Domestic Violence Lawyer in Arizona — Defend Your Rights, Record & Future
Domestic Violence Lawyer Arizona: Allegations under ARS 13-3601 trigger fast-moving no-contact orders, mandatory booking decisions, and collateral risks to firearms and employment. From Tempe Municipal Court to Maricopa County Superior Court, we intervene early to challenge probable cause, release terms, and charging decisions tailored to Arizona’s procedures.
Arizona Domestic Violence Laws & Penalties
In Arizona, “domestic violence” is a legal designation that attaches to an underlying offense when the parties share one of the relationships listed in ARS 13-3601. The statute covers spouses and former spouses, people who live or lived together, those with a child in common, family members related by blood or court order, and people in a current or past romantic or sexual relationship. The designation can attach to crimes such as assault (ARS 13-1203), criminal damage (ARS 13-1602), threatening or intimidating (ARS 13-1202), disorderly conduct (ARS 13-2904), harassment (ARS 13-2921), stalking (ARS 13-2923), interfering with judicial proceedings (e.g., violating an order of protection, ARS 13-2810), and trespass (ARS 13-1502/13-1503).
Arizona prosecutions are filed in different courts depending on the charge. Misdemeanor domestic violence cases are commonly heard in limited-jurisdiction courts such as Tempe Municipal Court, Mesa Municipal Court, Phoenix Municipal Court, Glendale City Court, or Maricopa County Justice Courts. Felony-designated domestic violence cases proceed in the county superior courts, including Maricopa County Superior Court, Pinal County Superior Court, Mohave County Superior Court, and Yavapai County Superior Court.
The domestic violence designation can increase the consequences. Courts often impose no-contact conditions at the Initial Appearance under Rule 7.2, Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure. Judges may also impose domestic-violence-specific counseling as a condition of probation under ARS 13-901 and consistent with ARS 13-3601. A separate statute, ARS 13-3601.02, creates “Aggravated Domestic Violence” when a person has prior domestic-violence convictions within 84 months; that felony carries mandatory jail terms measured in months before any release eligibility.
Protective orders are governed by ARS 13-3602. An Order of Protection can be issued by municipal, justice, or superior courts. It may restrict contact, exclude a person from a residence, and, in some cases, direct firearm surrender during the order’s term. Violations are typically charged as interfering with judicial proceedings (ARS 13-2810), a Class 1 misdemeanor frequently filed in city or justice courts. For a deeper dive on OOPs and hearings, see our post What Is an Order of Protection in Arizona.
Because the underlying offenses often involve threats or physical force, domestic violence allegations regularly overlap with assault law. If your case includes allegations under ARS 13-1203 or 13-1204, review our Assault Lawyer resource for how Arizona juries evaluate injury evidence, self-defense, and credibility in city and superior courts. When felony exposure is on the table — for example, stalking under ARS 13-2923 or aggravated assault charged in superior court — align your plan with our Felony Defense Lawyer insights on Arizona charging ranges and plea structures.
| Underlying Offense | Arizona Statute | Typical Level | Potential Penalties in Arizona | DV-Specific Consequences |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assault (intentional, knowing, or reckless injury; or reasonable apprehension of injury) | ARS 13-1203 | Class 1 misdemeanor (felony if aggravated under ARS 13-1204) | Misdemeanor ranges per ARS 13-707 & 13-802: up to 6 months jail and up to $2,500 fine for Class 1; felony ranges per ARS 13-702 | DV designation triggers no-contact orders, probation terms with counseling, and firearm disability under federal law for qualifying misdemeanor convictions |
| Threatening or Intimidating | ARS 13-1202 | Often Class 1 misdemeanor; can be felony in specified circumstances | Misdemeanor ranges per ARS 13-707 & 13-802; felony ranges per ARS 13-702 | Possible protective order under ARS 13-3602; enhanced probation conditions |
| Disorderly Conduct (domestic context) | ARS 13-2904 | Class 1 misdemeanor (Class 6 felony if reckless display or discharge of a firearm) | Misdemeanor or felony ranges as applicable | DV designation with counseling requirements and no-contact terms |
| Criminal Damage | ARS 13-1602 | Misdemeanor or felony depending on damage amount | Ranges vary by value thresholds; misdemeanors per ARS 13-707 & 13-802; felonies per ARS 13-702 | Restitution to the alleged victim; DV probation terms |
| Harassment | ARS 13-2921 | Commonly Class 1 misdemeanor | Misdemeanor ranges per ARS 13-707 & 13-802 | Order of Protection restrictions; counseling |
| Stalking | ARS 13-2923 | Felony (class varies by conduct) | Felony ranges per ARS 13-702 | Strict release conditions; protective orders limiting contact and travel |
| Interfering with Judicial Proceedings (violating OOP) | ARS 13-2810 | Class 1 misdemeanor | Up to 6 months jail and up to $2,500 fine per ARS 13-707 & 13-802 | New case can affect bond and alleged probation status |
| Criminal Trespass (1st/2nd degree) | ARS 13-1503 / 13-1502 | Class 1 or 3 misdemeanor | Up to 6 months (Class 1) or 30 days (Class 3) per ARS 13-707 | Contact and residence exclusions via ARS 13-3602 orders |
| Aggravated Domestic Violence (prior DV convictions within 84 months) | ARS 13-3601.02 | Class 5 felony | Felony ranges per ARS 13-702 with mandatory minimum jail time before release eligibility | Mandatory incarceration measured in months; heightened supervision |
Even a first-time misdemeanor domestic violence conviction can create federal firearm consequences under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9), and an Arizona protective order may mandate firearm surrender during the order’s lifespan under ARS 13-3602. For a focused look at outcomes, see our analysis What Are the Penalties for Domestic Violence in Arizona.
