Charged with Reckless Endangerment in California? The Consequences Are More Serious Than You've Been Led to Believe.
California criminal defense attorney David Chesley has successfully defended reckless driving, child endangerment, and related "reckless endangerment" cases in criminal courts across every county in California — from Los Angeles to San Francisco, San Diego to Sacramento, and everywhere in between. What seems like a "minor" charge can devastate your record, license, career, and family — the defense you build now changes everything.
THE STAKES ARE REAL
We know how scary and unfair this feels — many assume "reckless endangerment" isn't serious enough for a lawyer. That mistake costs people their jobs, driver's licenses, professional certifications, custody rights, and freedom.
California has no standalone "reckless endangerment" statute, but prosecutors aggressively pursue equivalent charges like:
- Reckless driving (Vehicle Code § 23103)
- Child endangerment (Penal Code § 273a)
- Reckless discharge of a firearm (Penal Code § 246.3)
- Reckless driving causing injury (VC § 23104) or vehicular manslaughter (PC § 192(c)) if harm or death results
Convictions can lead to:
- Up to 90 days county jail + $145–$1,000 fine + 2 DMV points for misdemeanor reckless driving (VC 23103) — plus potential license suspension (30+ days first offense, longer with priors) and vehicle impoundment
- Up to 1 year county jail (misdemeanor) or 2, 4, or 6 years state prison (felony) for child endangerment (PC 273a)
- Up to 3 years state prison for felony reckless firearm discharge (PC 246.3)
- A permanent criminal record impacting employment, security clearances, housing, and professional licenses
- Driver's license suspension or revocation — catastrophic for CDL holders and anyone whose livelihood depends on driving
- CPS investigations and loss of custody or visitation rights in child endangerment cases
- Immigration consequences including deportation or removal proceedings for non-U.S. citizens
- Escalation to felony assault, manslaughter, or worse if the reckless conduct caused injury or death
Prosecutors and CPS act fast. Evidence fades. Call now to protect your future.
Free consultation — don't wait. 📞 (800) 755-5174
WHAT IS "RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT" IN CALIFORNIA?
The term "reckless endangerment" describes conduct that creates a substantial risk of harm to others — prosecuted in California under specific statutes. Understanding exactly which charge you're facing determines your exposure, your defense strategy, and what a conviction will mean for the rest of your life.
Reckless Driving (VC § 23103)
Willful or wanton disregard for the safety of persons or property while driving on a highway or parking facility. A criminal misdemeanor — not merely a traffic ticket — meaning it creates a permanent criminal record, not just a DMV entry. Up to 90 days in county jail, fines up to $1,000, 2 DMV points, and potential license suspension. Prosecutors pursue these cases aggressively in every California jurisdiction.
Reckless Driving Causing Injury (VC § 23104)
A wobbler — charged as a misdemeanor (up to 1 year county jail) or felony if serious injury resulted. When injuries are involved, prosecutors across California pursue these cases with significantly greater intensity and the stakes escalate accordingly.
Child Endangerment (PC § 273a)
Willfully causing or permitting a child to suffer harm, or placing a child in a situation where their health or safety is endangered. A wobbler: misdemeanor (up to 1 year county jail) or felony (2, 4, or 6 years state prison) if the endangerment placed the child at risk of great bodily harm or death. These charges frequently trigger parallel CPS investigations and family court proceedings — making early, coordinated defense across all fronts essential from the very first day.
Reckless Discharge of a Firearm (PC § 246.3)
Willfully discharging a firearm in a grossly negligent manner that could result in injury or death. A wobbler: misdemeanor (up to 1 year county jail) or felony (up to 3 years state prison). If the discharge caused injury, charges escalate significantly.
Vehicular Manslaughter (PC § 192(c))
When reckless or grossly negligent driving causes the death of another person, prosecutors can — and regularly do — file vehicular manslaughter charges. This is among the most serious consequences of what began as reckless driving, carrying up to 6 years in state prison for gross negligence cases. If alcohol or drugs were also involved, charges can escalate further to vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated (PC § 191.5), with even greater prison exposure. If you are being investigated for or charged with vehicular manslaughter arising from reckless conduct, you need an experienced criminal defense attorney immediately — not after you've spoken to investigators, not after charges are formally filed. Now.
The exact charge dictates your penalties and your defense strategy. David Chesley identifies and acts on that distinction from day one — in every California court, in every county.
HOW DAVID CHESLEY DEFENDS RECKLESS ENDANGERMENT CASES
These cases hinge on interpretation. "Reckless" versus honest mistake, emergency response, or deliberate mischaracterization — that line is exactly where experienced defense attorneys do their most important work.
