Causation is everything in a manslaughter case. Your conduct must be a significant cause of the death - and that standard opens real defences.
Manslaughter and criminal negligence charges arise when a person's conduct causes another person's death, even without any intent to kill. These are among the most serious criminal charges in Ontario, requiring defence counsel who understands forensic science, causation law, and long-game strategy.
Unlawful Act Manslaughter
The most common form of manslaughter arises from an unlawful act that causes someone's death. The classic example: a bar fight where the victim falls and hits their head on concrete and dies days later. No one intended a death. But because the underlying act (an assault) was unlawful and it caused the death, manslaughter charges follow. See also our assault page for how these situations typically escalate.
The Crown does not need to prove you meant to cause death. They need to prove that your unlawful act was a contributing cause of the death, and that a reasonable person in your position would have foreseen that some bodily harm was a likely result. That is still a high bar, and it is one I challenge carefully in every case.
Criminal Negligence Causing Death
Criminal negligence causing death covers a different category of conduct. It applies when someone shows wanton or reckless disregard for the life or safety of another person. Examples include grossly negligent driving that kills a pedestrian, failure to provide necessaries of life to a person in your care, or unsafe workplace conduct that leads to a fatality. Impaired driving causing death is one of the most common situations I see in this category.
The Causation Challenge
Causation is usually the central issue in manslaughter cases. The Crown must prove your actions were a significant cause of the death - not just a small or minor one. That opens powerful defences.
Did something else cause or contribute to the death? Did the victim have a medical condition no one knew about? Did they refuse treatment? Did another person's actions break the chain? Medical experts and accident specialists can answer these questions in your favour. I look for these gaps in every case.
Provocation as a Partial Defence
In homicide cases, provocation can reduce a murder charge to manslaughter. If someone provoked you suddenly and you acted before you could calm down, the law recognizes that your fault is reduced. This defence doesn't result in an acquittal. But it prevents a murder conviction and opens a much wider range of possible sentences. That can mean the difference between decades in prison and a far more manageable outcome.
Bail for Manslaughter Charges
Bail on manslaughter charges is one of the hardest applications in Ontario criminal law. The Crown almost always tries to keep you in custody. A strong release plan - with a bail guarantor (surety), clear conditions, and no-contact terms - is essential. I act quickly on bail hearings in serious cases.
Getting out of custody before trial matters. You can participate in your own defence. You can do counselling. You are not spending months in jail before the case is even decided.
Sentencing Range and Degree of Fault
Manslaughter carries a maximum of life imprisonment but has no mandatory minimum sentence. That wide range exists because manslaughter covers very different levels of fault. A first-time offender who acted impulsively is treated very differently from someone with a history of violence.
Courts look hard at how blameworthy your conduct was. Factors like remorse, counselling, mental health issues, and a clean prior record carry real weight. I start building that picture early - not just what happened, but who you are.
Why You Need Experienced Counsel Immediately
The decisions you make in the first hours after a manslaughter charge can shape the entire outcome. Do not speak to police. Do not make statements at the scene or afterward. The more evidence the Crown has to work with, the harder the case becomes. I provide immediate response to serious charges anywhere in Ontario, around the clock. Call as early as possible. Contact me for a free, confidential consultation. Legal Aid Ontario may be available depending on your circumstances.