Because domestic violence prosecutions often travel with other allegations, your defense plan should account for the entire case posture in the specific Arizona court where it is pending. Our Criminal Defense Lawyer hub explains how disclosure under Rule 15, Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure, plea deadlines, and trial settings vary across municipal, justice, and superior courts statewide.
Firm Snapshot
Oliverson Law DUI & Criminal Defense is based at 60 E Rio Salado Pkwy, Suite 900, Tempe, AZ 85281. Founded in 2009, we represent clients in courts across Arizona, from Glendale City Court and Phoenix Municipal Court to the county superior courts. Our approach is informed by experience inside Arizona courtrooms and prosecutor’s offices.
What Happens After an Arizona Arrest
Arizona domestic violence arrests move quickly, often beginning with a same-day appearance in a city, justice, or superior court. Whether your case is in Tempe Municipal Court, Mesa Municipal Court, or Maricopa County Superior Court, the timeline is set by the Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure and the Victims’ Bill of Rights in Title 13.
Arrest, Booking & Initial Appearance
After arrest, you will be booked and brought before a judge for an Initial Appearance, typically within 24 hours, under Rule 4.2. The court confirms identity, advises of charges, appoints counsel if eligible, and sets release conditions under Rule 7.2. In domestic violence cases, expect a no-contact order and restrictions tied to the protected party and residence.
Orders of Protection & Release Conditions
A civil Order of Protection may be issued or already in place under ARS 13-3602. The order can be served by law enforcement and takes effect immediately. You have a right to request a hearing to challenge it. Violations may lead to a new misdemeanor (ARS 13-2810). Read our guide What Is an Order of Protection in Arizona to prepare for a hearing.
Pretrial Litigation, Disclosure & Negotiations
Arizona’s Rule 15 requires the State to disclose police reports, body-worn camera files, 911 audio, and witness lists. Your defense may file motions to suppress statements, contest hearsay, or seek to preclude late evidence under the Arizona Rules of Evidence. Conferences with the Tempe City Prosecutor, Mesa City Prosecutor, or Maricopa County Attorney’s Office vary by court. Our Criminal Defense Lawyer resource explains statewide practices and deadlines.
Trial, Sentencing & Post-Judgment
Cases may resolve by dismissal, diversion where available, plea, or trial. Misdemeanor sentences are governed by ARS 13-707 and fines by ARS 13-802; felony ranges follow ARS 13-702. Courts can order DV counseling as a condition of probation (ARS 13-901) and impose restitution. Aggravated Domestic Violence under ARS 13-3601.02 carries mandatory jail before release eligibility. See Can Domestic Violence Charges Be Dropped in Arizona for charging and dismissal insights.
Call Oliverson Law DUI & Criminal Defense at (480) 582-3637. Our Tempe office coordinates appearances statewide — municipal, justice, and superior courts — and moves quickly on no-contact orders, release terms, and evidence preservation.
Defense Strategies That Fit Arizona Law
Every defense should track Arizona statutes, rules of evidence, and the local court’s practices. Below are targeted approaches we regularly evaluate in Tempe Municipal Court, Phoenix Municipal Court, Glendale City Court, justice courts, and the county superior courts handling felonies.
If a felony is alleged — for instance, stalking under ARS 13-2923 or aggravated assault under ARS 13-1204 — sentencing structures, presumptive terms, and collateral consequences expand significantly. Align your approach with our Felony Defense Lawyer guidance on Arizona’s felony ranges, mitigation, and plea negotiations.
