Retail and property records may be important
Security video, receipts, civil recovery letters, photos, repair records, and incident reports should be preserved and reviewed.

Criminal Law in Queen Street Corridor
Sawan Law House LLP helps Queen Street Corridor clients review criminal charges, release terms, retail or property evidence, workplace impact, disclosure, driving consequences, and defence options.
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A criminal charge can affect a Queen Street Corridor client’s work, driving, family contact, immigration status, reputation, and future record concerns.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Queen Street Corridor clients review release terms, disclosure, retail or property records, and practical consequences before decisions are made.
We focus on preserving video and document evidence, avoiding improper contact, and planning the defence around the actual record.
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
Security video, receipts, civil recovery letters, photos, repair records, and incident reports should be preserved and reviewed.
Shift schedules, employer reporting, site access, licensing, background checks, and driving duties may affect the practical plan.
Store staff, coworkers, complainants, and witnesses should not be contacted without legal advice, especially if conditions restrict contact.
Queen Street Corridor Focus
Clients may be dealing with charges involving retail incidents, property issues, workplace records, driving, family contact, or immigration status.
We review release documents, disclosure, video, photos, store materials, property records, police notes, statements, and messages.
We help assess restitution issues, disclosure gaps, employment concerns, negotiation options, and trial preparation.
How We Help
We help clients understand the allegation, court paperwork, release conditions, and what could lead to a breach.
We review police notes, witness statements, video, photos, 911 calls, breath or driving records, store materials, and digital evidence.
We advise on negotiations, diversion where available, peace bond discussions, withdrawals, guilty pleas, sentencing issues, or trial strategy.
We help clients consider work, travel, driving, immigration, family, licensing, and record-related concerns where relevant.
Our Process
We start with the charge, release paperwork, court date, no-contact terms, driving restrictions, and immediate risks.
We review the Crown disclosure, police notes, statements, videos, photos, test records, and relevant digital evidence.
We look for evidentiary gaps, Charter issues, reliability concerns, available defences, and practical resolution options.
We help plan the next appearance, negotiation position, document collection, witness follow-up, or trial preparation.
What To Prepare
You do not need everything ready before contacting us, but these items help us understand your situation faster.
Common Questions
Get advice first. Store communications, restitution issues, and criminal disclosure should be reviewed together.
Get legal advice first. Contact may be restricted or may create risk for the defence.
Receipts, video, photos, messages, repair records, civil recovery letters, and witness details may be relevant.
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