It depends. Are you the complainant, or the defendant? If you are the copmplainant - go to the court that issued the order and asked to have it dissolved. If you are the defendant - you must file a petition/motion showing good cause why the order should be dissolved. The judge will hold a hearing to determine the outcome. However: if the complainant does not wish to, or does not agree - in all likliehood it will not happen.
If your husband was arrested for a battery-domestic charge and an onsite police report was taken and it was false, you can fight it in court. This will be the only way to get the charges dropped depending on what state you are in.
An assault committed upon your 'significant other' is Domestic Violence. The likliehood of that being dropped is slim to none.
In Virginia, the victim can request that assault and battery charges be dropped, but ultimately, the decision lies with the prosecutor. The state has the authority to pursue charges independently of the victim's wishes, especially in cases involving public safety. If the victim does not want to proceed, they can communicate this to law enforcement or the prosecutor, but it may not guarantee that the charges will be dismissed.
Assuming that you mean the charges were originally taken by the victim and dropped by or at the request of the victim, Then if the state (in GA at least) motions to prosecute (typically domestics) on behalf of the state, then the charges stand and the victim takes on the role of victim/witness in stead of victim/complainant. The state can continue to pursue domestic violence charges and prosecution in domestic situations now due to laws adopted after years of battered spouses dropping charges against their abusers because of fear and misguided loyalty.
When charges are dropped then you are free to go
Yes because the records are clean
false charges
This is known as a downfiling of charges from a felony to a misdemeanor, and the case transferred to its respective court.
No, Battery is not the same as Domestic Battery. Battery is the unlawful touching or another person. Domestic Battery is the unlawful touching of a family member, spouce, boyfriend, girlfriend, room mates. Domestic means someone you're living with or related too.
Talk to your lawyer.
no
If you were taken into custody with the intent to be interrogated then yes, the charges could be dropped.