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If you filed the restraining order, you can withdraw it. You must go back to the court where you filed the restraining order and ask that it be dropped.
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Go back to the court that issued it and request that it be withdrawn or vacated.
If she has a restraining order, she can. If instead this means he has court ordered access, she still can until he takes her back to court to enforce. see links below
No evidence is necessary for a temporary restraining order. What happens is when you go into court and get a restraining order they give a temporary restraining order until trial. You can then push the date back a few times and extend it. Some people would argue this is how you get custody of children in a divorce situation. For a long term restraining order you will need documented cases of abuse.
If there was a restraining order preventing one parent from seeing their children, and you have not filed for, or been given an extension on that order, it's best to take the matter back to court. You should have your original custody agreement amended to reflect the fact that there was a restraining order keeping the parent from the child.
A couple should not get back together until properly taking care of the restraining order issue in the court system. If you try to work things out without properly handling the restraining order you can only cause more issues for your selves in the long run.
A restraining order is a civil court action and does not appear on your criminal history record - UNLESS - you were arrested for domestic violence BEFORE the order was issued - OR - were arrested as a result of violating the order. In those cases it WILL show up.
Go back to court and request that the judge either extend, or re-instate, the order. Be prepared to give good cause as to your reason.
Not if they are the parent unless they have been found unfit to have contact by the court so you have a court order. If he/she is not the parent you speak to the police and ask them to tell him/her to back off. If that doesn't work get a restraining order.
If the husband has an order of protection from his wife, it applies everywhere. If a person has a protective order restraining another person from contacting them, and would then like to have contact with that person, the person who obtained the order should go back to the court and ask the court to dismiss the original protective order.
To get anyone, including an ex wife to stop calling you, file a restraining order. If she breaks the order by still calling, go back to the court house and they will issue a warrant for her arrest.