You've been served. There's a court order with your name on it, and it's already restricting where you can go, who you can contact, and whether you can be in your own home. You haven't had a chance to respond, because a domestic violence injunction in Florida can be issued based entirely on what the other person said, before you've spoken a single word in your defense.
That's how the domestic violence injunction process works here. The petitioner, the person who filed against you, goes to the clerk's office, fills out paperwork, and a judge reviews it the same day, often without you present. If the court sees anything suggesting immediate danger, a temporary order goes into effect immediately. You get served. Then you have roughly 15 days to prepare your response before a formal hearing decides whether that order becomes permanent.
Fifteen days isn't much time, and the hearing is typically your one shot.
An injunction for protection is a civil court order that prohibits one person from contacting, approaching, or threatening another. It's distinct from a criminal charge, though the two often run on parallel tracks.
Under Florida Statutes § 741.30, a domestic violence injunction may be filed when someone alleges:
To file, the petitioner must share a qualifying relationship with you. Florida Statutes § 741.28(3) defines a family or household member to include spouses, former spouses, people related by blood or marriage, people who are presently residing together as if a family or who have resided together in the past as if a family, and individuals who are parents of a child in common regardless of whether they have been married or have resided together at any time.
Other civil injunctions exist outside the domestic violence category. Dating violence covers people who have had a continuing and significant relationship of a romantic or intimate nature who don't share a residence or children, as defined under Florida Statutes § 784.046. Repeat violence covers two or more incidents involving any person, not just a partner, also governed by § 784.046.
A sexual violence injunction addresses sexual offenses regardless of the relationship, also under § 784.046. Each follows a similar injunction process, but the qualifying relationship and legal standard differ.
The domestic violence process begins at the clerk's office. The petitioner files a sworn petition describing the alleged conduct. A judge reviews it, usually the same day, without the respondent present.
If the court feels there is immediate danger, it issues a temporary injunction. That order goes into effect before you've had any opportunity to respond. It can:
You'll receive a hearing date, typically within 15 days. That domestic violence injunction hearing is where both sides finally get to speak. The window between being served and that hearing is not the time to figure this out alone. The sooner you contact a Fort Lauderdale domestic violence defense lawyer, the more time you have to build a response that actually holds up in court.
The steps you take in the first 24 to 48 hours after being served can affect your defense as much as anything that happens in the courtroom.
Do not contact the petitioner, even to explain your side or correct something you believe is false. Do not ask a mutual friend or family member to pass along a message. Do not post about the situation on social media. Do not assume the case will be dismissed without preparation.
Any of these can be used against you at the hearing or result in a separate criminal charge before you've had a chance to respond at all.
When you're trying to figure out how to respond to a domestic violence injunction, the instinct is often to reach out, explain yourself, or wait and see. None of those work in your favor. It's about presenting specific evidence in response to specific allegations, in a format a judge can evaluate under the applicable legal standard.
The petition is the foundation of the case against you. An attorney will go through it looking for dates or times that don't match your records, claims that are vague or internally inconsistent, and any related incident that documents or messages can contradict. The petitioner's written allegations set the judge's initial impression before you say a word, and identifying the weak points early is where a defense begins.
Your defense shouldn't rest on testimony alone. Your attorney will work with you to collect text messages, call logs, photos, videos, and any records that contradict the allegations. If the petition describes a physically violent encounter, evidence showing the incident didn't occur, or occurred differently, carries significant weight.
Witnesses who can speak to the relationship dynamic or a specific incident can also testify on your behalf. In cases involving allegations of a sexual act, a lascivious act, or conduct the statute describes as sexually performing, documentary evidence and witness accounts can directly counter the petitioner's version.
An injunction hearing is a formal legal proceeding, not an informal conversation. Your attorney will prepare you to testify under oath, cross-examine the petitioner, and introduce documents and witnesses.
The judge applies a specific standard: did the petitioner prove, by competent, substantial evidence, that domestic violence occurred or that there is reasonable cause to believe it will occur? That standard, the burden of proof, rests entirely on the petitioner. Your attorney's job is to give the court reason to question whether they met it.
The petitioner must demonstrate reasonable fear of imminent danger, meaning a threat that is real, credible, and likely to materialize soon. A generalized concern about the relationship doesn't meet that standard.
