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Federal Full Faith and Credit Laws

Your choice of attorney to represent you during a domestic violence charge is important. Please contact our firm today to schedule a consultation with a knowledgeable criminal defense attorney who can provide a clear explanation of your legal rights and options.

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I am Andres R. Guevara, an attorney who is a former assistant district attorney who understands how the state prosecutes domestic violence cases. While at the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, I was assigned to the Domestic Violence Unit. Today I represent people who are accused of committing crimes. Understanding how the state prosecutes domestic violence cases helps me, your lawyer, prepare a better defense for clients. I represent clients in Denver, Colorado.

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I am attorney in Denver, Colorado, who is a former prosecutor who now defends criminal defendants. I know that once the wheels of justice start to turn in a domestic violence case, they can be hard to stop. If you are accused of a crime that can affect your future and your reputation, it's important to mount a proactive defense.

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Federal Full Faith and Credit Laws

Under federal law, a protective order issued in one state must be enforced wherever a violation occurs - even if it is not in the same state where the order was issued. Known as full faith and credit, this federal law seeks to protect victims of domestic violence from abusers crossing state lines to violate the terms of protection orders. If you have questions about protection orders, contact Law Office of Andres R. Guevara in Denver, Colorado to speak with an attorney. An experienced criminal defense lawyer can help you understand the scope and effect of the order.

Interstate Enforcement of Protection Orders

According to federal law (18 USCA §2265), each state is required to enforce valid protection orders that are issued by other states when the terms of the order are violated in its jurisdiction. Protective orders are defined broadly under the law to account for the various types of orders issued by states, such as temporary restraining orders (TROs) and no-contact orders, for example. To qualify, the orders must seek to "prevent violent or threatening acts of harassment against or contact or communication with or physical proximity to another person."

A key component of the law is that the protection order must be valid before the jurisdiction is required to enforce it. To be valid, a protection order must:

  • List the names of the parties
  • List the date the order was issued
  • List the expiration date
  • Specify the terms and conditions that must be followed by the abuser
  • Contain the name of the issuing court
  • Contain the signature of or on the behalf of the judge

The order does not have to be an original or contain a raised seal. The person whom the order protects does not have a duty to register the order with the new state, should he or she move. Also, the person seeking to enforce the order does not have to carry a copy of it with him or her.

The person subject to the protection order must have been provided with due process rights, including notice of the order and an opportunity to be heard prior to the order being issued. The only exception is if the order was issued as an emergency order. In that situation, a hearing must have been set within a reasonable amount of time to protect the alleged offender's due process rights.

If the police in another state fail to comply with a protection order because it was issued by another jurisdiction, the officer and/or the police department may be held legally responsible for their inaction if someone is injured as a result.

Conclusion

Just because a protection order was issued against you in one state does not mean it cannot be enforced against you in another. Under federal full faith and credit laws, a valid protection order must be enforced in any US jurisdiction where a violation occurs. Contact Law Office of Andres R. Guevara in Denver, Colorado if you have been charged with violating a protection order.

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En Español
  • P. v. MM (2010): Arapahoe county case involving innocent client mistakenly charged with drug sale. Successfully argued for dismissal of case.
  • P. v. C.B. (2010): Felony drug possession case. Successfully argued for suppression of drug evidence in case where police illegally entered an apartment under the pretense of conducting a child welfare check. Case dismissed.
  • P. v. I (2010): Client charged with inciting a prison riot and faced long mandatory prison if convicted. Successfully negotiated plea for probation.
  • P. v. B-G (2009): Arapahoe County felony case in which client was passenger in vehicle containing over 200 grams of cocaine. Over prosecution's objections, and despite the fact that a co-defendant received a two-year prison sentence, successfully argued to the judge for a sentence of probation.
  • P. v. J. (2009): Felony identity theft case in Arapahoe County. Client wrongly accused of being involved in a scheme to defraud when in actuality client was a victim of the same scheme. Case dismissed.
  • P. v. E. (2009): Client falsely accused by third party of illegal weapons possession of a sawed-off shotgun. Case dismissed after attorney investigation into accuser's background and the allegations.
  • P. v. O (2009): Client charged as look-out for alleged felony cocaine drug sales. Case dismissed.
  • P. v. C. (2008): Client accused of public indecency for changing clothes in a secluded part of a park. If convicted, client would have had to register as a sex offender. Client acquitted at trial of all counts.

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