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.
I'm not sure what the longest restraining order is, but I have a restraining order against my ex that is valid through the year 2099. It was issued in Orange County, CA to my ex after my earlier restraining order of 2004 thru 2007 expired. Can anyone beat that? Oh, and I got this on my own...my attorney was successful only at taking my money, not at protecting my rights or assets.
no, that would defeat the purpose of a restraining order
A restraining order against James M. Fyfe for Hunter B. Fyfe
What would prevent that? You are bound by the restraining order, not the person who obtained it.
The case would be drop
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!?!?!
* Yes they can, but then they would be breaking the laws associated with the Restraining Order. So would they get in trouble or would it just nullify the order?
No, they can not. That would be Unfair Termination. You have not done anything criminally wrong. A Restraining order is to protect you.
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.
Don't quite understand the question. A restraining order is an order of the court. The parole authorities would have to acknowledge the existence of the order and comply with it.
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 she is doing something that gives legal cause for one, maybe. But it would be difficult to prove that she is threatening you and that you are not violating your restraining order.