local court fit, migration source data, or a multi-product Arlington workflow.