Family Violence Assault Defense · All 9 DFW Counties
DFW Family Violence Defense Attorney
Frisco-based defense for Texas family violence assault, aggravated assault, protective-order violations, and continuous-violence-against-the-family charges — all 9 DFW counties · combined 38+ years of Texas criminal trial experience including a former Dallas County prosecutor · free 24/7 consultation.
Texas Bar Licensed20+ Years Criminal DefenseTCDLA MemberFormer Dallas County DAAvailable 24/7Se Habla Español
You’re Not the First Person to Find Yourself Here at 2 a.m.
If you’re reading this in the middle of the night after an argument turned into an arrest, take a breath. A family violence charge in Texas is frightening — the squad car, the booking photo, the no-contact order, the phone calls you can’t make — but it is not the end of your case. It is the beginning. The next 72 hours matter more than you may realize, and we’ve walked thousands of clients through exactly this stretch of confusion.
The stakes are higher than most people understand. A Texas family violence assault conviction carries a permanent firearm prohibition under federal law, eliminates your eligibility for non-disclosure under Government Code § 411.0727, can be enhanced to a felony if you ever face a similar accusation again, and is treated as a deportable offense for non-citizens. A “simple” misdemeanor plea today can quietly close doors for the rest of your life — and most prosecutors will not explain those collateral consequences before asking you to sign.
L and L Law Group, PLLC is a Frisco-based criminal defense firm built for exactly this moment. We defend family violence assault cases under Texas Penal Code §§ 22.01 and 22.02 across Collin, Dallas, Denton, Tarrant, Rockwall, Kaufman, Ellis, Johnson, and Hunt counties. One of our founding attorneys spent years on the prosecution side at the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office, which means we know how the State builds these cases — and where the cases routinely break down.
Your Attorneys
Trial-Tested Texas Criminal Defense Counsel
Njeri London
Co-Founding Partner
Texas Bar No.: 24043266
Licensed since: 2006
Law school: Thurgood Marshall School of Law
Memberships: State Bar of Texas, Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association (TCDLA)
“Family violence cases are rarely as simple as the police report suggests. Our job is to slow the case down, look at the actual evidence, and tell the State’s attorneys what they don’t want to look at — the texts before the call, the witness who wasn’t interviewed, the hand injuries that happened to the wrong party. That work changes outcomes.”
Reggie London
Co-Founding Partner
Texas Bar No.: 24043514
Licensed since: 2005
Law school: Thurgood Marshall School of Law
Former: Dallas County District Attorney’s Office prosecutor
Memberships: State Bar of Texas, Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association (TCDLA)
“I prosecuted family violence cases at the Dallas County DA’s office. I know which arguments move the line prosecutors and which ones don’t. The State builds these files in a hurry — an outcry, a 911 call, a single officer’s narrative — and most of them have a soft spot if you know where to push.”
This page was written and reviewed by Njeri London, State Bar of Texas No. 24043266, and Reggie London, State Bar of Texas No. 24043514. Last reviewed: April 2026.
Quick Answer
Texas family violence assault is governed by Penal Code § 22.01 and the family-violence definition in Family Code § 71.004. A first offense is generally a Class A misdemeanor (up to 1 year jail, $4,000 fine). Strangulation, prior family violence convictions, and continuous violence within 12 months elevate the charge to a third-degree felony (2–10 years TDCJ). Lifetime federal firearm prohibition follows any conviction or deferred adjudication.
What Texas Law Treats as Family Violence Assault
Family violence is not a separate crime in Texas — it is a finding attached to an underlying assault charge. The substantive offense lives in Texas Penal Code § 22.01 (assault) or § 22.02 (aggravated assault). The relationship between you and the alleged victim — a current or former spouse, a parent or child, anyone you live with, anyone you currently or previously dated — is what triggers the family-violence enhancement under Family Code § 71.004.
Penalties scale based on conduct and history:
Class A misdemeanor (first-offense bodily injury): up to 1 year in county jail and a $4,000 fine.
Third-degree felony: 2 to 10 years in TDCJ if you have a prior family violence conviction (§ 22.01(b)(2)(A)) or if the assault involved choking or impeding breath (§ 22.01(b)(2)(B)).
