DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AGAINST ELDERLY - New Jersey
Criminal Offenses
against the Elderly and Disabled
Domestic
Violence Attorneys Where an elderly or disabled person is subjected to a
criminal offense listed as an act of domestic violence, police shall follow the
appropriate procedure.
Where
the actions or omissions against an elderly or disabled person do not meet the
domestic violence conditions, police may file appropriate criminal charges
against the offender.
A
person may be charged with Endangering the Welfare of the Elderly or Disabled,
N.J.S.A. 2C:24-8, if the person has:
1)
A legal duty to care for or has assumed continuing responsibility for the care
of a person who is:
a. 60 years of age or older, or
b. emotionally, psychologically or physically
disabled, and
2)
The person unreasonably neglects or fails to permit to be done
3)
Any act necessary for the physical or mental health of the elderly or disabled
person
RESTRAINING
ORDER
What
Happens After Obtaining a Restraining Order?
Service of Temporary Restraining Order (no-contact
order)
A. When the
victim obtains a no-contact court order but the defendant had not been arrested
by police and is present at the scene, the officer should:
1. Escort the victim to his or her home.
2. Read the conditions of the court order to
the defendant if the defendant is present.
3. Order the defendant to vacate the premises.
4. Give the defendant a reasonable period of
time to gather personal belongings, unless the court order includes specific
limits on time or duration.
5. Arrest the defendant if required by the
court order or if defendant refuses to comply with the order.
B. Where a
court order had been issued but was not served upon the defendant because the
defendant could not then be located but the defendant is now at the scene,
police should follow Paragraphs A.2-5 above.
C. When a
temporary or final restraining order is issued that requires service outside
the issuing county,
1. The restraining order, along with the
complaint and any other relevant documents (e.g. search warrant, etc.) must
immediately be brought or faxed to the sheriff's department in the issuing
county.
a) The sheriff's department in the issuing
county must similarly bring or fax the order and related documents to the sheriff's
department in the county of the defendant's residence or business.
b) the sheriff's department in the receiving
county, pursuant to local policy, will either
1. execute service on the
defendant or
2. will immediately bring or
fax the order and related documents to the police department in the
municipality in which the defendant resides or works so that it can execute
service accordingly.
c) The return of service should then be faxed
back to the sheriff's department in the issuing county, which in turn must
immediately deliver or fax the return of service to the Family Division in the
issuing county.
2. When the service of a restraining order
results in the seizure of weapons,
a) The weapons inventory should be attached to
the return of service that is brought or faxed back to the issuing county.
b) The weapons themselves, along with any
licenses, I.D. cards, or other paperwork or documentation shall be secured by
the prosecutor in the seizing county for storage. At such time that the seized
property is needed by the prosecutor or Family Division in the issuing county,
the prosecutor in the seizing county shall forward same.
3. Once service on the defendant is attempted,
successfully or unsuccessfully, the return of service portion of the TRO
(located on the back of the last page of the multipart TRO form) must be filled
out by the police or sheriff's department and immediately returned to the
Family Division prior to the scheduled final hearing date.
VIOLATING A RESTRAINING ORDER
Where a police officer determines that a party has
violated an existing restraining order either by committing a new act of
domestic violence or by violating the terms of a court order, the officer must
:
Violating Restraining Order Attorneys
1. Arrest and transport the defendant to the
police station.
2. Sign a criminal contempt charge concerning
the incident on a complaint-warrant (CDR-2).
3. The officer should sign a criminal
complaint for all related criminal offenses. (The criminal charges should be
listed on the same criminal complaint form that contains the contempt charge.)
4. Telephone, communicate in person or by
facsimile with the appropriate judge or bail unit and request bail be set on
the contempt charge.
a. During regular court hours,
bail should be set by the emergent duty Superior Court judge that day.
b. On weekends, holidays and
other times when the court is closed, bail should be set by the designated
emergent duty Superior Court judge except in those counties where a municipal
court judge has been authorized to set bail for non-indictable contempt charges
by the assignment judge.
c.
