Criminal Law Problems: Difference between revisions

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* [[I've been charged with a criminal (or youth) offence and have to go to court|I've been charged with a criminal offence and have to go to court]].
* [[I've been charged with a criminal (or youth) offence and have to go to court|I've been charged with a criminal offence and have to go to court]].
* [[I've been accused of a criminal offence and have been offered "diversion", "restorative justice" or "alternative measures"]].
* [[I've been accused of a criminal offence and have been offered "diversion", "restorative justice" or "alternative measures"]].
* [[I've been charged with a criminal (or youth) offence and want to change my release conditions so I can have contact with my spouse or children|I've been charged with a criminal offence and want to change my release conditions so I can have contact with my spouse or children]].  
* [[I've been charged with a criminal (or youth) offence and want to change my release conditions so I can have contact with my spouse or children|I want to change my release conditions so I can have contact with my spouse or children]].  
* [[I've been charged with a criminal (or youth) offence out-of-town and want to move the case closer to home|I've been charged with a criminal offence out-of-town and want to move the case closer to home]].  
* [[I've been charged with a criminal (or youth) offence out-of-town and want to move the case closer to home|I want to move my criminal case closer to home]].  
* [[I have a criminal record and want to get a pardon]].  
* [[I have a criminal record and want to get a pardon (or record suspension)]].  




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| tips = A number of "problem-solving courts" have emerged over the past few years that deal with people who are prepared to plead guilty or take responsibility for criminal offences. Two of them—the Drug Treatment Court of Vancouver and the Downtown Community Court—only take cases from the Vancouver area, but the New Westminster First Nations Court will take some aboriginal offender cases waived from elsewhere in the province. Sentencing at the First Nations Court consists of a roundtable discussion among the judge, lawyers, helping professionals, offender, victim and supportive family and community members about an appropriate sentence or "healing plan". Related family legal matters and youth court matters can be dealt with at the same time. Contact [[Native Courtworkers]] (see Part 2 of this guide), Crown Counsel or a lawyer for information about accessing the New Westminster First Nations Court.
| tips = A number of "[http://www.provincialcourt.bc.ca/about-the-court/specialized-courts specialized courts]" have emerged over the past few years that deal with people who are prepared to plead guilty or take responsibility for criminal offences. Two of them — the Drug Treatment Court of Vancouver and the Downtown Community Court — only take cases from the Vancouver area. Several First Nations Courts <span class="noglossary">will</span> take aboriginal offender cases waived from elsewhere in the province. Sentencing at the First Nations Court consists of a roundtable discussion among the judge, lawyers, helping professionals, offender, victim and supportive family and community members about an appropriate sentence or "healing plan." Related family legal matters and youth court matters can be dealt with at the same time. Contact [[Native Courtworkers]] (see the [[Resource List for Legal Help for British Columbians|Resource List]]), Crown Counsel or a lawyer for information about accessing First Nations Court in Duncan, Kamloops, New Westminster or North Vancouver.
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Latest revision as of 22:14, 6 September 2018

Here are the first steps and some useful resources for people in BC facing problems with the criminal justice system such as:


A number of "specialized courts" have emerged over the past few years that deal with people who are prepared to plead guilty or take responsibility for criminal offences. Two of them — the Drug Treatment Court of Vancouver and the Downtown Community Court — only take cases from the Vancouver area. Several First Nations Courts will take aboriginal offender cases waived from elsewhere in the province. Sentencing at the First Nations Court consists of a roundtable discussion among the judge, lawyers, helping professionals, offender, victim and supportive family and community members about an appropriate sentence or "healing plan." Related family legal matters and youth court matters can be dealt with at the same time. Contact Native Courtworkers (see the Resource List), Crown Counsel or a lawyer for information about accessing First Nations Court in Duncan, Kamloops, New Westminster or North Vancouver.
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada Licence Legal Help for British Columbians © Cliff Thorstenson and Courthouse Libraries BC is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Canada Licence.