Penalties for negligent and dangerous driving vary across states, but they are always serious. For heavy vehicle drivers, the consequences are often harsher due to the risks involved with operating large trucks and commercial vehicles.
Even a first offence can result in losing your licence. For repeat or aggravated offences, prison is a real possibility.
We regularly achieve results such as:
For truck and heavy vehicle drivers, being charged with negligent or dangerous driving can mean:
At Highway Advocates, we have defended drivers facing every level of negligent and dangerous driving offence. Our approach includes:
Negligent driving is when a driver fails to exercise the care and attention expected of a reasonable driver. It doesn’t require intent, only a lapse in proper care.
Dangerous driving requires the court to find that the driving was not just careless, but actually dangerous in all the circumstances. Negligent driving is a lower standard, but can still carry severe penalties if injury or death occurs.
Reckless driving is where the driver knows there is a substantial risk of harm but drives dangerously anyway. It often attracts heavier penalties than negligent driving.
Menacing driving involves intimidating or threatening other road users through your driving. Predatory driving is more serious and involves deliberately pursuing or targeting another driver with the intent to cause harm. Both are treated as criminal offences.
Yes. Defences may include disputing the facts of the accident, challenging the standard of driving alleged, showing medical or mechanical issues or demonstrating that the prosecution cannot prove the charge beyond reasonable doubt.