Subdivision and arterial roads overlap
Turning movements, traffic signals, school traffic, pedestrians, parked vehicles, and lane changes may affect the analysis.

Dangerous Driving in Sandringham-Wellington
Sawan Law House LLP helps Sandringham-Wellington clients charged with dangerous driving review road context, collision evidence, witness statements, video, licence consequences, and defence options.
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A Sandringham-Wellington dangerous driving charge can involve subdivision roads, busier arterial routes, school traffic, pedestrians, or a collision where timing matters.
Sawan Law House LLP helps Sandringham-Wellington clients preserve evidence, review disclosure, and plan for licence, insurance, work, immigration, and travel consequences.
We examine the local driving context before deciding how the allegation should be answered.
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
Turning movements, traffic signals, school traffic, pedestrians, parked vehicles, and lane changes may affect the analysis.
Distance, angle, lighting, timing, traffic flow, and whether a witness saw the full sequence should be reviewed.
Licence, insurance, employment driving, family transportation, immigration, travel, and record concerns should be planned early.
Sandringham-Wellington Focus
Clients may face dangerous driving allegations after a collision, school-area incident, road complaint, police observation, or alleged aggressive driving.
We review disclosure, police notes, witness statements, videos, photos, collision reports, road conditions, vehicle information, and gaps in the Crown theory.
We help clients assess the alleged driving, the criminal threshold, licence consequences, insurance, employment, immigration, and travel.
How We Help
We examine speed, lane use, turns, following distance, pedestrian movement, traffic density, and road conditions.
We assess traffic controls, roadway layout, visibility, weather, vehicle condition, photos, videos, and collision records.
We test officer notes, civilian statements, 911 information, dashcam footage, reconstruction material, and inconsistencies.
We consider suspension risk, insurance, employment driving, family duties, immigration, travel, and record concerns.
Our Process
We start with the court date, release terms, charge paperwork, licence documents, and collision or insurance material.
We help identify videos, photos, route details, vehicle data, repair records, witness names, and timing information.
We review police theory, witness reliability, collision evidence, video, road context, and missing materials.
We discuss defence options, resolution discussions, trial issues, 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. Pedestrians, buses, parked vehicles, timing, and visibility may be relevant.
It can. Video may confirm, narrow, or contradict observations about speed, distance, or traffic flow.
No. Licence paperwork can create separate deadlines or consequences, so review it promptly.
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