Last blog added on Monday, September 22nd, 2025

Information About Kyla Lee: Vancouver Criminal Lawyer

Recent Posts

Below is a preview of the five most recent posts from the blog Kyla Lee: Vancouver Criminal Lawyer. To read these posts in their entirely or subscribe to future updates from this blog, please visit their website!

  • This is VANCOLOUR: Kyla’s Court – Can we sue grocery chains for wasting food?

    Is it time to hold Canada’s biggest food wasters — grocery chains, food producers — legally responsible? This is VANCOLOUR host Mo Amir asks lawyer Kyla Lee (Acumen Law). Can food waste ever be considered a legal harm? Are “best before” labels misleading the public? Kyla gives us the legal perspecti … Read more »

  • Episode 432: Bill C-16, Court Delays, and a CVS Officer Crash

    This week on Driving Law, Kyla and Paul examine Bill C-16, a sweeping federal criminal law bill that quietly rewrites court delay rules, evidence retention timelines, and sentencing discretion — with serious consequences for impaired driving cases. Driving Law · Episode 432: Bill C-16, Court Delays, … Read more »

  • Impaired Driving Update – BC Edition: Volume 5

    Welcome to British Columbia’s only weekly DUI law update newsletter. This newsletter contains the most cutting-edge information, the newest case law, and helpful practice tips for DUI defence in BC. Authored by Kyla Lee, BC’s Impaired Driving Update is released weekly on Thursdays. What’s inside: Im … Read more »

  • Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 377

    This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Who Gets the Pets When Love Ends I love my dog. Wrigley has been my companion, my friend, my protector and when I’m down, my primary emotional support. He has given me so much, and we have a deep emotional bond. Sadly, he’s very old now. He can’t hear. He pee … Read more »

  • The Supreme Court Rules on What the Crown Must (and Must Not) Prove in Impaired Driving Cases

    On November 14, 2025, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) delivered its judgment in R. v. Larocque, 2025 SCC 36, a companion case to R. v. Rousselle, 2025 SCC 35. This ruling clarifies the Crown’s evidentiary burden when prosecuting the “80 and over” offence, focusing specifically on how much informat … Read more »