Gang & Criminal Organization Offence Services | Sanctuary Lawyers

Defending Your Rights, Protecting Your Future

Gang and criminal organization charges are among the most complex and high-stakes prosecutions in Canadian criminal law. These cases typically involve multi-agency investigations, wiretap evidence, confidential informants, multi-accused proceedings, and some of the most serious sentencing exposure in the Criminal Code, including offences that can carry sentences up to life imprisonment. A conviction can result in lengthy consecutive penitentiary sentences, forfeiture of assets, firearms prohibitions, and permanent consequences for your record, employment, and immigration status.

At Sanctuary Lawyers, we have over a decade of experience defending clients charged with gang-related and criminal organization offences across Southern Ontario. From our office in Aurora, we provide immediate, strategic, and confidential defence, including urgent bail representation for reverse-onus hearings. If you or someone you know has been charged in connection with a criminal organization, contact us immediately. Early legal intervention is critical. For more information on our broader practice, visit our Criminal Law page.

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Understanding Gang & Criminal Organization Charges in Ontario

Criminal organization offences are defined under Part XIII of the Criminal Code (sections 467.1 through 467.14). These provisions target individuals alleged to be connected to groups of three or more persons whose purposes or activities include facilitating or committing serious offences. These allegations are often connected to offences said to be committed for financial or material benefit. A "serious offence" is any indictable offence carrying a maximum of five years or more—meaning criminal organization charges can arise in connection with drug trafficking, firearms offences, fraud, robbery, and many other allegations.

"Gang" is a non-legal term often used by police and media. The Criminal Code uses the term "criminal organization," and that is the standard the Crown must prove. At Sanctuary Lawyers, we focus on the legal elements, not labels, and we challenge every aspect of the Crown's case with precision.

Bail

Many criminal organization charges trigger reverse-onus bail under section 515(6)(a)(ii), shifting the burden to the accused to demonstrate why detention is not justified. These hearings are heavily contested and require detailed release planning—sureties, strict conditions, supervision, and a clear structure. We appear in both regular bail court and specialized weekend and statutory holiday bail court (WASH court) to secure bail as quickly as possible. If you or a loved one is detained, contact our office immediately.

Consecutive Sentencing

Under section 467.14, sentences for criminal organization offences must be served consecutively to any other sentence from the same events. This significantly increases total sentencing exposure and makes early, strategic defence planning critical.

Types of Criminal Organization Charges We Defend

Sanctuary Lawyers has experience defending the full range of gang and criminal organization offences. Each charge has distinct elements the Crown must prove, and each creates specific opportunities for defence:

Participation in Activities of a Criminal Organization (s. 467.11)

Applies to anyone who knowingly participates in or contributes to any activity of a criminal organization for the purpose of enhancing its ability to commit an indictable offence. The facilitation need not be of a specific offence. Maximum: 5 years. These prosecutions often rely on surveillance, intercepted communications, and informant evidence. Our role is to carefully test the reliability, legality, and context of that evidence. Mere association alone is not enough to establish participation.

Recruitment (s. 467.111)

Recruiting, soliciting, or inviting a person to join a criminal organization. Mandatory minimum of six months if the person recruited is under 18. Maximum: 5 years. We scrutinize the Crown's evidence of active recruitment and challenge whether the accused's conduct meets the legal threshold, distinguishing genuine recruitment from casual conversation.

Commission of an Offence for a Criminal Organization (s. 467.12)

Applies when an indictable offence is alleged to have been committed for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a criminal organization. Maximum: 14 years. The Crown must prove both the underlying offence and its connection to the organization. We focus on severing that connection—arguing the offence was independent, personal, or coerced, not linked to organizational benefit.

Instructing Commission of an Offence (s. 467.13)

The most serious criminal organization offence. Applies when a member of a criminal organization instructs another person to commit an offence for the benefit of the organization. Maximum: life imprisonment. The offence can apply even where the alleged instructed offence was never carried out. We challenge whether the accused was truly part of the organization and whether the alleged instructions were mischaracterized or given under duress.

Gang-Related Firearms Offences

Firearms charges committed in association with a criminal organization carry enhanced penalties and trigger reverse-onus bail. We defend clients facing the intersection of firearms and criminal organization allegations with a coordinated strategy. For more detail, see our Firearms & Weapons Offences page.