David Chesley is a California criminal defense attorney with extensive experience handling VC 23103, PC 273a, PC 246.3, and related charges in criminal courts across every major region of California — Southern California, Northern California, and Central California. He personally manages every file from first consultation to final resolution. No hand-offs. No paralegal-managed cases. The attorney you hire is the attorney who fights for you.
Every defense begins by asking the right questions:
Was the conduct truly "willful or wanton" — or was it an honest mistake or emergency?
California's reckless driving statute requires willful or wanton disregard for safety — a meaningfully higher bar than careless or inattentive driving. Accidents happen. Emergencies happen. Poor judgment under pressure is not the same as criminal recklessness, and David Chesley builds the record to reflect that distinction in every case.
In child cases: Was the child actually endangered — or was the situation misreported?
Child endangerment charges frequently originate from allegations made by a co-parent, estranged family member, or neighbor with their own agenda — particularly during custody disputes. The question of whether a child was truly placed in danger of harm, as opposed to exposed to an imperfect parenting decision, is often the entire case.
Is the evidence actually reliable?
Reckless driving charges often rest on a single officer's observations, dashcam footage that captured only part of what happened, or witness accounts from people who saw the situation incompletely. David Chesley scrutinizes every piece of evidence and aggressively challenges what doesn't hold up — in every jurisdiction where your case is filed.
Were there circumstances that explain or justify the conduct?
A medical emergency. A vehicle malfunction. Avoiding a collision caused by another driver. Circumstances the police report ignored entirely. These are real defenses that real cases turn on — and David Chesley builds the record to surface them.
In firearm cases: Was it gross negligence — or an accident or lawful act?
The prosecution must prove willful, grossly negligent conduct — not merely that something went wrong. The distinction between criminal recklessness and an accident is often the entire defense.
Was evidence gathered lawfully?
Unlawful traffic stops, improper vehicle searches, and coerced statements can lead to suppression of critical evidence. When key evidence is suppressed, prosecutions collapse. David Chesley scrutinizes every step of the investigation for Fourth Amendment violations across every California court.
Free, confidential case review — discuss your specific facts today. 📞 (800) 755-5174 | 📧 calllog@chesleylawyers.speedvitals.org
YOU HAVE RIGHTS. USE THEM.
Prosecutors must prove willfulness or wanton recklessness beyond a reasonable doubt — a demanding legal standard that David Chesley enforces at every stage, in every court across California. Many reckless endangerment cases resolve with outcomes far better than defendants initially fear:
- Charges reduced — reckless driving to a non-criminal infraction, felony child endangerment to misdemeanor, or "wet reckless" in DUI overlap cases
- Dismissals — through successful suppression motions, exposure of unreliable witnesses, or demonstration that the conduct didn't meet the legal threshold for criminal recklessness
- Diversion or deferred entry of judgment — particularly for first-time offenders, resulting in complete dismissal upon program completion with no conviction on your record
- Favorable plea agreements protecting your driver's license, professional licenses, custody rights, and permanent record
- Acquittals at trial when the prosecution cannot prove willful recklessness beyond a reasonable doubt
Strong defense delivers these outcomes. Not chance.
WHY CLIENTS CHOOSE DAVID CHESLEY
Direct, personal handling — statewide
David Chesley personally fights your case in criminal courts across all of California — Los Angeles, San Diego, Orange County, San Francisco, Sacramento, Fresno, San Jose, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, and every other jurisdiction statewide. You get the attorney, not support staff.
Straight talk, always
Realistic assessment of your options, risks, and achievable outcomes — no inflated promises, no false reassurance, no sugarcoating. You'll always know exactly where your case stands.
Aggressive, strategic representation
Motions, negotiations, and trial preparation — full effort at every stage, with a strategy built around the specific facts of your case and the specific court where it's pending.
California-wide expertise
Extensive knowledge of California reckless driving, child endangerment, and firearm discharge law — combined with direct experience navigating prosecutors, judges, and court procedures across every major region of California — Southern, Northern, and Central. Particular focus on CDL holders and clients with professional licenses at stake.
Representative Results:
- Dismissed felony child endangerment charge after exposing fabricated allegations rooted in an ongoing custody dispute
- Reduced reckless driving causing injury to a non-criminal traffic infraction — preserved client's commercial driver's license and career
- Obtained diversion for first-time reckless driving client — charge completely dismissed upon program completion, no conviction on record
- Suppressed dashcam and officer testimony evidence following unlawful traffic stop — reckless driving case dismissed entirely
- Negotiated misdemeanor resolution of felony PC 246.3 reckless firearm discharge — no state prison
Client Feedback:
"David saved my commercial license after a reckless driving charge. Reduced to an infraction — my career is intact." — Anonymous former client
"The child endangerment charge came out of my custody battle. David fought it aggressively and got it dismissed. I don't know what I would have done without him." — Anonymous former client
"Honest guidance from day one, then real results that protected my record and my future." — Anonymous former client
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Is reckless driving in California a criminal offense or just a traffic ticket?