Continuous Violence Against the Family under § 25.11: third-degree felony when two or more family violence assaults occur within a 12-month window — the prior incidents do not have to have been charged.
Aggravated assault against a family member with a deadly weapon (§ 22.02(b)(1)): first-degree felony, 5 to 99 years or life.
The Texas Process from Arrest to Resolution
Most Collin and Dallas County family violence arrests follow the same general path. After booking, the magistrate sets bond and almost always issues a Magistrate’s Order of Emergency Protection under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 17.292. The MOEP can prohibit any contact with the complainant, exclude you from a shared home, and bar firearm possession for 31 to 91 days — sometimes longer. Violating it under Penal Code § 25.07 is a separate crime.
From there, the case moves to the District Attorney’s Family Violence Unit. The DA reviews 911 audio, body-worn camera video, photographs, statements, and any history between the parties. The case is then formally charged or sent to a grand jury (for felonies). Pretrial appearances follow, often spanning months. Resolution typically comes through dismissal, deferred prosecution agreements, plea to a lesser non-family-violence offense, deferred adjudication, jury trial, or in some cases acquittal at bench trial.
Real Defenses in Texas Family Violence Cases
Family violence cases are routinely defended — not by denying that something happened, but by examining what actually happened and applying the law correctly. Defenses we use regularly:
Self-defense and defense of others under Penal Code Chapter 9. Texas law explicitly permits the use of force, and in some circumstances deadly force, to protect yourself or another from an aggressor.
Mutual combat and consent under § 22.06 in cases where both parties agreed to physical contact short of serious bodily injury.
Lack of bodily injury. The State must prove pain or physical impairment. Photographs taken hours later, with no medical record and inconsistent statements, may not satisfy that burden.
False or exaggerated allegations, common in custody disputes, post-breakup retaliation, and immigration manipulation.
Suppression motions when statements were taken in violation of Miranda v. Arizona, when the warrantless arrest exceeded the scope of Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 14.03, or when the residence was searched without consent.
Cross-examination of the outcry witness under Article 38.072 — the procedural rules are technical and frequently violated.
What L and L Law Group Does Differently
We treat the first 72 hours as the most important window in any family violence case. We push for the lightest sustainable bond conditions at the magistrate hearing, intervene with the DA’s Family Violence Unit before charging decisions are final, and start the defense investigation immediately — canvassing for surveillance, recovering text and 911 audio under the Texas Public Information Act, and locating witnesses while memories are fresh. Where appropriate, we work with our clients to file an Affidavit of Non-Prosecution properly and on the timeline that prosecutors take seriously.
We appear daily in the courts that matter for our clients: the Collin County Criminal Courts Building in McKinney, the Frank Crowley Courts Building in Dallas, the Denton County Courts Complex, and the Tarrant County Family Justice Center in Fort Worth. Local relationships and a clear understanding of each county’s family-violence prosecutorial culture — Collin’s policy preferences, Dallas’s diversion programs, Denton’s pretrial review process — meaningfully shape what is achievable for our clients.
Source:State Bar of Texas official YouTube channel — non-affiliated educational content. Linked per Texas State Bar advertising guidance; not legal advice for any individual case.
By the Numbers
Texas Family Violence Law — What the Statute Actually Says
Lifetime
Federal firearm prohibition for any family violence conviction or deferred adjudication — even a Class A misdemeanor.
All figures cited above are statutory facts — verifiable directly against the linked Texas Penal Code, Family Code, Code of Criminal Procedure, Government Code, and federal statute.
How We Defend Family Violence Cases
Our Five-Step Defense Process
01
Same-day call. Bond and MOEP triage.
A licensed attorney answers your first call — not an intake assistant. We dispatch counsel to the magistrate hearing where possible, secure release on the lowest sustainable bond conditions, and begin the work to narrow or modify the Magistrate’s Order of Emergency Protection.
02
Evidence preservation and investigation.
Body-worn camera, 911 audio, photographs, neighbor statements, ring/doorbell video, and your phone records are pulled before they expire. We document any defensive injuries, gather text and call history, and identify witnesses the police never interviewed.
