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Fighting Provincial Offences Charges: Various Cases Within Provincial Courts
Question: What are the consequences of a provincial offence conviction?
Answer: Even though a provincial offence does not result in a criminal record, the penalties can be significant, including hefty fines and other repercussions. Traffic Ticket Rescue is here to help you navigate these challenges, ensuring you understand your rights and options for defence.
Provincial Offence Allegations as Being Charges Considered as Quasi-Criminal Matters
Provincial offences are quasi-crimes or regulatory offences in that they are violation of laws enacted to regulate individual conduct for the protection of society as a whole and they are prosecuted by a Prosecutor as an agent of the state, meaning as a representative of the people; however, unlike criminal offences, upon conviction of a provincial offence a person avoids establishing a criminal record. With this said, although conviction for a provincial offence fails to establish a criminal record, the consequences for conviction of a provincial offence may still carry heavy penalties and consequences for the convicted person.
The Provincial Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33, as well as the Rules of the Ontario Court (Provincial Division) in Provincial Offences Proceedings, R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 200, provide the procedural law that guides the process by which offences within numerous substantive law statutes are prosecuted. The range in matters falling under the purview of provincial offences is very broad. Concerns involving provincial offences include:
