Maryland Criminal Defense · Baltimore City · Baltimore County · Statewide
Second-degree assault is the most frequently charged assault offense — and many people underestimate it. A conviction means a permanent criminal record, up to 10 years in prison, and consequences that extend well beyond the courtroom. How you respond to the charge matters enormously.
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Second-degree assault under Criminal Law § 3-203 is intentionally broader than its name might suggest. It covers two distinct types of conduct: causing harmful or offensive physical contact with another person, and placing someone in reasonable fear of imminent physical harm — even without any contact at all.
Maryland Criminal Law — § 3-203A person may not commit an assault. A person convicted of a misdemeanor under this section is subject to imprisonment not exceeding 10 years or a fine not exceeding $2,500 or both. Where the victim is a law enforcement officer, probation agent, or other protected person, the offense is a felony.
That second category — placing someone in fear — is what surprises many people. A shove, a raised fist, a threatening confrontation that never turned physical: any of these can support a charge. The breadth of the statute means it captures a wide range of situations, from bar fights and road rage to domestic disputes and workplace conflicts.
Most second-degree assault charges are misdemeanors. But the charge becomes a felony — carrying the same 10-year maximum — when the alleged victim is a law enforcement officer, a probation or parole agent, a correctional officer, or certain other protected persons acting in their official capacity. If that’s the situation you’re in, the stakes are higher and the defense approach shifts accordingly.
Second-degree assault is one of the most commonly charged crimes because of how broadly the statute is written. Charges frequently arise from:
This is one of the most important things to understand. In Maryland, the decision to prosecute rests with the State’s Attorney — not the alleged victim. If a complainant later regrets filing, changes their story, or refuses to cooperate, the prosecution may still proceed.
That said, an uncooperative or recanting witness significantly affects the strength of the case. Allan Rombro uses this where it applies — working with the facts as they develop and identifying the arguments that give his clients the best path forward.
The sentence imposed — even if it’s probation rather than incarceration — isn’t the end of the story. A criminal conviction for assault:
These are not side effects — they are part of the real cost of a conviction. Allan Rombro builds his defense understanding everything that’s at stake, not just the sentencing range.
Allan Rombro has handled hundreds of assault cases throughout his career. He knows that the outcome often turns on factors that an inexperienced attorney might overlook: the consistency of witness statements, the circumstances of the arrest, whether consent was given, who actually initiated contact, and what the physical evidence actually shows — or doesn’t.
He represents clients in District Court and Circuit Court, handles cases involving alleged victims who are police officers, and regularly achieves dismissals, acquittals, and reductions in assault cases that clients were initially told couldn’t be won.
Because second-degree assault covers such a wide range of conduct and arises from so many different circumstances, the available defenses are equally varied. These are the most commonly applicable arguments.
You have the right to use reasonable force to protect yourself from imminent harm. If you were acting in self-defense — particularly if the other party initiated the confrontation — that is a complete defense. Allan Rombro builds this argument through witness testimony, physical evidence, and the sequence of events.
Defending a third party from immediate harm is equally valid. If you intervened to protect someone else — a family member, a friend, or even a stranger — that action may be fully justified under the law, depending on what you observed and how you responded.
In some contexts — contact sports, mutual combat, consensual physical activity — the alleged victim's consent to the contact negates the assault. This is fact-specific but a legitimate defense where the circumstances support it.
Assault requires intentional conduct. An accidental contact — even one that caused harm — is not second-degree assault. If the contact was unintentional or accidental, the charge cannot stand. Allan Rombro examines how the incident occurred and whether intent can genuinely be proven.
Many second-degree assault charges arise from personal disputes where the complaining party has a motive to exaggerate or fabricate. Allan Rombro investigates thoroughly — inconsistent statements, prior relationship, and contradictory physical evidence are all exploitable at trial or in negotiations.
If police violated your Fourth Amendment rights during the investigation — an unlawful search, improper arrest, or failure to provide Miranda warnings — the evidence obtained may be suppressed. A weakened evidentiary case significantly changes the prosecution's leverage.
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Second-degree assault under § 3-203 covers intentional harmful or offensive physical contact with another person, or placing someone in reasonable fear of immediate physical harm — even without any contact. It is typically a misdemeanor carrying up to 10 years, but becomes a felony when the victim is a law enforcement officer or other protected person.
Yes. Under Maryland law, placing someone in reasonable fear of immediate physical harm — even without making contact — can constitute second-degree assault. A threatening gesture, a raised fist, or an aggressive approach can all support a charge. This is sometimes called “apprehension assault” and is prosecuted regularly.
In Maryland, the State’s Attorney — not the alleged victim — decides whether to proceed with prosecution. Even if the complainant recants or refuses to cooperate, the State can and sometimes does continue. However, an uncooperative witness is a significant factor that often leads to dismissal. Allan Rombro evaluates this dynamic carefully in every case.
Usually it is a misdemeanor — but it becomes a felony when the victim is a law enforcement officer, probation or parole agent, or certain other protected persons acting in their official capacity. Even as a misdemeanor, the penalties and collateral consequences are serious enough to warrant full legal representation.
Yes — and often. Second-degree assault cases frequently turn on disputed facts, credibility of witnesses, self-defense, and the strength of physical evidence. Allan Rombro has achieved dismissals, acquittals, and reductions in a significant number of these cases. A consultation costs nothing and will tell you where you stand.
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