
Criminal Defence
Being charged does not mean you are guilty.
You have the right to a trial. You have the right to make full answer and defence — including every piece of pertinent disclosure the Crown has, the right to call witnesses, and the right to testify on your own behalf.
Practice Focus
Charges we defend.
We have successfully defended assaults arising from a fight in a bar to allegations with a domestic partner — and every category of charge in between.
01
Driving Offences
- Over 80
- Impaired driving
- Refuse to provide sample
- Dangerous driving
- Fail to stop
- Flight from police
- Drive disqualified
02
Assault
- Domestic assault
- Assault causing bodily harm
- Assault with a weapon
- Assault police
03
Sexual Offences
- Full charter analysis
- Trial preparation
- Bail and detention reviews
04
Fraud
- Conspiracy
- Theft
- Forensic disclosure review
05
Firearms & Weapons
- Firearm bails
- Charter applications
- Exclusion of evidence
06
Other Matters
- Parole hearings
- Pre-charge advice
- Police interviews
Your Rights
The right to remain silent.
Consult a lawyer before speaking to police. The police can lawfully make false statements to encourage you to answer — about evidence, witnesses, DNA, or recordings.
Failing to provide a statement is not a sign of guilt. It is a legal right. In almost every instance, a suspect under investigation should exercise the right to remain silent.
Refusing to answer police questions cannot be used against you in a court of law.
Free Consultation
