Maryland Criminal Defense · Baltimore City · Baltimore County · Statewide

Civil Orders Defense · Maryland District & Circuit Courts

Peace Orders &
Protective Orders
Defense — Maryland

Whether it’s called a peace order, protective order, or protection order — if one has been filed against you in Maryland, you need to act immediately. A final order can cost you your home, your firearms, your custody rights, and your career. Allan Rombro defends respondents at every stage of the process.

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Super Lawyers — Selected
Avvo Rating 10.0
National Trial Lawyers — Top 100
Best DUI/DWI Attorney 2017
Martindale-Hubbell BV Rated
Americas Top 100 Criminal Defense
Google · 4.8★ · 113 Reviews
Top DUI Attorney — NADD 2016
Know Your Rights as a Respondent

These Orders Are More Serious
Than Most People Realize

In Maryland, a restraining order is called either a protective order or a peace order — the terms are often used interchangeably, but they are legally distinct. Either way, if one has been filed against you, the consequences of a final order entering can be severe and long-lasting.

Protective orders are typically tied to domestic relationships — spouses, intimate partners, family members, or cohabitants. Peace orders cover everyone else: neighbors, coworkers, acquaintances, former dating partners who don’t qualify under the domestic criteria. Both are civil proceedings — but violating either one is a criminal offense.

A final order becomes part of your permanent public record. It can be found in background checks, affect your employment and professional licenses, restrict your access to your own home, force the surrender of all firearms you own, and directly impact custody and visitation in family court proceedings.

There are over 20,000 temporary protective orders granted in Maryland each year, and judges enter final orders in a significant number of those cases. The best time to defend is before the final order is issued. Once a final order is entered, your options narrow considerably. Call Allan Rombro immediately.

What a Final Order Can Do to You

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Know the Difference

Protective Orders vs.
Peace Orders in Maryland

Protective Order
Maryland Family Law § 4-501 · Domestic Violence Context
Who qualifies
Current or former spouses, intimate partners, cohabitants, family members, parents of a shared child, persons in a sexual relationship
Court
District Court or Circuit Court (if active family law matter)
Filing fee
No filing fee

Temp. order
Up to 7 days (extendable for good cause)

Final order
Up to 1 year, extendable to 2 years upon good cause shown
Firearms
Mandatory surrender of all firearms upon entry of order
Can include
Vacating shared residence, temporary child custody, emergency family maintenance
Record
Permanent public record; not eligible for shielding unless successfully appealed
Peace Order
Maryland Courts & Judicial Proceedings § 3-1501 · Non-Domestic
Who qualifies
Anyone who does not qualify for a protective order — neighbors, coworkers, acquaintances, former partners not covered by domestic criteria
Court
District Court only (exclusive jurisdiction)
Filing fee
$20 filing fee + $30 service fee (may be waived for indigency; service fee cannot be waived)

Temp. order
Interim order: ~2 business days; Temporary order: up to 30 days
Final order
Up to 6 months, extendable for an additional 6 months
Firearms
May require surrender depending on underlying allegations
Can include
No-contact provisions, stay-away orders, mandatory counseling or mediation
Record
Public record; consent order may be shielded after expiration following a hearing
How the Process Works

The Three-Stage Order
Process in Maryland

Both protective orders and peace orders follow a three-stage process. Understanding each stage — and having representation at every step — is critical. The final hearing is where the order is won or lost.

1. Interim / Emergency Order

Duration: ~2 business days
When courts are closed, a petitioner can file with the District Court Commissioner (open 24/7). If the Commissioner finds reasonable grounds, they issue an interim protective order served by law enforcement — effective until the next court session. If courts are open, petitioner files directly and receives an immediate hearing before a judge.

2. Temporary Order Hearing

Duration: Up to 7 days
The petitioner appears before a judge who decides — based on the petitioner's testimony alone — whether to issue a temporary protective order. As the respondent, you typically are not present at this stage. The temporary order remains in effect until the final hearing, which is usually scheduled within 7 days.

3. Final Hearing

Final order: Up to 1 year (extendable to 2)
Both parties appear before a judge. Each side presents evidence, witnesses, and testimony. The petitioner must prove the alleged act by a preponderance of the evidence. This is your primary opportunity to contest the order — and having experienced representation here is essential. Allan Rombro will cross-examine the petitioner, challenge the evidence, and present your defense.

1. Interim Peace Order

Duration: Until next District Court session (~2 business days)
Issued by a District Court Commissioner when courts are closed. The petitioner must show that an abusive act occurred within 30 days of filing. The interim order is served on the respondent and expires at the end of the second business day — or the next day the court is open if that day falls when court is closed.

2. Temporary Peace Order Hearing

Duration: Up to 30 days
A judge hears the petitioner's account and, if they find reasonable grounds, issues a temporary peace order. As with protective orders, the respondent is typically not present at this stage. The temporary order remains in effect until the final hearing, scheduled approximately one week later.

3. Final Peace Order Hearing

Final order: Up to 6 months (extendable by 6 months)
Both parties appear before a District Court judge. The petitioner must prove the alleged act by a preponderance of the evidence. The respondent has the right to present witnesses, cross-examine the petitioner, and offer evidence. A final peace order is a public record — having it successfully defeated at this stage protects your record entirely.

Why You Must Fight This

What a Final Order Costs You

Loss of Your Home

A protective order can require you to vacate a residence you own or lease — even if your name is the only name on the deed or lease. You may be removed from your home within hours of service, with no immediate right to return for personal belongings.

Custody & Visitation

A protective order entered in the context of a domestic relationship can include emergency custody provisions and directly harm your standing in any ongoing or future family court proceeding. Your parental rights are immediately at risk.

