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Order of Protection Lawyer High Point, NC
If you are seeking protection from an abusive partner or family member, or if someone has filed a 50-B petition against you, the next hearing will shape what happens in your home and sometimes in your criminal record. These cases move quickly in North Carolina courts. The evidence you bring and how you present it determines the outcome.
At Spagnola Law Firm, we have represented both sides of domestic violence protective order cases for 27 years. Sam Spagnola is a Board Certified Family Law Specialist and has handled restraining orders, 50-B hearings, and related custody matters throughout Guilford County. An experienced High Point, NC order of protection lawyer can mean the difference between walking out of court with a real order of safety or a dismissal, and between losing access to your home and keeping your life intact.
Why Choose Spagnola Law Firm for Order of Protection Cases in High Point, NC?
Protective order cases sit at a difficult intersection. They involve family law, criminal exposure, custody, firearms rights, and sometimes housing. You need a lawyer who understands every piece. As a dedicated family lawyer in High Point, NC, our firm brings nearly three decades of courtroom experience to these hearings.
Board Certified and Focused on Family Law
Sam Spagnola has practiced family law since 1998. He is a Board Certified Family Law Specialist, a credential earned through peer review, a written exam, and documented substantial involvement in the field. Only a small percentage of North Carolina attorneys hold this certification. Domestic violence work has been part of his practice from the beginning, including both petitioners seeking 50-B orders and respondents defending against them.
Recognition Earned Over Decades
Sam has been named a Super Lawyer and holds the Martindale-Hubbell Distinguished Lawyer Rating. He is also a Martindale-Hubbell Client Champion and has been listed among America’s Most Honored Lawyers. He is also a past President of the Family Law Section of the Greensboro Bar Association.
Representation on Both Sides
We file petitions for clients who need protection. We also defend clients who have been falsely accused or whose situations have been mischaracterized. Both sides of these cases require preparation, evidence gathering, and witness management.
Hourly Billing and Client Portal Access
Domestic violence and protective order matters are billed hourly. How much work a case requires depends on the complexity of the facts, the number of hearings, and whether criminal charges are involved. Our client portal provides clients with direct access to filings, invoices, and case updates in real time.
★★★★★ “After searching for many months for a qualified attorney who would answer the phone and return calls, I was blessed to find Attorney Spagnola. He heard my case and gave excellent consultation to get me out of an abusive and unhappy marriage! I will be forever grateful to my Attorney for helping me to get back my peace and joy!”
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Gwendolyn Jones Harris
Read more reviews on our Google Business Profile.
Types of Order of Protection Cases We Handle in High Point
Most clients come to us in one of two moments. Either they have just been served with papers and have a hearing in ten days, or they have reached the point where they need a court order to feel safe. Both situations have hard deadlines. Below are the matters we handle under North Carolina’s protective order framework.
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50-B domestic violence protective orders. These are the most common protective orders in North Carolina and apply to current or former household members, dating partners, and certain family members. Ex parte orders are available on an emergency basis, followed by a full hearing within ten days.
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Defense against false or exaggerated allegations. Protective orders filed during a contested divorce or custody case sometimes do not reflect real safety concerns. We defend respondents at the ten-day hearing and work to prevent entry of a permanent order where the facts do not support it.
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Domestic violence. Protective orders often arise alongside related family law matters, and coordinated legal strategy matters.
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Divorce. When abuse is part of the marriage, a 50-B order can reshape the divorce timeline, property access, and temporary support orders.
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Child custody. A 50-B order can include temporary custody and visitation terms. These affect later custody litigation, sometimes significantly.
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Emergency ex parte orders. When immediate harm is a real risk, a judge can issue a temporary order the same day a petition is filed. The respondent then has an opportunity to respond at the ten-day hearing.
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Modification and renewal of existing orders. Protective orders can be extended, renewed, or modified based on changing circumstances. Renewal requires timely filing before the original order expires.
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Violation proceedings. When a respondent violates the terms of a protective order, civil contempt and criminal consequences follow. We represent both sides in violation proceedings.
