Driving Offenses

Serious driving charge defense

Some motor-vehicle offenses are criminal, not just traffic tickets — with real jail exposure and lasting license consequences.

What's at stake

Massachusetts treats certain driving offenses as criminal matters. Operating after a license suspension or revocation, reckless operation, negligent operation, and driving to endanger can all carry criminal penalties — including potential jail time, fines, and further license loss through the RMV.

These charges are especially serious when they stack on top of an underlying OUI suspension, or when a pattern of offenses is alleged. A conviction can also drive up insurance costs for years. Many of these cases are defensible on the elements the Commonwealth must prove.

How it works

How we defend driving charges

We focus on what the Commonwealth actually has to prove — and often can't.

  1. 01

    Step 1

    Review the stop and the record

    We examine the basis for the stop and the RMV records behind any alleged suspension or notice.

  2. 02

    Step 2

    Test the elements

    Charges like negligent operation and driving to endanger require proof of specific conduct and, sometimes, knowledge — which is often disputable.

    • Did you actually receive notice of the suspension?
    • Was the driving truly negligent or reckless under the law?
    • Was the traffic stop lawful?
  3. 03

    Step 3

    File motions where warranted

    We move to suppress evidence from unlawful stops and challenge insufficient proof.

  4. 04

    Step 4

    Negotiate or try the case

    We seek dismissal or reduction to a civil infraction where possible, and try the case when the elements aren't met.

Driving offense questions

Is driving on a suspended license really a crime?
Yes. In Massachusetts, operating after suspension or revocation is a criminal offense that can carry a fine and, in some circumstances, jail — and it becomes more serious when the suspension stems from an OUI. A key issue is often whether you actually received legal notice of the suspension.
What's the difference between negligent and reckless operation?
Negligent operation involves driving in a way that could endanger the public; reckless operation involves a more serious, willful disregard for safety. Both are criminal, but they require the Commonwealth to prove specific conduct — which is where the defense focuses.
Will this affect my insurance and license?
A conviction can add surchargeable events, raise premiums for years, and trigger additional RMV action. We work to avoid the criminal conviction and, where possible, resolve the matter as a civil infraction.

Charged with a driving offense?

Don't assume it's minor. Call for a free, confidential consultation.