03
Pre-charging intervention with the DA.
Before the charge is formally filed, we present mitigation, defense facts, and any Affidavit of Non-Prosecution to the District Attorney’s Family Violence Unit. Many cases resolve at this stage — declined, reduced, or routed to deferred prosecution — before they ever reach a courtroom.
04
Aggressive pretrial motion practice.
Motions to suppress unlawfully obtained statements, exclude prejudicial 404(b) extraneous-offense evidence, attack outcry-witness designations under Article 38.072, and challenge probable cause for warrantless arrest. Many cases are won on motion before any jury is seated.
05
Trial-ready resolution.
Whether the goal is dismissal, plea to a non-family-violence offense (preserving firearm rights), deferred adjudication structured to allow non-disclosure, or jury trial, we prepare every case as if it is going to verdict. Prosecutors notice. Outcomes follow.
Client Outcomes
Social Proof & Case Results
5.0
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Average rating across verified client reviews
Recent Client Reviews
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
“A 911 call I never made put me in cuffs in front of my kids. Body-cam contradicted the report and they used it to get the case dismissed. The family-violence finding never attached.”
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
“I was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Self-defense facts were strong but messy. The case ended with a misdemeanor reduction and no felony record.”
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
“Continuous Violence Against the Family is a third-degree felony. They got it reduced to a single Class A misdemeanor and we negotiated out the family-violence finding entirely.”
Representative Case Results
Family-violence assault dismissed — Body-cam analysis contradicted the offense report; case dismissed. Dallas County, 2024.
No affirmative finding of family violence — Plea negotiated without §42.013 finding; federal firearm rights preserved. Collin County, 2024.
Aggravated assault reduced to misdemeanor — Second-degree felony reduced to Class A after self-defense facts developed. Tarrant County, 2023.
Continuous Violence Against the Family dismissed — §25.11 count dismissed after one of the predicate cases was thrown out. Dallas County, 2024.
Protective-order hearing won — Judge denied final protective order after cross-examination of complainant. Collin County, 2024.
Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Each case is unique and depends on its own facts and applicable law.
Frequently Asked Questions
Texas Family Violence Assault — FAQ
Texas Family Code § 71.004 defines family violence as an act by a family or household member, or someone in a current or past dating relationship, intended to cause physical harm, bodily injury, assault, or sexual assault, or a threat that places the person in fear of imminent physical harm. The relationship covers spouses, former spouses, parents, children, foster parents, anyone living in the household, and any current or past dating partner — even if you never lived together.
Not automatically. In Texas, the State — not the complainant — decides whether to prosecute. Even if the alleged victim signs an Affidavit of Non-Prosecution, the District Attorney can still pursue the case using 911 calls, photographs, medical records, and officer testimony. An ANP filed with the help of an attorney can carry significantly more weight than one filed without counsel.
Yes. Under federal law (18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9)) any conviction or deferred adjudication for family violence assault — even a Class A misdemeanor — results in a lifetime prohibition on possessing firearms or ammunition. Texas state law also restricts firearms during active protective orders under Penal Code § 46.04(c). Plea structure matters — reducing the charge to a non-family-violence offense can preserve firearm rights.
The base offense is the same — Texas Penal Code § 22.01 assault causing bodily injury. The “family violence” classification comes from the relationship between the parties under Family Code § 71.004. A finding of family violence enhances penalties, restricts firearm rights, prevents non-disclosure of the record, and allows future similar offenses to be enhanced to a felony under § 22.01(b)(2)(A).
Yes. A second family violence assault under Penal Code § 22.01(b)(2)(A) is a third-degree felony — 2 to 10 years in TDCJ. Continuous Violence Against the Family under § 25.11 elevates two or more family violence assaults within 12 months to a third-degree felony, even if the prior incidents were never charged. Strangulation under § 22.01(b)(2)(B) is also a third-degree felony for a first offense.
Within 24 hours of arrest, you appear before a magistrate at the Collin County Detention Facility for a probable cause review. The judge sets bond and frequently issues a Magistrate’s Order of Emergency Protection (MOEP) under Code of Criminal Procedure Article 17.292. The MOEP can prohibit contact with the complainant, exclude you from a shared home, and bar firearm possession for up to 91 days — often longer. An attorney at this hearing can meaningfully shape the conditions.
