Commuting routines can overlap with release terms
Transit, driving routes, school drop-offs, and regular errands should be checked against no-go and no-contact wording.

Assault in Mount Pleasant
Sawan Law House LLP helps Mount Pleasant clients charged with assault review no-contact terms, commuting and parenting issues, shared-home concerns, disclosure, digital evidence, and defence options.
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A Mount Pleasant assault charge can quickly affect commuting, parenting routines, shared housing, school schedules, and communication if release conditions are broad.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Mount Pleasant clients review release terms, disclosure, digital records, witness evidence, and practical consequences before deciding on a strategy.
We help clients stay compliant while building a defence plan around the evidence.
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
Transit, driving routes, school drop-offs, and regular errands should be checked against no-go and no-contact wording.
Parenting communication, property pickup, child exchanges, and shared-home access can create breach risk without a clear plan.
Texts, call logs, screenshots, photos, location records, and social media messages should be preserved before strategy decisions.
Mount Pleasant Focus
Clients may be balancing release terms with commuting, work, parenting, school routines, shared housing, or immigration concerns.
We help review no-contact terms, no-go places, residence wording, reporting obligations, surety duties, and variation options.
We assess police notes, witness statements, photos, videos, medical records, 911 calls, digital records, and defence timelines.
How We Help
We explain the allegation, Crown burden, Criminal Code framework, possible consequences, and court process.
We help clients understand conditions affecting parenting, home access, belongings, communication, and related family-law issues.
We assess credibility, reliability, self-defence, identity, intent, consent where relevant, Charter issues, and disclosure gaps.
We advise on negotiation, peace bond discussions where appropriate, diversion possibilities, withdrawals, pleas, or trial preparation.
Our Process
We start with the charge, court date, no-contact wording, residence terms, no-go areas, and immediate family or commuting concerns.
We analyze police notes, witness statements, photos, videos, medical records, 911 calls, messages, and location records.
We consider parenting, work, travel, immigration, housing, and school routines that may affect the plan.
We help clients understand appearances, disclosure requests, Crown discussions, compliance, negotiations, 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
Yes, if the wording includes a no-go area or contact restriction along your normal route.
Only if your conditions allow it. Otherwise, even child-related communication can create breach risk.
Yes. Preserve messages and screenshots, but avoid editing or deleting records.
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