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SHShawn HaffCriminal Defense Attorney
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Criminal Defense Attorney

Grand Rapids Domestic Violence Attorney — I Fight Back Hard

Grand Rapids domestic violence attorney Shawn Haff aggressively defends DV charges across Kent County — first-offense deferrals, PPOs, dropped charges, not-guilty verdicts. Free 24/7 call: 616-438-6719.

If you’ve been arrested for domestic violence in Michigan, you’re probably sitting in a jail cell right now — or you just got out. You’re confused. You’re angry. Maybe the situation was completely blown out of proportion, or maybe someone made a false accusation. It doesn’t matter what happened yet. What matters is what you do next.

I’m Shawn Haff, and I’ve defended hundreds of domestic violence cases across West Michigan. I know exactly how these cases play out in Kent County courts, including the specialized Kent County Domestic Violence Court. I know the prosecutors who handle these cases, and I know how to beat them.

Call me now at 616-438-6719.

The call is free. I’m available 24/7.

How Shawn Can Help You: Insights from a Seasoned Domestic Violence Lawyer

Under Michigan law, domestic violence is an assault or assault and battery against a person you have a domestic relationship with. This includes:

  • A spouse or former spouse
  • A person you share a child with
  • A current or former dating partner
  • A person you live with or have lived with

Michigan categorizes DV charges into multiple levels, each carrying increasingly severe penalties:

Domestic Violence — First Offense (MCL 750.81)

A misdemeanor punishable by up to 93 days in jail and fines up to $500. Even a first offense can result in probation, mandatory counseling, and a no-contact order.

Aggravated Domestic Violence (MCL 750.81a)

If the assault causes serious or aggravated injury, this becomes aggravated domestic violence — a misdemeanor punishable by up to 1 year in jail and fines up to $1,000.

Domestic Violence — Second Offense

A second DV conviction (with a prior) is a misdemeanor carrying up to 1 year in jail and fines up to $1,000. Prosecutors treat second offenses much more aggressively than first offenses — which means you need a criminal defense attorney who fights even harder.

Domestic Violence — Third Offense

A third DV conviction is a felony carrying up to 5 years in prison and fines up to $5,000. This is where DV charges escalate from misdemeanor to felony territory. Judges take repeat offenses extremely seriously, and prison time becomes very real.

Assault With a Dangerous Weapon (MCL 750.82)

If a weapon is involved — even a household object used as a weapon — you could face a felony with up to 4 years in prison.

Domestic Assault by Strangulation (MCL 750.84)

Prosecutors increasingly charge strangulation or suffocation as a separate felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison. All it takes is an allegation that you impeded someone’s breathing or blood flow — even briefly, and even without any lasting injury. These charges are serious, frequently overcharged, and demand an aggressive, evidence-based defense.

The Arrest Process: What You Need to Know

Michigan has a mandatory arrest policy for domestic violence. This means if police respond to a DV call and have probable cause to believe an assault occurred, they must make an arrest. They don’t have discretion. Even if the alleged victim tells police they don’t want to press charges, you’re getting arrested.

After arrest, you’ll be arraigned — typically within 24-48 hours. The judge will set bond conditions, which almost always include a no-contact order with the alleged victim. Violating that order — even a text message — is a separate criminal offense.

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No-Contact Orders and Personal Protection Orders (PPOs)

Two very different orders can keep you away from your own home and family, and people constantly confuse them:

  • No-contact bond condition: Set by the criminal court at your arraignment. It bars any contact with the alleged victim — in person, by phone, by text, even through a friend. Violating it can put you back in jail and adds a brand-new charge, so I move fast to modify these conditions when children, shared housing, or a family business are involved.
  • Personal Protection Order (PPO): A separate civil order under MCL 600.2950 that the alleged victim can request — sometimes without you ever being in the room. A PPO can force you out of your own home and off your own property. Violating one is criminal contempt, punishable by jail. If a PPO has been entered or requested against you, I can challenge it at a hearing and cross-examine the person who sought it.

How Domestic Violence Charges Affect Your Life

DV charges reach far beyond the courtroom:

Child Custody

Michigan courts consider domestic violence heavily in custody determinations. A DV conviction creates a legal presumption against joint custody under MCL 722.25a.

Gun Rights

Under the federal Lautenberg Amendment, a domestic violence conviction results in a lifetime federal firearms prohibition. You lose your right to own or possess firearms — permanently.

Employment

A DV conviction shows up on background checks and can cost you your job, professional licenses, and future opportunities.

