Yes, if there is grounded proof that sed person poses a physical threat. I suggest hiring a lawyer, laying out the evidence, and if the lawyer sees ground for a restraining order, sed person will set up restrictions and a court date with a County or State District Attorney or Judge, according to the degree of threat, and a court date will be set.
apperntice, journeyman, master
Yes, depending on the jurisdiction you can get restraining orders against anyone, providing you have the proof the judge needs to see that they are legitimately a threat to you. CAUTION; NOT ALL JUDICIAL SYSTEMS OFFER RESTRAINING ORDERS or KEEP AWAY ORDERS. Some systems offer ONLY DOMESTIC VIOLENCE ORDERS. To quailfy to get a Domestiv Violence Order the other party MUST be a member of your immediate or extended family.
No, protective orders, colloquially known as restraining orders, are person specific not group specific. Therefore you'd need an OP (Order of Protection) against each individual that places you in fear of your life or safety.
yes
A lawyer can help, but it is a court that issues a restraining order.
no, that would defeat the purpose of a restraining order
If she is doing something that gives legal cause for one, maybe. But it would be difficult to prove that she is threatening you and that you are not violating your restraining order.
What would prevent that? You are bound by the restraining order, not the person who obtained it.
There are grounds and criteria for someone seeking a restraining order. A judge will decide about issuing the restraining order as a permanent order. There must be proof of threatening behavior or danger. The court will be cautious and issue a temporary restraining order. After the court , if there isn't proof to substantiate the court can't enforce....
No, the restraining order is only for the person that put the restraining order on the other person. So it does not stay with the property of the person who has now passed away.
no. why would you even want to contact a person you gave a restraining order to? ain't that the whole point of RESTRAINING ORDER!?!?!
Contact your police department either in person or using the local non-emergency number. Explain the situation and ask to file a restraining order.
If the restraining order is in place, you can and should not reply. Block them and do not let them into your home--you are always liable until they remove the restraining order.
If the restraining order is in place, you can and should not reply. Block them and do not let them into your home--you are always liable until they remove the restraining order.
You don't.
Unfortunately yes, lets say you're in a store and the person with the restraining order walks in, that person has to notify the store that they have a restraining order against you and they would notify you to leave but if that person wanted to be a (you know what) then they could say that you saw them and still proceeded to break the restraining order.