talk to the police
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!?!?!
What would prevent that? You are bound by the restraining order, not the person who obtained it.
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.
If a person has a restraining or protective order prohibiting the from making contact with a specific individual, all contact is prohibited, including social media.
No, the person who has a restraining order against someone in Washington state cannot legally harass the individual it is issued against. The restraining order is designed to protect the person from harassment, threats, or contact from the other party. If the person with the restraining order engages in harassing behavior, they may face legal consequences, including potential criminal charges or modification of the restraining order.
Traditionally the no contact order and restraining order are synonymous with each other. however, some judges will also write the no contact on the court paperwork. If that is the case then it does not expire. However, if he did not then the no contact dissolves when the restraining or expires
if a wife puts a restraining order against the husband is it legal to contact each other through another person
Yes. Fill it out at your court clerks office and it will be served on them before they get out. That way it will be illegal for them to contact you upon release. If you are the victim, and the reason they are in jail, then most states have a victim liaison at the court. Ask you court clerk to have them help you.
no, that would defeat the purpose of a restraining order
If you have a permenant restraining no contact order then your ex-husband commenting on your facebook picture definitely violates the terms of the restraining order because he is not suppose to contact you at all and commenting on your facebook picture would be a form of contact.
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.