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| Maybe I'm confused. In a protective order modification, are we not offering the bad acts to show that each act happened, thus requiring a modification? This is different from the situation where a defendant is accused of X, and we show he committed bad acts A, B, and C, which are only relevant because a person who did A, B, and C is more likely to do X.
Here, we want to show that respondent has been sitting outside her work place staring at her office window, parking down the street from her house and playing loud Peter Gabriel music on a jam box, and serenading her school with a Vuvuzela every day during study hall. Those acts show why particular modifications should be made, not that he in fact beat her up in a drunken rage one night. Right? |
| Posts: 2138 | Location: McKinney, Texas, USA | Registered: February 15, 2001 |
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| What may be happening here is some confusion regarding the rule that whatever happened prior to the issuance of the protective order is barred by res judicata from being used to obtain a modification of the order. That evidence may be referenced to put the original protective order in context, but the modification has to be supported solely by evidence of bad acts that occured after the protective order was signed. Using JohnR's example, you could argue that the protective order was granted because Def committed acts A, B & C and now he has committed acts X, Y & Z and based solely on X, Y & Z the order needs to be modified. A common problem is that Def commits acts A, B, C, D, E & F, but you only raised A, B & C to get the protective order. D, E & F were superfluous or weak. Now you want a modification and all you have is act X, which is weak, so you try to connect it to acts D, E, & F to show a pattern. The court will rightly refuse to let you go into D, E & F because you could have raised them int he original proceeding. All you are left with is wimpy act X. |
| Posts: 188 | Location: Lubbock, Texas USA | Registered: October 04, 2002 |
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