Being charged for going where you are not supposed to be in violation of a protection order; avoided by having a court order permitting the access.
“And you're not getting charged with a violation of a protection order, because you actually have a court order saying you're allowed to do this. And the other thing to remember is you're not allowed to take anything that isn't yours. In other words, you can't take shared items, you can't get to keep the peace order and go over the house and then 15 minutes, I don't know if it's possible, but 15 minutes, clear out the whole house, that's not allowed, you are only allowed to take what is actually yours.”
Alexis explains: "And you're not getting charged with a violation of a protection order, because you actually have a court order saying you're allowed to do this. And the other thing to remember is you're not allowed to take anything that isn't yours. In other words, you can't take shared items, you can't get to keep the peace order and go over the house and then 15 minutes, I don't know if it's possible, but 15 minutes, clear out the whole house, that's not allowed, you are only allowed to take what is actually yours."
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Each answer links directly to the source where a Right Law Group attorney addressed this question.
1 answers grounded in Right Law Group sources
Got into a DV case because of an ex I let back in the home and made my life very hard
he fought hard for me
they dismissed the whole case
their belief of my side and story and their knowledge in the legal system they were able to get my case dismissed
get my case dismissed