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dhausey
Jan 21, 2009, 01:42 PM
My fiancé and I broke up for a few months a year ago. In that time, he started seeing this woman that turned out to be a total fatal attraction. She wasn't too happy when he decided not to see her anymore. She cracked his windshield twice, keyed my car, and broke the windows out of our apartment, a long with a lot for terrible phone calls, and he and I filed several police reports. She has also filed several false charges on him claiming that he hit her. All of which have been D.A. rejects. We both have restraining orders against her, and she even has a warrant for her arrest for Terrorist Threats against us and filing false police reports. Recently, he received a letter saying that he may be in violation of summary probation and that he needed to appear in court. (He was on summary probation for a dui). When he went to court he found out that in February of last year she had filed another faulty charge against him claiming he hit her yet again. He was never arrested, never sent any kind of notice, and never had a warrant for it or anything like that. The charge just happened to be filed a day after she had been served the temporary restraining orders (guess she didn't like that). The DA decided to not drop that case after almost a year and no evidence of anything. The picture they took of her doesn't even look like she had been touched. This morning he has to appear at CDC for a probation violation hearing. The girl is still crazy and even called him again this morning to remind him about court, which is a clear violation of the restraining order. We also found out that she has a history of things like this. We found out from the police that she basically did the same thing to another couple a few years back, stalking a filing false police reports, and that they also have restraining orders against her. What do you think the outcome will be? Will he get anytime or community service?

Fr_Chuck
Jan 21, 2009, 01:54 PM
When he goes with his attorney to the hearing, with the brief case of evidence, showing all of the complaints, showing false claims that were dismissed. Then most likely nothing will happen

If he walks in with no evidence and no attorney just telling his story, well it is a larger risk

dhausey
Jan 21, 2009, 02:03 PM
He has a public defender but even the judge questioned the DA for going forward with the case because the restraining orders and all of the filed reports against her are in the system.