Contacted you HOW? In person? By phone? By third party? If they are violating the provisions of the restraining order you will have to notify the court and/or (depending on your state) swear out a warrant against them. REMINDER: Restraining orders are orders of the CIVIL court and cannot be enforced by the police who can ONLY enforce CRIMINAL law.
no, that would defeat the purpose of a restraining order
i had a restraining order put on me over 4 years ago and the judge gave me 1 year restraining order which i obeyed now the person is contacting me and i also contacted her and she is calling the police again saying i broke a restraing order and i live in Vancouver and she lives in Winnipeg Manitoba she contacted me about 2 months ago and i replied and left 2 messages after on her phone and she is now trying to charge me again
What would prevent that? You are bound by the restraining order, not the person who obtained it.
What state are you living in. Penalties for violating a restraining order are set forth according to state statute. At the very least you will probably be arrested and brought before the judge who issued the order.
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!?!?!
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.
The case would be drop
they can be charged with contempt of court - violation of restraining order. The actual penalties vary case by case.