I am assuming you are referring to an "ex parte" protection from abuse order? Yes, if the terms of the protection order refer to no contact and 100 yard stay away, the person filing can actually be considered to be in violation of their own order if they force a situation where these terms are broken. For example, the filing party SHOULD NOT call the person they have filed against, or go with 100 yards of them, thereby forcing a violation of the order.
Read the order very closely and also any supplemental information that is given out with it to be completely clear on all legal aspects of the order.
2006-10-11 03:46:09
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answer #1
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answered by Yahzmin ♥♥ 4ever 7
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There is no such thing as "an ex parte". Ex parte is an adjectival phrase, it modifies something else. It would be like saying "Would you like a buttered?" It leaves the question "a buttered WHAT?"
A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Get a lawyer to protect you from yourself.
2006-10-11 09:38:43
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answer #2
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answered by open4one 7
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definitely yes, your filing it for a reason, for that person to stay away from you, if u go ahead and violate it, you will not be taken seriously, it's not a joke. if your really scared of someone, then why would you go out of your way to talk/see this person.
2006-10-11 11:32:58
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answer #3
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answered by shorte716 6
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