Firearms Surrender

Upon entry of a final protective order, you are required to surrender all firearms in your possession or control. Federal law also prohibits possession of firearms while subject to a qualifying protective order — even before any criminal conviction.

Permanent Public Record

A final protective order is not eligible for shielding unless successfully appealed to Circuit Court. A final peace order is also public record, though a consent order may be shielded after expiration. Either order will appear in background checks conducted by employers, landlords, and licensing boards.

Employment & Licensing

A protective or peace order on your record can disqualify you from jobs requiring security clearances, professional licenses in healthcare, law, education, or finance, and positions with government agencies. The impact on a career can be lasting and severe.

Criminal Exposure

Violating any condition of a protective or peace order — including accidental or inadvertent contact — is a criminal offense. A single violation can result in arrest, jail time, and a new criminal record on top of the civil order, compounding the consequences dramatically.

Why You Must Fight This

How We Defend
Against These Orders

01
Appear at Every Stage — Starting Immediately

Most respondents make the mistake of not retaining an attorney until the final hearing — or not at all. Allan Rombro can appear at the temporary hearing stage and begin building your defense from the outset, identifying weaknesses in the petitioner's account before they have the chance to solidify.

02
Challenge the Petitioner's Account

At the final hearing, Allan Rombro will cross-examine the petitioner thoroughly — testing the consistency, credibility, and accuracy of their account. Many order petitions are filed in the heat of an argument and are based on exaggeration, mischaracterization, or outright fabrication. These weaknesses can be exposed effectively at hearing.

03
Present Your Own Evidence & Witnesses

The final hearing is a two-sided proceeding. Allan Rombro will identify and prepare witnesses who can corroborate your account, gather text messages, emails, phone records, security footage, or other documentary evidence, and present a comprehensive defense case designed to defeat the order entirely.

04
Contest Whether the Relationship Qualifies

Protective orders require a qualifying domestic relationship. Peace orders require that the alleged act occurred within 30 days of filing. If the petitioner does not satisfy these threshold requirements — or does not meet the legal definition of the alleged abusive act — the order should not be granted, and Allan Rombro will argue exactly that.

05
Negotiate a Consent Agreement When Appropriate

In some cases, the best outcome is a negotiated consent agreement that both parties can live with — without a finding of abuse and without a permanent order on your record. A consent agreement, unlike a contested final order, may be eligible for shielding from the public record after it expires.

06
Coordinate With Any Parallel Criminal Defense

Peace and protective order proceedings often run simultaneously with domestic violence or assault charges in criminal court. What you say at a civil order hearing can affect your criminal case, and vice versa. Allan Rombro handles both proceedings together, ensuring your defense strategy is consistent and protective across both courts.

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If an Order Is Already in Place

Violating a Maryland
Order Is a Criminal Offense

Once a protective or peace order is in place, any violation of its conditions is a criminal misdemeanor in Maryland — even accidental or indirect contact. This means that if the petitioner contacts you first and you respond, you can still be arrested and charged with a violation.

The penalties for a first violation may seem manageable, but repeat violations or violations involving assault, threats, or weapons carry significantly harsher consequences — and each violation strengthens the petitioner’s case for renewal or extension of the original order.

If you have been charged with violating a protective or peace order, call Allan Rombro immediately. These are treated as criminal cases with all the consequences that follow. 

Important: You cannot rely on the petitioner’s consent to contact them as a defense. If a protective or peace order prohibits contact and the petitioner asks you to reach out, responding to that contact can still result in your arrest. The order governs your conduct — not theirs.

Common Questions

Peace & Protective
Order FAQ

Have a question not answered here? Email Allan Rombro directly for a free, confidential consultation — available 24 hours.

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What is the difference between a protective order and a peace order?

The key difference is the relationship between the parties. Protective orders are for domestic relationships — current or former spouses, intimate partners, family members, cohabitants, or parties sharing a child. Peace orders apply to everyone else: neighbors, coworkers, acquaintances, or former dating partners who don’t meet the domestic relationship criteria. Both are civil orders but violating either is a criminal offense. A person cannot qualify for both simultaneously.

A final order becomes part of your permanent public record. It can restrict where you live, work, and travel; require you to surrender all firearms; affect child custody and visitation; harm your employment and professional licensing; and serve as the basis for criminal charges if violated. Final protective orders last up to one year and can be extended to two years. Final peace orders last up to six months and can be extended for another six months.

Violating a protective order is a misdemeanor carrying up to 90 days in jail and a $1,000 fine for a first violation, and up to one year for subsequent violations. If the violation involves assault or a weapon, penalties increase significantly — up to 5 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Violating a peace order also carries up to 90 days in jail and a $1,000 fine. Crucially, you cannot use the petitioner’s own invitation to contact them as a defense — the order governs your conduct alone.

Yes — and this is your primary opportunity to defeat the order entirely. Both parties appear before a judge, present evidence and witnesses, and the petitioner must prove the alleged act by a preponderance of the evidence. An experienced attorney can cross-examine the petitioner, challenge the credibility of allegations, present documentary evidence, and argue that the legal threshold was not met. A successful final hearing defense means no order is entered and no public record is created.

A final protective order that was contested and entered by the court is not eligible for shielding unless successfully appealed to Circuit Court. A consent protective order — where both parties agreed — may be eligible for shielding after it expires, but a hearing must be held. A final peace order is a public record, though a consent peace order may be shielded from the public record after it expires. The best outcome for your record is defeating the order at the final hearing — if no order is entered, there is nothing to shield or expunge.

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