No-contact conditions can affect home and family life
Domestic or relationship-based allegations may restrict communication, residence, property pickup, parenting exchanges, or third-party contact.

Assault in Ajax
Sawan Law House LLP helps Ajax clients charged with assault review release terms, disclosure, witness statements, digital evidence, employment and family impact, resolution options, and trial strategy.
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Ajax assault clients often need immediate help understanding no-contact terms, court dates, disclosure, and whether the allegation will affect work, family, immigration, or housing.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Ajax clients review release paperwork, evidence, witness statements, digital records, and practical risks before deciding on strategy.
We help clients slow the situation down enough to make careful, informed decisions.
This page provides general information only and is not legal advice. Criminal charges are urgent and fact-specific. Do not contact a complainant, miss court, change release conditions, speak to police, or make decisions about your case without legal advice.
Local Planning Notes
Domestic or relationship-based allegations may restrict communication, residence, property pickup, parenting exchanges, or third-party contact.
Police notes, statements, video, photos, 911 calls, and medical records should be reviewed before deciding whether to negotiate or prepare for trial.
Texts, social media messages, call logs, location data, rideshare records, and camera footage can be important and may not remain available.
Ajax Focus
Clients may be managing court dates alongside shift work, family caregiving, school, immigration applications, or regulated employment.
We help clients understand undertakings, release orders, surety obligations, no-contact terms, and options to seek changes where appropriate.
We review disclosure and defence records to assess reliability, context, self-defence, identity, intent, and Charter issues.
How We Help
We explain the charge, the Crown's burden, available disclosure, possible consequences, and the court process.
We help clients respond carefully to conditions that affect communication, housing, children, family proceedings, and safety concerns.
We review the Crown's evidence before discussing withdrawals, peace bonds, diversion where available, or other resolution options.
Where a trial is needed, we prepare around witness evidence, credibility, reliability, physical evidence, digital records, and legal defences.
Our Process
We review conditions, court dates, contact restrictions, and urgent risks of breach.
We examine Crown disclosure alongside any defence timeline, messages, photos, videos, and witness information.
We identify evidentiary gaps, credibility issues, self-defence concerns, Charter issues, and negotiation opportunities.
We help clients make informed decisions about negotiation, peace bond discussions, plea positions, or trial.
What To Prepare
You do not need everything ready before contacting us, but these items help us understand your situation faster.
Common Questions
Sometimes. The answer depends on disclosure, Crown position, prior record, complainant input, conditions, and case-specific risk.
A breach can create a new charge and make release more difficult. Conditions should be followed unless properly changed.
No. The Crown controls the prosecution after charges are laid, though complainant input may be considered.
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