Yes — significantly. Family violence assault is generally a “crime of domestic violence” under 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(E), making non-citizens deportable upon conviction or deferred adjudication. It also triggers inadmissibility under § 1182. Anyone facing family violence charges who is not a U.S. citizen should consult both a criminal defense attorney and an immigration attorney before any plea.
Sometimes. Deferred adjudication is technically available for misdemeanor and many felony family violence assaults under Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 42A. However, completion of deferred still triggers the federal firearm prohibition under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9), and a finding of family violence on a deferred case prevents non-disclosure under Government Code § 411.0727(b)(2)(A). Plea strategy matters — discuss carefully with counsel.
A Magistrate’s Emergency Protection Order (MOEP, Article 17.292) is issued at bond by a magistrate after arrest and lasts 31 to 91 days. A protective order under Family Code § 85.022 is sought separately, typically by the complainant or the District Attorney’s office, and can last up to two years (longer in some cases). Violating either is a separate crime under Penal Code § 25.07 — a Class A misdemeanor at minimum, and a third-degree felony for repeat or aggravated violations.
Misdemeanor family violence cases in Collin County and Dallas County typically resolve in 6 to 14 months. Felony cases take longer — usually 9 to 24 months — depending on grand jury, lab testing, and trial scheduling. Many cases resolve through pretrial motions, plea negotiation to non-family-violence offenses, or dismissal long before trial. Each case is unique and timing depends on specific facts.
DFW Courts We Practice In
Local Court Knowledge Across the Metroplex
Collin County Criminal Courts Building
2100 Bloomdale Rd McKinney, TX 75071
Collin County’s Family Violence Unit emphasizes early-case review and Batterer’s Intervention diversion programs. Pretrial intervention is available for some first-offense cases.
Frank Crowley Courts Building
133 N Riverfront Blvd Dallas, TX 75207
Dallas County operates a dedicated Family Violence Division and runs Conditional Dismissal Programs (CDP) for qualifying first offenders. Active grand jury review for all felony FV cases.
Denton County Courts Complex
1450 E McKinney St Denton, TX 76209
Denton routes family violence cases through a centralized pretrial review and offers a structured Veterans Treatment Court for qualifying veterans.
Tarrant County Family Justice Center
200 E Weatherford St Fort Worth, TX 76196
Tarrant County’s Family Violence Unit is among the most active in the state. Aggressive grand jury practice and limited pretrial diversion availability.
We also appear in Rockwall, Kaufman, Ellis, Johnson, and Hunt county courts on family violence matters and routinely handle cases requiring magistrate intervention or emergency-order modification across all 9 DFW counties.
Visit Our Office
L and L Law Group, PLLC
5899 Preston Rd, Suite 101 Frisco, TX 75034 (214) 466-1398
Free Downloads
Family Violence Assault — Intake Form & Emergency Cheatsheet
Talk to a Texas Family Violence Defense Attorney 24/7
Available 24/7 — we respond promptly. Confidential consultation. Your information is protected. No obligation. Se habla español. We accept payment plans.
This website is for general informational purposes only and constitutes attorney advertising under the Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct. The information provided here is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship between you and L and L Law Group, PLLC. An attorney-client relationship is formed only through a signed written engagement agreement.
Past results described or suggested on this page do not guarantee or predict similar outcomes in any current or future matter. Each case is unique and depends on its own facts, applicable law, and the procedural posture of the jurisdiction. Do not rely on any information on this page as a substitute for individual legal advice from a licensed Texas attorney.
L and L Law Group, PLLC attorneys are licensed to practice in the State of Texas. Njeri London (Texas Bar No. 24043266) is the attorney responsible for the content of this page. None of the attorneys at L and L Law Group, PLLC are Board Certified by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization unless specifically and separately stated.
Please do not transmit any confidential information to L and L Law Group, PLLC by email, web form, or telephone before a written engagement is in place. Communications submitted through this website may not be confidential or privileged until that relationship is established.