
Facing a drug production charge under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) is one of the most serious situations you can be in. Police treat these cases aggressively, and the penalties can be life-altering. You need experienced, immediate defence.
With over 10 years of defending clients in Brampton against complex drug-related allegations, I provide focused, one-on-one representation from the moment you reach out.
If you’ve been charged or believe you’re under investigation, contact me immediately for a confidential consultation.
Under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, “production” includes anything from cultivating, synthesizing, growing, harvesting, or manufacturing a controlled substance. Even minor involvement can be treated as active participation. Police and prosecutors rely heavily on surveillance, search warrants, and chemical analysis to build these cases, and the law allows them to charge multiple people connected to the location or equipment used.
These examples help prosecutors argue that you knowingly participated in the process. My role is to challenge that assumption at every level.
Drug production charges carry some of the harshest penalties under the CDSA, and the consequences extend far beyond jail. Understanding what you’re truly facing is the first step in building an effective defence.
Penalties for drug production charges depend on the drug’s schedule. Schedule I substances—like cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, and methamphetamine—carry some of the harshest penalties in Canadian law, including lengthy penitentiary sentences. Even Schedule II and III substances can lead to multi-year jail terms, especially where the Crown alleges distribution intent, organized activity, or risk to public safety.
Beyond imprisonment, a conviction can lead to:
These consequences can affect every part of your life. Early, strategic defence is essential to avoid them.

Drug production charges often arise in situations where police rely on assumptions, surveillance, or the presence of equipment or substances.

These situations often involve more speculation than proof, and that’s where a strong defence makes a difference.
When you are facing a production allegation, your immediate actions can significantly influence the outcome of your case. Police often rely on statements, consent searches, and pressure to build evidence quickly.
Early intervention allows me to protect your Charter rights, prevent self-incriminating statements, and challenge investigative steps before the Crown builds a narrative against you.

Production charges are complex, technical, and aggressively prosecuted. You need a defence tailored to the exact circumstances of your case, not a generic approach.

Production of drug charges moves quickly, and the police often build their case long before they make an arrest. The sooner you involve me, the more control we have over the outcome. Early defence can stop mistakes from becoming evidence, prevent damaging statements, and protect your Charter rights from the very beginning.
When you contact me, you speak directly to me—your lawyer—not an assistant, not a paralegal. I will review your situation immediately, explain your options clearly, and start mapping out the strongest defence strategy for your case.
If you’re facing charges or believe you’re under investigation, do not wait. Every hour counts in cases involving search warrants, surveillance, and forensic analysis.
Call now for a confidential consultation: (437) 998-1429

Yes. Depending on the strength of the evidence, the Charter issues, and your role in the situation, production charges can sometimes be reduced to possession or trafficking, or even withdrawn.
Jail is common for Schedule I substances, but outcomes vary. Strong defence strategies, early negotiation, and Charter arguments can significantly affect sentencing.
Production charges often overreach. I challenge assumptions, unclear roles, and weak connections to prove you were not a participant.
Ownership of the property doesn’t automatically prove involvement. The Crown must show you had knowledge and control over the operation.
If police conducted an unlawful search or exceeded their authority, I can challenge the evidence and seek to have it excluded.