Drug Trafficking in Association with a Criminal Organization

Drug trafficking charges under the CDSA become significantly more serious with a criminal organization connection. These cases often involve large-scale joint police investigations, surveillance operations, and wiretap evidence. For more, see our Drug Offences page.

How Police Investigate Organized Crime & Your Defence Rights

Criminal organization investigations are large-scale, multi-agency operations that can span months or years. These prosecutions rely heavily on surveillance, intercepted communications, and informant evidence. Our role is to carefully test the reliability, legality, and context of every piece of evidence the Crown relies on.

Wiretaps and Electronic Surveillance

Wiretap evidence is often the centrepiece of the Crown's case. However, wiretap authorizations are subject to strict requirements under Part VI of the Criminal Code. If the authorization was improper, exceeded its scope, or captured privileged communications, the evidence may be excluded under section 24(2) of the Charter.

Confidential Informants

Informer privilege protections generally prevent disclosure of informant identities. However, we challenge informant credibility—questioning motives, criminal histories, promised leniency, and the reliability of their accounts. Informant reliability is frequently a decisive issue in organized crime trials.

Search Warrants, Raids, and Digital Evidence

Police execute search warrants on homes, vehicles, and digital devices. Modern investigations rely on cellphone extractions, encrypted messaging apps, GPS tracking, and banking records. We scrutinize every warrant for overbreadth, insufficient grounds, or procedural defects. Any evidence obtained through an unlawful search can be challenged for exclusion.

Charter Challenges and Disclosure

We examine every search, seizure, wiretap authorization, and evidence-gathering method for Charter compliance. Overbroad searches, improper wiretap practices, and failure to disclose relevant material can lead to exclusion of evidence or stays of proceedings. In gang cases, disclosure is often extensive, and we fight to ensure all relevant material is properly provided.

Participation vs. Innocent Association

A critical defence: the accused's involvement was not the prohibited type of participation. Social or casual contact with alleged members does not meet the legal threshold. We challenge whether the Crown can prove the accused had the requisite knowledge, purpose, and connection to the organization.

Why Choose Sanctuary Lawyers for Gang & Criminal Organization Defence

Experience with High-Stakes Prosecutions

Criminal organization cases are among the most complex matters in Canadian criminal law. With over a decade of experience, our lawyers have extensive experience navigating multi-accused proceedings, extensive disclosure, wiretap evidence, and informant testimony to build strong, strategic defences.

Reverse-Onus Bail Expertise

Many gang and criminal organization allegations involve reverse-onus bail proceedings requiring detailed release planning and strict proposed conditions. We act quickly to prepare release plans with sureties and supervision, and appear in both regular and WASH court. For more on our bail process, see our Bail Hearings page.

Strategic Severance and Multi-Accused Defence

The Crown often attempts to try all co-accused together. We bring severance applications where appropriate to ensure your defence is not compromised by evidence attributed to others.

Consistent Communication and Support

Organized crime cases can take months or years. You'll have direct access to your lawyer, regular updates, and 24-hour urgent support. You will never be left in the dark.

Our Criminal Organization Defence Process

Step 1: Immediate Consultation and Bail Planning

We begin with a confidential consultation to understand the charges, assess the Crown's case, and plan immediate next steps. For criminal organization charges, bail is almost always reverse-onus, making a strong release plan essential from the very start.

Step 2: Disclosure Review and Legal Analysis

Our team reviews every piece of evidence—wiretap transcripts, surveillance logs, financial records, informant notes, cellphone extractions—identifying weaknesses, Charter breaches, and defence opportunities.

Step 3: Defence Strategy Development

We determine the most effective approach: challenging the Crown's proof that a "criminal organization" exists, severing your case from co-accused, bringing Charter applications, or preparing for trial.

Step 4: Trial Preparation and Advocacy

Criminal organization trials are often lengthy and complex. We prepare thoroughly, challenging the Crown's evidence at every stage—from the definition of the organization to the accused's alleged role, knowledge, and intent.

