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Legal Information: Indiana

Restraining Orders

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Laws current as of December 2, 2025

Can the abuser have a gun?

Once you get an order for protection, there may be laws that prohibit the abuser from having a gun in their possession. There are a few places where you can find this information:

  1. read your order and see if it restricts the abuser from having or getting firearms;
  2. read the questions in our Restraining Orders section about the protections you can get in an order of protection to see if judges in Indiana have the power to remove guns as part of a temporary or final order;
  3. go to our State Gun Laws section to read about your state’s specific gun-related laws; and
  4. read our Federal Gun Laws section to understand the federal laws that apply to all states.

You can read more about keeping an abuser from accessing guns on the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence and Firearms’ website.

Can a workplace violence restraining order be extended?

If necessary, the employer can apply for the renewal of the final workplace violence restraining order within the three months before the three-year order expires.1

1 IC § 34-26-6-9

What happens if the abuser violates the workplace violence restraining order?

If the workplace violence restraining order is violated on purpose (intentionally), the abuser can be found guilty of an invasion of privacy, which is a Class A misdemeanor. It may be a more serious crime, a Class D felony, if the person has a conviction for violating the order in the past.1

1 IC § 35-46-1-15.1

If I get a protection order, will it show up in an internet search?

According to federal law, which applies to all states, territories, and tribal lands, the courts are not supposed to make available publicly on the internet any information that would be likely to reveal your identity or location. This applies to all of these documents:

  • the petition you file;
  • the protection order, restraining order, or injunction that was issued by the court; or
  • the registration of an order in a different state.1

1 18 USC § 2265(d)(3)