Only the court and the judge can lift an order of protection. You have to petition the court and they can help you.
Marrying a person who has an order of protection against you is breaking the law. You have to get the order lifted before getting married.
Not unless the person being protected by the order wishes it to occur. Unless you are the parent or legal guardian of the individual being protected you do not have the legal 'standing' to ask the court to withdraw the order. If the petitioner wishes to have their protection order lifted, they can return to the same court which issued it and request that it be withdrawn.
Against you? No.
duhhh
Do not respond. It could be a trick. If you don't have an order against them, they can technically contact you. But if you respond to them, you will violate the order. If their contact persists, you can get a protective order against them for harassment.
Well, you stay away from them temporally ...
A restraining notice is an order of protection. If you have a restraining order against someone then they can't be within a certain feet of your.
All that I have seen do have rollover protection.
You have to go back to the judge that granted the order. Good luck with that most judges won't lift the order !!
Yes just as long as you get it removed.
You don't, only a prosecutor can "press" or "drop" charges against someone.
as soon as you turn 18 its the law actually now the legal age is 17 so and you can get rid of an order of protection and the age legally at 16 but at 16 you have to come up with a good reason for getting rid of it and at 17 you become legal age you should be able to and if the order of protection is off then yes you can get married