Meet Your Legal Team
Located at 60 E Rio Salado Pkwy, Suite 900, Tempe, AZ 85281, Oliverson Law DUI & Criminal Defense applies courtroom-tested experience to Arizona domestic-violence cases in municipal, justice, and superior courts statewide. Phone: (480) 582-3637. Rating: 4.9/5 (150+ reviews).
Derek Oliverson — Founder
Derek earned his B.S. in Criminal Justice magna cum laude from Southern Utah University and his J.D. with a litigation concentration from Creighton University School of Law. Admitted to the State Bar of Arizona in October 2009, Derek’s public service spans law enforcement, prosecution, and the judiciary. After serving as a police officer in Henderson, Nevada, he prosecuted cases for the Mohave County Attorney’s Office in Arizona. He later became a judge for the Page Magistrate Court, which processed 3,000+ cases per year, and then a judge for Glendale City Court beginning in 2012, a court with a 40,000+ annual caseload. Derek left the bench in 2014 and founded Oliverson Law in 2016. That vantage point — from officer to prosecutor to Arizona city magistrate — provides rare insight into how probable cause is evaluated, how municipal prosecutors charge under ARS 13-3601, and how city courts set and modify Rule 7.2 release conditions in domestic-violence matters.
David Tangren — Attorney
David graduated from the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law, where he served as Note and Comment Editor for the International and Comparative Law Journal. As a former prosecutor with the Pima County Attorney’s Office, he handled cases from misdemeanors through the felony trial team, including assignments in the Property and Narcotics Bureau. David’s experience navigating disclosure under Rule 15 and preparing cases for juries in Arizona superior courts translates directly to domestic-violence prosecutions, which often turn on evidence management, victim-witness coordination under Title 13 rights, and motion practice grounded in the Arizona Rules of Evidence.
Together, Derek and David bring experience across Arizona courts. Whether your case sits in Tempe Municipal Court or Maricopa County Superior Court, we tailor strategy to the forum’s filing practices, plea structures, and trial calendars. For context on violent-charge overlaps in DV cases, review our Assault Lawyer resource.
Arizona Counties & Cities We Cover
We appear in municipal, justice, and superior courts across Arizona. Use the links below for county- and city-specific information about courts, prosecutors, and local procedures.
Tempe, AZScottsdale, AZMesa, AZGlendale, AZChandler, AZGilbert, AZPeoria, AZSurprise, AZGoodyear, AZBuckeye, AZParadise Valley, AZ
Frequently Asked Questions
Under ARS 13-3601, Arizona labels an offense as “domestic violence” when the victim and defendant share a qualifying relationship, including spouses, former spouses, people who live or lived together, persons with a child in common, family members, or those in a current or past romantic/sexual relationship. The designation can attach to offenses like assault (ARS 13-1203), criminal damage (ARS 13-1602), and threatening (ARS 13-1202), among others.
Orders of Protection are governed by ARS 13-3602 and can be issued by municipal, justice, or superior courts. The order may restrict contact and access to a residence and can be served by law enforcement. You have the right to request a hearing to challenge the order, present evidence, and cross-examine. Violating the order is typically charged as interfering with judicial proceedings under ARS 13-2810.
Penalties depend on the underlying charge. Misdemeanor sentencing ranges are in ARS 13-707 (jail) and ARS 13-802 (fines): up to 6 months and up to $2,500 for a Class 1, with lower ranges for Class 2 and 3. Courts often impose domestic-violence counseling under ARS 13-901. A qualifying misdemeanor DV conviction can carry federal firearm consequences under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9).
ARS 13-3601.02 elevates a case to Aggravated Domestic Violence when there are prior domestic-violence convictions within 84 months. It is a Class 5 felony with mandatory incarceration before eligibility for any release, measured in months. The statute significantly raises exposure in Arizona superior courts and affects plea options, probation eligibility, and required jail time before any release.
Not automatically. In Arizona, prosecutors decide whether to file, reduce, or dismiss charges. Victims have rights under Title 13 (Victims’ Bill of Rights) to be heard, but dismissal is governed by Rule 16 of the Arizona Rules of Criminal Procedure and prosecutorial discretion. See our analysis at /blog/can-domestic-violence-charges-be-dropped-in-arizona/ for how charging decisions typically unfold.
From the first court appearance to trial, we navigate ARS 13-3601, ARS 13-3602 hearings, and Rule 15 disclosure to protect your record and future. Contact Oliverson Law DUI & Criminal Defense, 60 E Rio Salado Pkwy, Suite 900, Tempe, AZ 85281.

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