Residential details can change the analysis
Parked cars, narrow streets, turns, traffic calming, pedestrians, cyclists, and sightlines may affect how the alleged driving is understood.

Dangerous Driving in Flowertown
Sawan Law House LLP helps Flowertown clients charged with dangerous driving review the alleged driving conduct, local road conditions, collision evidence, witness statements, licence consequences, and defence options.
Request a call back
A Flowertown dangerous driving charge often turns on details that can be easy to overlook, such as sightlines, parked vehicles, traffic speed, witness vantage points, and the route taken before the incident.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Flowertown clients review the driving allegation, preserve evidence, and understand the possible impact on licence, insurance, work, and family transportation.
We focus on the difference between a serious driving incident and proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the manner of driving was criminally dangerous.
This page provides general information only and is not legal advice. Criminal driving matters can be urgent and consequence-heavy. Do not miss court, drive while suspended, speak to police, ignore licence paperwork, or make decisions about your case without legal advice.
Local Planning Notes
Parked cars, narrow streets, turns, traffic calming, pedestrians, cyclists, and sightlines may affect how the alleged driving is understood.
A neighbour, driver, passenger, or pedestrian may see only part of an incident, so timing, distance, and vantage point matter.
Dashcam footage, doorbell video, nearby business video, photos, route notes, and vehicle data should be preserved quickly.
Flowertown Focus
Clients may face dangerous driving allegations after a collision, neighbourhood complaint, traffic stop, road-rage report, or incident near homes, parks, or schools.
We review disclosure, officer notes, witness statements, photos, video, collision records, road conditions, and gaps in the Crown theory.
We help clients assess whether the evidence meets the criminal threshold and how the charge may affect licence, insurance, employment, travel, or immigration concerns.
How We Help
We look closely at what the Crown says was dangerous and what the surrounding road conditions actually show.
We assess traffic patterns, visibility, weather, roadway layout, vehicle condition, photos, repair records, and collision details.
We review civilian statements, police notes, 911 information, dashcam footage, doorbell video, and inconsistencies.
We consider suspension risk, insurance, employment driving, professional duties, immigration, travel, and record concerns.
Our Process
We start with the charge, court date, release terms, licence documents, and any collision or insurance material.
We help identify route details, photos, videos, vehicle data, witness names, repair records, and timing information.
We review the Crown package, police theory, witness reliability, collision evidence, and missing materials.
We discuss trial issues, resolution options, expert needs, licence consequences, and court obligations.
What To Prepare
You do not need everything ready before contacting us, but these items help us understand your situation faster.
Common Questions
Yes. A charge can arise from a complaint, collision, police observation, or witness report, but the evidence still has to be tested.
No. The legal issue is the manner of driving in the circumstances, not simply whether an accident happened.
Keep your paperwork, preserve video or witness details, and get legal advice before speaking about the incident.
Request a consultation