His decision after reviewing the evidence.
You would have to file a motion with the court to be heard in front of THAT judge, and present reasoning why the order should be dissolved.
Yes, it is POSSIBLE, but he would have to have sufficient grounds to convince the judge that a restraining order was justified.
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.
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.
no, that would defeat the purpose of a restraining order
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.
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.
You can put a restraining order on anyone as long as you can show that they are intending to do you harm. If you mean just to keep the guy away, I don't know if a judge would go for that. I think you do have to go in front of a judge.
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!?!?!
Each state enacts laws pertaining to such issues. In some jurisdictions the entry will remain until it (ORS, NCO, DVPO, WPO etc.) is vacated by the court. Restraining orders are not usually not open public records and are available to "those persons with need to know" and at the discretion of the issuing judge. My understanding is a restraining order has to be renewed every three years?or less according to the Judge that made the order. Check with your local court recorders office or your local family law facilitator.