Victoria represents individuals facing scrutiny by regulatory bodies in the health and non-health sectors. She assists in drafting responses to minimize impacts of investigational proceedings that involve professional misconduct allegations, ranging from upcoding, conflicts of interest, and privacy breaches, among other matters. She also assists the firm in applications for judicial review. In her civil litigation practice, she has advised clients on contract disputes, oppression remedies, and private international law.
Victoria received her Juris Doctor and Master of Laws from Dalhousie University’s Schulich School of Law. Prior to her current role, she practiced civil litigation, personal injury, and criminal defence with a focus on sentencing law. She has represented clients in the Ontario Court of Justice, the Licence and Appeal Tribunal, the Landlord and Tenant Board, the Small Claims Court and in the Superior Court of Justice.
Her Master of Laws thesis examined the federal regulatory scheme governing the market entry of medical devices. She has served as an editorial assistant for law reviews including the Dalhousie Law Journal and the Canadian Journal of Law and Technology. She was previously a research assistant with the Marine & Environmental Law Institute at Dalhousie University. There, she worked with stakeholders including the United Nations Environment Programme, the OECD, and WWF to spearhead training materials for multinational corporations to encourage voluntary compliance with procedural and substantive human rights standards in the plastics sector.
Victoria has published on topics at the intersection of business, human rights, and environmental law. She co-authored Business, Human Rights and Plastic Pollution (Brill, 2025), authored Medical Devices and Public Safety: A Constitutional Prescription? (Dalhousie Law & Technology Institute, 2023), and contributed to the United Nations Environment Programme’s policy resource on plastics and human rights in South-East Asia (2022). She is also a member of The Advocates’ Society.