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6 answers

actually i know the answer to this. my husband recently got charged with this. We live in Rockingham County (VA) In our case thought it was some BS. I called the cops on him that day and they turned around and issed this thing and then he got in touble just for calling me from the jail. Anyway by the time they got around to his case he had already been locked up for 3 months on other charges and they just gave him like a $150 fine for this charge. I sure it vaires with every case but I hope this helps.

2006-10-25 09:19:16 · answer #1 · answered by Kerri 3 · 0 0

Read the order. If you have a Protection from Abuse or the equivalent then when the order was signed, you and the other person would have been notified of the ramifications. If you feel you are in danger, call your local police.

2006-10-21 13:36:56 · answer #2 · answered by wq4you 2 · 0 1

With all due admire, "your butt is dirt". heavily, the courtroom frowns on somebody who violates a kinfolk Violence protection Order. that's a serious adequate cost as that's, much less violate the order. in case you haven`t accomplished it, don`t. in case you have, pray. There are a number of diverse strategies it ought to be dealt with. relies upon how gung-ho the decide is. the two way, stable success.

2016-11-24 21:48:05 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

depends on what the protection order was for and who broke it, the person that took it out-it is then null and void, or the person it was taken out on- you could go to jail.

2006-10-21 13:37:04 · answer #4 · answered by sesamenc 4 · 0 1

The offender should get beat down. I think cops still do that there.

2006-10-21 13:37:15 · answer #5 · answered by seantherunner 3 · 0 1

You may wind up in jail.

2006-10-21 13:43:05 · answer #6 · answered by sandislandtim 6 · 0 1

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