Shared-home conditions need careful reading
A release order may affect where a client sleeps, how belongings are collected, who can pass messages, and whether a shared address can be visited.

Assault in Fletcher's Creek Village
Sawan Law House LLP helps Fletcher's Creek Village clients charged with assault review no-contact terms, family and housing impact, digital messages, disclosure, witness issues, and defence options.
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A Fletcher’s Creek Village assault charge can create immediate problems at home, especially where release terms affect contact, living arrangements, parenting, or shared property.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Fletcher’s Creek Village clients review the charge, release conditions, disclosure, digital messages, witness evidence, and practical consequences before choosing a strategy.
We focus first on compliance and evidence preservation, then on the legal and factual issues that may shape resolution or trial planning.
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
A release order may affect where a client sleeps, how belongings are collected, who can pass messages, and whether a shared address can be visited.
School pickups, child exchanges, family events, and neighbourhood errands should be checked against no-contact and no-go wording.
Texts, call logs, screenshots, social media activity, and deleted-message issues should be preserved and reviewed before strategy decisions.
Fletcher's Creek Village Focus
Clients may be trying to comply with conditions while managing parenting, work, shared housing, immigration paperwork, or pressure from relatives.
We help review undertakings, release orders, no-contact clauses, residence terms, surety duties, and possible variation options where appropriate.
We assess police notes, witness accounts, photos, video, 911 calls, medical records, phone data, and the client's own timeline.
How We Help
We explain the allegation, Criminal Code framework, Crown burden, court process, and possible consequences.
We help clients understand conditions affecting contact, housing, parenting, property pickup, and communication through others.
We review statements, digital records, photos, medical information, video, and possible defence evidence.
We advise on negotiation, peace bond discussions where appropriate, withdrawals, pleas, diversion possibilities, or trial preparation.
Our Process
We start with the charge, court date, release terms, no-contact wording, residence restrictions, and immediate compliance risks.
We compare the Crown's evidence with the client's timeline, messages, witnesses, photos, video, and surrounding context.
We assess credibility, reliability, self-defence, identity, intent, Charter concerns, and evidence gaps.
We help clients understand court appearances, disclosure requests, Crown discussions, and steps to avoid breaches.
What To Prepare
You do not need everything ready before contacting us, but these items help us understand your situation faster.
Common Questions
Only if your conditions allow it. Indirect contact through another person can still breach a no-contact term.
Do not attend or arrange contact without legal advice. Property pickup may need a careful plan that respects the release terms.
No. Preserve records and get advice before deciding what may be relevant.
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