When bail is set by a judge when the courts are closed, the officer
shall arrange to have the clerk of the Family Part notified on the next working
day of the new complaint, the amount of bail, the defendant's whereabouts and
all other necessary details.
d. If a municipal court judge
set the bail, the arresting officer shall notify the clerk of that municipal
court of this information.
5. If the defendant is unable to post bail,
take appropriate steps to have the defendant incarcerated at police
headquarters or the county jail.
6. Where the officer deems there is no
probable cause to arrest or sign a criminal complaint against the defendant for
a violation of no contact court order, the officer must advise the victim of
the procedure for completing and signing a criminal complaint alleging a
violation of the court order.
a. During regular court hours,
the officer should advise the victim that the complaint must be filed with the
Family Part of the Chancery Division of Superior Court.
b. On weekends, holidays and
other hours when the court is closed.
1. the officer should transport
or arrange for transportation to have the victim taken to headquarters to sign
the complaint;
2. the alleged offender shall be charged with
contempt of a domestic violence court order, N.J.S.A. 2C:29-9. The victim must
sign the complaint. A complaint-warrant (CDR-2) must be prepared;
3. the officer in charge shall
follow standard police procedure in arranging to have a court set bail.
7. Civil complaint against the defendant for
violations of a court order pertaining to support or monetary compensation,
custody, visitation or counseling. The victim should be referred to the Family
Division Case Management Office to pursue this civil enforcement of the court
order.
Should you
require an attorney for a Restraining Order, call today for your free consult.
800-709-1131 or submit your information via our website www.simonattorneys.com
SIEZURE OF WEAPONS
NJ
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE - SIEZURE OF WEAPONS
Seizure of a Weapon for Safekeeping.
Restraining Order Attorneys
A. A police
officer who has probable cause to believe that an act of domestic violence has
been committed may:
1) Question all persons present to determine whether
there are weapons, as defined in N.J.S.A. 2C:39- 1r, on the premises.
2) If an officer sees or learns that a weapon is
present within the premises of a domestic violence incident and reasonably believes
that the weapon would expose the victim to a risk of serious bodily injury, the
officer should attempt to gain possession of the weapon
3) If the weapon is in plain view, the officer
should seize the weapon.
4) If the weapon is not in plain view but is located
within the premises jointly possessed by both the domestic violence assailant
and the domestic violence victim, the officer should obtain the consent,
preferably in writing, of the domestic violence victim to search for and to
seize the weapon.
5) If the weapon is not located within the premises
jointly possessed by the domestic violence victim and assailant but is located
upon other premises, the officer should attempt to obtain possession of the
weapon from the possessor of the weapon, either the domestic violence assailant
or a third party, by a voluntary surrender of the weapon.
6) If the domestic violence assailant or the
possessor of the weapon refuses to surrender the weapon or to allow the officer
to enter the premises to search for the named weapon, the officer should obtain
a Domestic Violence Warrant for the Search and Seizure of Weapons.
B. Seizure
of a Weapon Pursuant to Court Order.
1) If a domestic violence victim obtains a court
order directing that the domestic violence assailant surrender a named weapon,
the officer should demand that the person surrender the named weapon.
2) If the domestic violence assailant or the
possessor of the weapon refuses to surrender the weapon, the officer should:
-- inform the person that the court order authorizes
a search and seizure of the premises for the named weapon, and
-- arrest the person, if the person refuses to
surrender the named weapon, for failing to comply with the court order,
N.J.S.A. 2C:29- 9
-- conduct a search of the named premises for the
named weapon.
3) The
officer must append an inventory of seized weapons to the domestic violence
offense report.
4) Weapons seized by a police officer must be
promptly delivered to the county prosecutor along with a copy of the domestic violence
offense report and, where applicable, the domestic violence complaint and
temporary restraining order.
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Should you require representation for your
Restraining Order, call today for your free consultation with a NJ Domestic
Violence Attorney at 800-709-1131. Or visit our website to submit your request www.simonattorneys.com
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