A criminal misdemeanor under VC § 23103 — not a traffic infraction. That means it goes on your permanent criminal record, not just your DMV driving record. It can show up on employment background checks, affect professional licensing, and follow you in ways a speeding ticket never would. It is not something to handle without an attorney, regardless of which California county your case is filed in.
Can a reckless driving charge be reduced to a non-criminal infraction?
Yes — and this is one of the most important outcomes David Chesley pursues in reckless driving cases across California. A reduction to a speed exhibition (VC § 23109) or similar infraction eliminates the criminal record consequence entirely. Getting there requires building real leverage through the facts of your case and negotiating effectively with prosecutors who handle these cases every day.
What's the difference between reckless driving and DUI?
Reckless driving (VC § 23103) involves driving with willful disregard for safety — no alcohol or drugs required. DUI (VC § 23152) involves driving under the influence. Importantly, DUI charges are sometimes reduced to "wet reckless" through plea negotiation — a significantly better outcome that avoids mandatory DUI sentencing enhancements. If you've been charged with DUI anywhere in California, this reduction is worth discussing with your attorney from the very start.
Will CPS get involved if I'm charged with child endangerment?
Often yes — and this is one of the most important things to understand about child endangerment cases. CPS investigations frequently run parallel to criminal proceedings, operating on their own timeline and under their own standards. What many people don't realize is that statements made during a CPS investigation can be used against you in criminal court — and statements made in criminal proceedings can surface in family court. It is critical to have an attorney who coordinates your defense across all three proceedings simultaneously, from the very beginning. Speaking to CPS investigators without counsel present is one of the most common and damaging mistakes people make in these cases — in every county across California.
Can pending child endangerment charges affect my custody case?
Absolutely. Pending charges — even without a conviction — can be used by the other parent in family court to seek emergency modification of custody or visitation. A criminal conviction makes that effort significantly easier. Getting the criminal case resolved favorably and quickly is often as important for the family court outcome as it is for the criminal one.
Can a felony reckless endangerment charge be reduced to a misdemeanor?
Yes — in many cases. Wobbler charges like PC 273a and PC 246.3 can be charged as either a misdemeanor or a felony, and an experienced attorney can argue for misdemeanor treatment at multiple stages. After a felony conviction in appropriate cases, a PC 17(b) motion can petition the court for reduction to a misdemeanor.
What if someone was injured — or killed?
If your conduct allegedly caused serious injury or death, the charges escalate significantly and immediately — potentially to felony assault with great bodily injury, gross vehicular manslaughter (PC § 192(c)), or vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated (PC § 191.5), which carries up to 10 years in state prison. These cases demand experienced legal representation from the moment you learn you are under investigation — not after charges are filed, not after you've spoken to detectives. Call David Chesley today, regardless of where in California your case is being investigated.
Will I lose my driver's license?
A reckless driving conviction results in 2 points on your DMV record. Accumulating points can trigger a DMV negligent operator hearing and potential license suspension or revocation. In cases involving injury, impoundment, or a pattern of violations, suspension is a serious risk — and one David Chesley actively works to prevent through both the criminal defense and any parallel DMV proceedings, statewide.
More questions? Free consultation, no obligation. 📞 (800) 755-5174
FREE CONSULTATION — CALL NOW
Evidence disappears. Witnesses' memories fade. CPS and DMV act on their own timelines, independent of the criminal case. Every day without an experienced California criminal defense attorney is a day the prosecution — and potentially CPS — gets further ahead.
Call the Law Offices of David Chesley today for a free, confidential consultation. No judgment. No pressure. Just clear, honest answers about what you're actually facing and what can be done right now to protect your future, your record, your license, and your family.
David Chesley handles reckless endangerment cases in criminal courts across all of California — Los Angeles County, Orange County, San Diego County, Riverside County, San Bernardino County, Ventura County, Santa Barbara County, Kern County, Fresno County, Sacramento County, Alameda County, Santa Clara County, San Francisco County, and every other jurisdiction statewide.
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📞 (800) 755-5174 📧 calllog@chesleylawyers.speedvitals.org 🌐 www.chesleylawyers.com
"Reckless endangerment charges hit harder than most people expect — on their record, their license, their custody rights, and their career. My commitment is making sure they don't define your future." — David Chesley, California Criminal Defense Attorney
















