Immigration

For non-citizens, a DV conviction can trigger deportation proceedings.

Domestic Violence Cases in Grand Rapids & Kent County

Most of my domestic violence cases run through the courts right here in Kent County — the 61st District Court in downtown Grand Rapids, the 62A and 62B District Courts in Wyoming and Kentwood, the 63rd District Court, and felony matters in the 17th Circuit Court. Grand Rapids also runs a specialized domestic violence docket, and the Kent County Prosecutor’s Office has a dedicated domestic violence unit that pursues these cases hard — often over the objection of the very person who called 911.

I’ve stood in these courtrooms hundreds of times. I know the prosecutors, the judges, the pretrial officers, and which diversion options are actually on the table in each court. That local knowledge is the difference between a conviction that follows you for life and a resolution that lets you move on.

My Defense Strategies for DV Cases

I don’t just show up and negotiate a plea. I investigate, challenge, and fight. My common defense strategies include:

  • False Accusations: In my experience, DV cases involve false accusations more than almost any other charge. Custody disputes, divorce proceedings, and personal vendettas drive people to lie. I expose those motives.
  • Self-Defense: If you were protecting yourself, Michigan law allows it. I build the evidence to prove it.
  • Lack of Evidence: Many DV arrests are based on a single person’s word with no witnesses, no injuries, and no physical evidence. I challenge every piece of the prosecution’s case.
  • Inconsistent Statements: I obtain police reports, 911 recordings, and witness statements — then I find the inconsistencies.
  • Constitutional Violations: If police violated your rights during the arrest or investigation, I move to suppress that evidence.

First-Offense Deferral: A Second Chance (MCL 769.4a)

If this is your first domestic violence offense, Michigan law gives you a powerful option most people have never heard of. Under MCL 769.4a — often called the domestic violence deferral or “spouse abuse” deferral — a first-time offender can plead to the charge and have the court hold the conviction in abeyance while completing probation and any required counseling. Finish successfully and the case is dismissed — it never becomes a public conviction.

That means no conviction on your record and, critically, you may avoid the lifetime firearms ban that comes with a domestic violence conviction. Not everyone qualifies, and the deferral can only be used once in your life — so it has to be handled correctly the first time. Securing this outcome, or something better, is exactly the kind of result I fight for.

Why You Need Me on Your Side

I’ve handled domestic violence cases in the 63rd District Court, 61st District Court, 62B District Court, and 17th Circuit Court. I know how the Kent County DV Court operates. I know which prosecutors handle these cases and what it takes to get charges reduced or dismissed.

Check my case results — they speak for themselves.

Don’t wait. Call me at 616-438-6719 right now. A DV charge moves fast, and I need to be involved before you make a mistake that hurts your case. If you’re also interested in clearing your record after a case resolves, ask me about expungement options.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens when you get arrested for domestic violence in Michigan?

Michigan has a mandatory arrest policy — if police have probable cause to believe domestic violence occurred, they must arrest someone. After arrest, you’ll be arraigned within 24-48 hours. The judge will set bond conditions, which almost always include a no-contact order with the alleged victim. Violating that order is a separate criminal offense.

Can domestic violence charges be dropped if the victim doesn’t want to press charges?

No. In Michigan, the prosecutor — not the victim — decides whether to pursue charges. Even if the alleged victim asks to drop the case, the prosecutor can and often will proceed. This is why you need an experienced defense attorney who can challenge the evidence independently.

Does a domestic violence conviction affect gun rights?

Yes. Under the federal Lautenberg Amendment, any domestic violence conviction — even a misdemeanor — results in a lifetime federal firearms prohibition. You cannot own, possess, or purchase firearms. This prohibition is permanent and applies nationwide regardless of state law.

How does domestic violence affect child custody in Michigan?

A domestic violence conviction creates a legal presumption against joint custody under Michigan law (MCL 722.25a). Courts weigh DV heavily in custody determinations, and a conviction can significantly limit your parenting time and decision-making authority.

What are the penalties for domestic violence in Michigan?

First-offense DV is a misdemeanor with up to 93 days in jail. Aggravated DV carries up to 1 year. A second offense is a misdemeanor carrying up to 1 year in jail and a $1,000 fine. Penalties also include fines, mandatory counseling, probation, no-contact orders, and a potential lifetime ban on firearm possession.

"I was falsely accused of domestic violence. Shawn took my case to trial and got me a not guilty verdict. I owe him my freedom! Thank you!" Willie R. read more testimonials

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