Exploring Brielle’s Journey
Lead Criminal Defense Lawyer
From the start of her legal career, Brielle Schumpe made one thing clear. She did not become a lawyer and enter criminal defense to sit on the sidelines and judge people from a distance. She became a lawyer to stand with people when they feel powerless and fight for the future they thought they lost.
Her commitment took shape in law school, where she worked directly with clients through the Arizona Justice Project and the Public Defender’s Office. She saw how fast one accusation or one 5-minute mistake could unravel a person’s entire life.
Instead of turning away, she stepped in. She chose to become the person who brings clarity into chaos, hope into moments that feel hopeless, and strength into situations where clients feel completely alone.
Her dedication earned her the Gideon Fellowship at ASU Law, one of the most competitive honors in the state for students committed to criminal defense. Through that fellowship, she gained hands-on experience across the full spectrum of indigent defense: felony trial work, real case representation, post-conviction solutions and federal habeas litigation.
These experiences shaped her into a lawyer who is both strategic and relentless, someone who knows how to navigate the courtroom with confidence and command while staying grounded in empathy.
At Future First Criminal Law, her philosophy aligns perfectly with the firm’s mission. She believes people are far better than the worst five minutes of their life. She believes second chances are earned when someone has the right lawyer beside them. And she believes her job is not only to defend clients, but to protect their dignity, their opportunities, and their future.
Clients connect with her because she has the rare ability to stay calm under pressure while still fighting hard. She communicates clearly, listens carefully, and never makes anyone feel judged or like just another case number being pushed through the system. Clients often tell her that after one conversation, they finally feel like someone sees them as a human being again.
In the courtroom, she is a force. Respectful, prepared, assertive, and unshakable. She has strong instincts under pressure and knows how to present the human story behind a case in a way that shifts how prosecutors and judges see the situation.
Behind the scenes, she spends extensive time on mitigation. She digs into her clients’ backgrounds, history, goals, struggles, and achievements so she can present the full picture of who they are. Those details often redefine how a case is approached, and she is known for finding the moments and facts that others overlook, which convince the judge to give people second chances they don’t give to other defendants.
To her, putting someone’s future first means looking beyond the charge and protecting the person. Protecting their job, their family, their education, their reputation, and their goals.She is reminded daily why this work matters. Like a previous client who was terrified of losing his career until she secured a resolution that dismissed his case, protected his record and saved his job. Or the time a young client broke down with relief when their case was dismissed and told her it was the first time someone believed in them and their side of the story.
These moments fuel her. They remind her that criminal defense is not just about winning or losing. It’s about giving people their life back as quickly as possible.
Outside the courtroom, she loves exercising, working out, crafting, cooking, traveling, and spending time with her dog, friends, and family. She lives by a guiding belief that shapes both her personal life and her practice: grace and accountability can coexist.
At Future First Criminal Law, she brings all of this to her clients: the skill of a trained lawyer, the heart of someone who listens, and the fire of someone who fights hard for second chances. She hopes clients remember her not just as their lawyer, but as someone who believed in them, stood with them, and fought for their future with everything she had.