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50-C civil no-contact orders. For non-domestic situations such as stalking or harassment by someone who is not a partner or household member, Chapter 50C provides a separate form of relief.
North Carolina Legal Requirements for Protective Orders
Chapter 50B of the North Carolina General Statutes creates the domestic violence protective order system. Chapter 50C covers civil no-contact orders for non-domestic situations. The definitions, procedures, and consequences are specific.
Who Can File Under 50B. Under N.C.G.S. § 50B-1, the petitioner must have a “personal relationship” with the respondent. That means a current or former spouse, someone of the opposite sex with whom the petitioner lives or has lived, a parent or child, a grandparent or grandchild, a current or former dating partner, or someone with a child in common. Without a qualifying personal relationship, a 50-B order is not available. Chapter 50C fills some of that gap.
What Counts as Domestic Violence. The same statute defines domestic violence to include attempting to cause or intentionally causing bodily injury, placing another in fear of imminent serious bodily injury or continued harassment rising to such a level as to inflict substantial emotional distress, and committing certain sex offenses.
Emergency Relief and Ten-Day Hearing. Under N.C.G.S. § 50B-2, a court may issue an ex parte order the same day a petition is filed if there is a risk of imminent danger. A hearing on a full protective order must be held within ten days.
Terms of the Order. Under N.C.G.S. § 50B-3, the court can order the respondent to stay away from the petitioner, surrender firearms, vacate a shared residence, pay temporary support, and address temporary custody. Initial orders last up to one year and may be renewed.
Criminal Consequences of Violations. Violation of a 50-B order is a Class A1 misdemeanor and, in certain circumstances involving firearms or repeat offenses, a felony.
Guilford County Family Court Practice. Protective order hearings in High Point and Greensboro follow the Guilford County Family Court scheduling rules. Preparation between the filing and the ten-day hearing is where most of these cases are won or lost.
Important Aspects of a High Point Order of Protection Case
The Ten-Day Hearing Is Where Everything Happens
Ex parte orders are temporary. The hearing within ten days is the real proceeding, and it is where evidence is tested, witnesses are cross-examined, and the judge decides whether a full one-year order is appropriate. Preparation is critical. Photographs, text messages, medical records, call logs, recordings, witness statements, and police reports need to be collected and organized in advance.
Consequences That Reach Beyond the Courtroom
A 50-B order affects much more than contact with the petitioner. It triggers federal firearms restrictions under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(8). It can affect employment in law enforcement, the military, or any profession requiring a security clearance. It can change custody orders and can be used as evidence in divorce proceedings. Clients defending against a 50-B need to understand every downstream consequence before the hearing.
False or Retaliatory Allegations
Not every 50-B petition reflects genuine safety concerns. Some are filed strategically during contested custody or divorce cases. North Carolina courts are alert to this, and judges apply serious scrutiny to petitions that surface at moments convenient to ongoing litigation. A well-prepared defense shows the court the full context, including timing, prior communications, and any pattern of similar allegations.
Temporary Custody and Possession of the Home
Under 50-B, a judge can order the respondent out of a shared home, award temporary custody of children, and set temporary child support and possession of personal property. These orders can remain in place throughout the life of the protective order. For parents, this means the 50-B hearing may effectively decide initial custody. This is why these hearings require the same preparation as a contested custody proceeding.
Coordinating With Related Cases
Protective orders often run alongside criminal charges, divorce filings, or custody actions. Decisions in one case affect the others. Statements made at a 50-B hearing may show up in a criminal trial. Custody terms in a 50-B order may influence permanent custody rulings later. Our firm coordinates across all related matters to prevent inconsistent positions and preserve the client’s broader position.
Contact Spagnola Law Firm
If you need to file a protective order in High Point or if you have been served with a 50-B petition and need to defend yourself, it is important to act quickly. Our firm has handled domestic violence protective order matters in Guilford County for nearly three decades, and Sam Spagnola brings Board Certified credentials to every hearing.
Contact us today to schedule a consultation.