DiscoverDriving LawEpisode 423 — Road Rage, “Xavier’s Law,” and Why Due Process Still Matters
Episode 423 — Road Rage, “Xavier’s Law,” and Why Due Process Still Matters

Episode 423 — Road Rage, “Xavier’s Law,” and Why Due Process Still Matters

Update: 2025-10-10
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Fresh off a sleepless night thanks to an elderly, opinionated dog, Kyla and Paul dive into a tough week on BC roads and in BC politics. With the public-sector strike still at an impasse, they pivot to a spate of high-profile road-rage cases in North Vancouver, Winnipeg, and Ontario. Kyla explains why we don’t need a new “road-rage law” when the Criminal Code already covers assaults, threats, dangerous driving, and leaving the scene, and offers practical advice: protect your own safety first and keep your cool. They then unpack “Xavier’s Law,” a proposal to yank licences indefinitely after any fatal crash until charges are declined or a trial ends, and lay out the legal problems: undefined timelines, no clear trigger when prosecutors quietly decline charges, constitutional issues akin to Alberta’s struck-down indefinite suspensions, perverse effects on plea discussions, and the fact that BC already has high-risk administrative prohibitions if police believe someone is unsafe. The Ridiculous Driver of the Week crosses the border to Florida, where a habitual violator on a driving prohibition left an idling car by a school and then allegedly punched and bit officers when told to shut it down—an object lesson in how quickly minor misconduct can become major charges.

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Episode 423 — Road Rage, “Xavier’s Law,” and Why Due Process Still Matters

Episode 423 — Road Rage, “Xavier’s Law,” and Why Due Process Still Matters

Driving Law