Restraining Orders
Facing a restraining order or a violation charge?
A 209A order can force you from your home and jeopardize your job, your firearms, and your record. Violating one is a crime. Attorney Reinhardt defends both the order and the charge.
What's at stake
Massachusetts has two main civil protective orders: abuse-prevention orders under G.L. c. 209A (between family or household members) and harassment-prevention orders under c. 258E (for harassment or stalking outside a domestic relationship). Although the order itself is civil, its consequences are severe: you can be ordered to leave your home, stay away from your children, and surrender your firearms.
And a violation of either order is a criminal offense under c. 209A, § 7 — even an accidental or minor contact can lead to arrest and prosecution. These matters move fast: a temporary order can issue without you present, with a full hearing just days later. What happens at that hearing shapes everything.
How it works
How we handle restraining-order cases
Two fronts: keeping an unjustified order from being extended, and defending any violation charge.
-
01
Step 1
Prepare for the hearing fast
The window between a temporary order and the full hearing is short. We move immediately to gather evidence and prepare your testimony.
-
02
Step 2
Contest the order
We challenge whether the legal standard for abuse or harassment is actually met, and present the other side of the story the court did not hear.
- Does the evidence meet the 209A/258E standard?
- Are there messages or witnesses that rebut the account?
- Is the order being used for leverage in a dispute?
-
03
Step 3
Defend violation charges
A violation charge requires proof you knew of the order and intentionally violated it. Accidental contact and lack of notice are real defenses.
-
04
Step 4
Protect your rights going forward
We address firearms surrender, housing, and custody impacts, and work toward vacating or narrowing the order where possible.
Restraining-order questions
A temporary order was issued without me there — is that legal?
What happens if I violate a restraining order?
Can a restraining order be removed?
Served with an order — or charged with a violation?
The hearing clock is already running. Call for a free, confidential consultation.