A defense built around the specific facts gives the court an alternative account grounded in evidence, not just contradiction. Did the described incident happen as alleged? Do the circumstances actually support a pattern of ongoing risk? Is the fear the petitioner describes objectively supported by evidence? Those are the questions a strong defense answers directly.
Domestic violence questions rarely have simple answers. The court doesn't automatically know the communication history, who initiated contact, whether a child support dispute preceded the filing, or how a shared living situation actually functioned. An attorney who understands the full picture can present documents, message threads, and witness accounts that give the judge a more complete view than the petition alone provides.
If you're not sure what to expect at an injunction hearing in Florida, the short answer is that it's a formal legal proceeding, not an informal conversation. At the domestic violence injunction hearing, both sides present their case before a judge. There are no juries in injunction proceedings. The process typically moves through opening testimony, evidence presentation, cross-examination of each witness, and closing arguments.
The judge then decides whether the petitioner met the burden of proof. If the petitioner doesn't appear, the court will typically dismiss the case. If the evidence doesn't support the claims, the court can deny the petition. If the judge decides the petitioner proved their case, a final injunction is entered, which can remain in place indefinitely unless modified or dissolved by the court.
A final injunction can affect far more than your ability to contact one person. Depending on the terms, you may face:
Violating a domestic violence injunction is a criminal offense. A first degree misdemeanor applies when a person violates a condition of the order without additional criminal conduct, under Florida Statutes § 741.31(4)(a). If the person commits an offense like aggravated stalking while the order is in place, the charge can escalate to a second degree felony punishable by up to 15 years, under Florida Statutes § 784.048(4). A third or subsequent violation of an injunction can also be charged as a third degree felony.
A violation also triggers a separate criminal proceeding through the state attorney's office, entirely independent of the civil injunction case.
A domestic violence injunction is civil, but the allegations behind it are often criminal in nature. Aggravated assault is a third degree felony under Florida Statutes § 784.021. Aggravated battery is a second degree felony under § 784.045. Sexual battery is defined and penalized under Florida Statutes § 794.011, and false imprisonment is governed by § 787.02. If the petitioner's allegations include conduct that meets those definitions, criminal charges can follow independently of the injunction.
Statements you make at the injunction hearing can be used in a later criminal proceeding. The domestic violence process in civil court can also reflect preparation by a victim advocate or local domestic violence center, who may have helped the petitioner build a safety plan and structure the petition. That gives the petitioner a procedural advantage going into the hearing.
How you handle the civil injunction can affect what happens in a criminal case if one follows.
The judge decides based solely on the petitioner's testimony. A final injunction will likely be entered by default, and you'll have no record to appeal from.
The petitioner can request dismissal, but the court makes the final decision. A judge isn't required to dismiss simply because the petitioner asks.
Yes. Digital communication is frequently central to these cases and can support or undermine either side's account of what happened.
Possibly. It's a civil court order, but it can appear in certain background searches and affect employment or housing applications.
Don't contact the petitioner if the court order prohibits it. Indirect contact through third parties can still count as a violation and trigger a criminal offense charge.
Speak with an attorney before making any statements. What you say at an injunction hearing can be introduced as evidence in a criminal proceeding.
The moment you receive a domestic violence injunction in Florida, the clock starts. You have roughly 15 days before a hearing that can permanently restrict your life, your home, and your time with your children. Waiting even a few days can limit what evidence you're able to gather and how your case is presented.
I'm R. David Williams, a Fort Lauderdale domestic violence defense lawyer with more than 25 years of experience handling injunction hearings and the criminal charges that follow. If the allegations against you have already led to a separate criminal case, or you expect they will, I handle both. You won't be coordinating between attorneys or explaining your situation twice.
When you call the Law Offices of R. David Williams, P.A., you’ll speak with me directly. I'll review the petition with you, identify where the petitioner's case has weaknesses, and build a defense around the full context of what actually happened. With a background in psychology, 5-star ratings on Google and AVVO, and staff fluent in English and Spanish, my office is equipped to handle your case from every angle. We serve clients throughout Fort Lauderdale, Broward County, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach County.
Call (954) 522-9997 to schedule your free consultation, or use the confidential online form to reach me directly. Same-day responses are common, and after-hours support is available.
Knowledge | Experience | Integrity – R. David Williams
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(954) 522-9997
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