Our defence often includes forensic lab reviews, privacy-based Charter motions, and expert consultation on digital timelines and metadata.
DNA, text messages, and digital footprints are increasingly central to sexual offence prosecutions—but these types of evidence are not infallible. From chain-of-custody issues in forensic labs to the context of a text conversation, we know where to look for weaknesses.
Our approach focuses on suppressing improperly obtained evidence, challenging assumptions about consent, and raising doubt about how—and when—certain evidence came to exist.
Whether the Crown is relying on trace DNA or months of phone records, we carefully dismantle the narrative to ensure only fair, reliable evidence is used against you.
Popular questions about excluding evidence in sexual offence case
Being prosecuted with DNA or digital evidence? Request a free consultation and protect your rights from the start.
Can DNA alone prove a sexual assault?
No. DNA may show contact, but it doesn’t prove a lack of consent. The Crown still has to prove the act was non-consensual beyond a reasonable doubt.
Can I challenge text messages used as evidence?
What if I deleted the messages? Can they still be recovered?
How can a lawyer fight forensic evidence?
Schedule your free consultation today!
Our team will answer your questions and talk you through potential next steps.