Step 5: Ongoing Support and Collateral Consequences

Gang-related charges have consequences beyond the courtroom—immigration proceedings, employment impacts, firearms prohibitions, and forfeiture applications. We provide ongoing guidance.

Penalties for Gang & Criminal Organization Offences

All sentences must be served consecutively to any other sentence from the same events (s. 467.14). In addition to incarceration, convictions may result in firearms prohibitions, forfeiture of proceeds of crime, and immigration consequences including inadmissibility under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.

Our Fees

Sanctuary Lawyers understands that criminal organization charges create immense stress. These cases can become complex quickly, which is why we prioritize transparency and clear communication about legal fees from the outset.

Block Fee Model

For most gang and criminal organization cases, we offer a block fee covering your entire matter from bail through resolution or trial. Cost predictability with no hidden surprises, even in multi-accused proceedings.

Payment Plans

These charges often arise unexpectedly and require immediate representation. Flexible payment plans are available to ensure financial constraints do not prevent you from accessing experienced defence counsel.

Specific Retainers

If you only require assistance for a particular stage—such as a bail hearing, Charter application, severance motion, or sentencing—we provide targeted retainers.

Areas We Service


In addition to Toronto, Sanctuary Lawyers represents gang and criminal organization clients across Southern Ontario. Our team regularly assists individuals facing criminal charges in a wide range of cities and regions, providing consistent, strategic defence regardless of location.

Ajax

Barrie

Belleville

Brampton

Brantford

Burlington

Cambridge

Cobourg

Guelph

Hamilton

Kitchener

London

Markham

Mississauga

Newmarket

North York

Niagara Falls

Oakville

Orillia

Oshawa

Orangeville

St. Catharines

Pickering

Richmond Hill

Toronto

Vaughan

Waterloo

Windsor

Gang & Criminal Organization Offence FAQs

Criminal organization charges are complex and high-stakes. Here are answers to the most common questions we hear from clients and their families:

Under section 467.1, a criminal organization is a group of three or more persons whose purposes or activities include facilitating or committing serious offences (any indictable offence with a maximum of five years or more). Police and media use "gang" informally, but the law focuses on the organized criminal activity, not labels.

Many criminal organization charges trigger reverse-onus bail under section 515(6), particularly charges under sections 467.11 through 467.13 and certain serious offences alleged to have been committed for the benefit of a criminal organization. In those cases, the accused must demonstrate why detention is not justified. A detailed release plan with sureties and strict proposed conditions is often essential.

Yes. Under s. 467.11, it is an offence to participate in or contribute to any activity of a criminal organization for the purpose of enhancing its ability to commit crimes, even if no specific offence was completed. We challenge whether the accused's conduct truly meets the legal threshold.

For ss. 467.11 and 467.12, no formal membership is required. For s. 467.13 (instructing), the law requires the accused to be a person constituting the organization. We challenge the Crown's evidence of membership and organizational connection.

Very serious. Up to 5 years (participation), 14 years (commission), or life imprisonment (instructing). Recruiting a minor carries a mandatory minimum of six months. All sentences must be served consecutively under s. 467.14.

Yes. Wiretap authorizations are subject to strict legal requirements. If the authorization was improper, exceeded its scope, or captured privileged communications, the evidence may be excluded under section 24(2) of the Charter.

Yes. Police can freeze assets before trial under Criminal Code sections 462.32 through 462.36. On conviction, the court can order forfeiture of proceeds of crime. You have a right to contest seizure and demonstrate legitimate ownership.

Potentially, yes. A conviction for a criminal organization offence can result in inadmissibility under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. Even pending charges can affect immigration proceedings.

You may argue lack of knowledge. If you socialized with certain people or performed tasks without knowledge of the broader criminal plan, that could form a defence. However, the Crown does not need to prove you knew every detail, so context matters. Experienced counsel can assess your actual intent and knowledge.

Get Immediate Defence for Gang and Criminal Organization Charges

If you are facing gang or criminal organization allegations in Ontario, early legal intervention is critical. These cases are often complex, high-stakes, and heavily prosecuted, requiring a defence strategy built around disclosure review, surveillance evidence, bail preparation, and long-term case planning from the outset.

At Sanctuary Lawyers, we don't just defend cases—we protect futures.

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