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Legal Information: Wisconsin

Restraining Orders

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Laws current as of June 10, 2024

Can the respondent modify or terminate a permanent individual at risk restraining order?

If you have a permanent order based on the abuser being convicted of sexually assaulting the individual at risk in the first, second, or third degree, the abuser can file a motion to have the order reviewed if the criminal conviction is vacated. The judge is required to change (modify) or remove (vacate) your order if the abuser proves that the conviction was vacated, and the judge will consider all relevant factors when deciding what to do. If your order has been in effect for longer than the maximum amount of time it could have been granted without the sexual assault conviction, the judge will vacate it.1  

1 Wis. Stat. § 813.126(1m)