Protective Orders.
Bond Conditions.
Your Future.
Domestic violence accusations can affect bond, housing, family contact, protective orders, employment and future record consequences.
Defense in domestic violence cases
Domestic violence cases are sensitive and high-stakes. They may involve spouses, partners, former partners, family members or people who live together.
Even before a case is resolved, a person may face no-contact conditions, protective order issues, housing problems and family complications.
Important early questions
These cases require careful handling because contact restrictions can create additional criminal exposure.
- Review reports, court paperwork, citations, body-camera evidence or medical records.
- Identify weaknesses, factual disputes, constitutional issues and negotiation opportunities.
- Preserve helpful documents, messages, photographs, witness information and deadlines.
- Prepare a practical strategy before you make decisions that can affect your record or recovery.
How I Defend Cases
A serious legal matter needs a clear process, not guesswork.
Case Evaluation
Review the facts, court paperwork, police report, deadlines and immediate risks.
Investigation
Identify evidence, witnesses, video, records, search issues and procedural weaknesses.
Defense Strategy
Build a case-specific plan for negotiation, hearings, trial preparation or alternative resolution.
Court Representation
Appear with you, protect your rights and keep the next steps clear.
Frequently Asked Questions
General information only. Your facts may change the answer, so speak with an attorney about your specific situation.
Can I contact the other person after a domestic violence arrest?
Do not contact the other person if a no-contact order, protective order or bond condition forbids it.
Are domestic violence cases different from other criminal cases?
Yes. They may involve family issues, protective orders, no-contact terms and sensitive evidence.
What should I bring to a consultation?
Bring court paperwork, bond conditions, protective order documents, messages, photos and witness information.