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A violation of an Order of Protection can result in a Violation Petition of an Order of Protection in the Family Court or an arrest for criminal contempt of a court order as follows: Criminal contempt in the second degree: This Class A misdemeanor applies when you intentionally disobey a court order.
If the person that requested the Order of Protection wants to change or drop it, she or he should speak to the Assistant DA, if it is a misdemeanor or felony case. In other cases, the person can come to City Court and ask the Judge.
If a final order of protection is issued, this occurs at the end of the case after the Judge finds that a family offense was committed or the respondent agrees. A final order lasts for two or five years.
You can go to court and file a Motion to Modify or a Motion to Terminate your Order of Protection . A Motion to Modify will change the order. A Motion to Terminate will end the order. The clerk will set a court date, and you will have to mail a copy of the motion to the abuser.
If you want to get back together, or even just talk to the other person or see them, you can: ask the court to change the order. The court can drop the "no contact" part of the order but keep the "no abuse" part of the order.
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People also ask

The Respondent can respond to the Order of Protection by filing a motion with 2 days notice asking for a rehearing on the Emergency Order of Protection, or by going to the next court date and requesting a hearing on the Petition.
Although convictions for a violation of a restraining order or harassment order (pursuant to c. 209A or c. 258E) are misdemeanors, the waiting period to seal these charges is ten years. There are some convictions in Massachusetts that can never be sealed.
You can request that the defendant be ordered to stay away from your work. This means the defendant: Must stay away from the place where you work as long as the order is in effect, even if you aren't there at the time.
If you were denied a final protection order, you have the right to appeal your case to the circuit court. The appeal must be filed at the circuit court clerk's office within ten days from the judge's denial of the order. A Circuit Court hearing on the appeal will be held within ten days of the date the appeal is filed.
A. No. Contrary to what many uninformed court employees, attorneys or even judges might otherwise tell you, a restraining order does not appear on your criminal record.

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