Contravene Apprehended Domestic Violence Order
Breach AVO Lawyer Parramatta, Sydney, Norwest & NSW - Contravene ADVO Defence
Charged with contravene AVO (breach AVO, breach ADVO) in Parramatta, Sydney, Norwest, Castle Hill, or anywhere in NSW? Contravening an Apprehended Domestic Violence Order is a serious criminal offence under section 14 of the Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act 2007 (NSW) carrying maximum 2 years imprisonment and $5,500 fine. Whether you're charged with breaching an AVO by sending text messages, attending the protected person's home in Parramatta or Castle Hill, making phone calls, or any prohibited contact in Norwest or across Western Sydney, you need immediate expert legal representation. AVO breaches are treated extremely seriously by police and courts, often resulting in arrest, bail refusal, and imprisonment.
At Barsha Defence Lawyers, we have offices in Parramatta (5 minute walk to Parramatta Local Court where most AVO breach matters are heard) and Norwest (serving Castle Hill, Baulkham Hills, Rouse Hill, and the Hills District with FREE on-site parking). We regularly defend contravene AVO charges at Parramatta Local Court, Castle Hill Local Court, Blacktown Local Court, Penrith Local Court, and across Western Sydney and NSW. Our experienced AVO breach defence team has successfully achieved charge withdrawals, not guilty verdicts, and minimal sentences by establishing lack of knowledge of AVO terms, consent/reconciliation defences, necessity defences, and challenging prosecution evidence.
⚠️ CRITICAL: DO NOT Contact Protected Person
ANY contact with the protected person while an AVO is in place is a separate criminal offence — even if they contact you first, even if they want to see you, even if you're discussing children. The AVO prohibits YOU from making contact. Contact includes phone calls, text messages, social media messages, emails, going to their home/work, approaching them in public, sending messages through third parties. Breaching an AVO can result in immediate arrest and imprisonment. Call us NOW: 0474 708 070 (24/7) before ANY contact.
What Is Contravene AVO (Breach AVO) in NSW?
Under section 14 Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act 2007 (NSW), you commit an offence if you:
- Knowingly contravene a prohibition or restriction
- Specified in an AVO made against you
Maximum penalties:
- General breach: 2 years imprisonment and/or $5,500 fine
- Breach involving violence or stalking: Section 14(4) presumption of imprisonment unless court decides otherwise
⚠️ Presumption of Imprisonment for Violent Breaches
Under section 14(4), if you're an adult and the AVO breach involved violence, stalking, harassment, or intimidation against the protected person, there is a presumption of full-time imprisonment unless the court is satisfied this is not appropriate. This means the default position is jail unless your lawyer can convince the court otherwise.
Common AVO Breach Scenarios - Parramatta, Sydney, Norwest & Castle Hill
Text Messages / Phone Calls:
- Sending text messages to protected person (even one message)
- Calling protected person's phone (even if they don't answer)
- WhatsApp messages, iMessage, Signal messages
- Voicemails left for protected person
- Responding to protected person's text messages (even if they contacted you first)
Social Media Contact:
- Facebook messages, Instagram DMs
- Liking, commenting on protected person's social media posts
- Tagging protected person in posts
- Snapchat messages
- Viewing protected person's Instagram stories (if traceable)
Proximity / Location Breaches:
- Going to protected person's home in Parramatta, Castle Hill, Norwest, Baulkham Hills when AVO prohibits being within 100m/200m
- Going to protected person's workplace
- Approaching protected person at shopping centre (Westfield Parramatta, Castle Towers)
- Being at child's school when AVO prohibits approach except for handovers
- Following protected person in car, on foot
Indirect Contact:
- Sending messages through friends or family members
- Getting children to pass messages to protected person
- Having friend deliver items, gifts to protected person
- Posting about protected person on social media (depending on AVO wording)
Child-Related Breaches:
- Attending child handover at wrong time or location not specified in AVO
- Texting about children outside permitted channels
- Going to children's school outside permitted times
- Calling to speak to children when AVO limits contact method
Violence or Threats:
- Assaulting protected person (triggers s14(4) imprisonment presumption)
- Threatening protected person
- Damaging protected person's property
- Stalking, intimidating protected person
Critical: "They Contacted Me First" Is NOT a Defence
A very common misunderstanding: It does NOT matter if the protected person contacted you first, invited you over, or wants to see you. The AVO prohibits YOU from making contact. If the protected person texts you, calls you, or invites you to their home, you are STILL breaching the AVO if you respond or attend. The protected person cannot consent to you breaching the AVO. Only a court can vary or revoke an AVO.
Common AVO Conditions That Can Be Breached
Standard AVO conditions typically include:
1. No Assault, Molest, Harass, Threaten, Stalk, Intimidate:
Cannot assault, threaten, harass, stalk, or intimidate the protected person.
2. No Contact (Any Means):
Cannot contact protected person by any means including:
- Phone calls, text messages
- Emails, letters
- Social media messages, posts, tags
- In person
- Through third parties
3. No Approach / Proximity:
Cannot approach or remain within certain distance (typically 50m, 100m, or 200m) of:
- Protected person wherever they are
- Protected person's home (specific address listed)
- Protected person's workplace
- Any place protected person happens to be
4. Prohibitions on Approaching Others:
"Do not assault, molest, harass, threaten, stalk, intimidate or deliberately or recklessly destroy or damage property of, or approach within X metres or contact by any means, any person with whom the protected person has a domestic relationship."
This means: Cannot contact protected person's family members, new partner, children (depending on wording)
5. No Firearms / Weapons:
Cannot possess firearms or prohibited weapons.
6. No Alcohol / Drugs:
Some AVOs prohibit consumption of alcohol or drugs.
7. Exceptions for Children:
Some AVOs allow contact for purposes of child handovers at specified times/locations or through nominated third party.
What Must Prosecution Prove?
For contravene AVO charges at Parramatta, Castle Hill, or Sydney courts, prosecution must prove beyond reasonable doubt:
- An AVO was in force against you (provisional, interim, or final AVO)
- The AVO prohibited or restricted specific conduct
- You contravened that prohibition or restriction (engaged in prohibited conduct)
- You knew about the AVO and its terms (had knowledge of the prohibition)
Defences to Contravene AVO
1. No Knowledge of AVO (Most Common Defence)
You did not know the AVO existed or did not know the specific prohibition you allegedly breached.
When this applies:
- AVO was made in court in your absence and you were not served with a copy
- Police did not serve you with provisional AVO
- You were not aware of specific conditions (e.g., thought you could contact about children, didn't know the distance restriction)
- AVO was recently varied and you were not aware of new conditions
Critical: Prosecution must prove you had knowledge. If you were never served with the AVO or conditions, you cannot be guilty.
2. Necessity
Contact was necessary to prevent serious harm or deal with emergency.
Examples:
- Child was seriously injured and you needed to contact protected person immediately
- Emergency medical situation requiring immediate contact
- House fire, natural disaster requiring immediate contact about children
Note: Necessity is a narrow defence and difficult to establish.
3. Compliance with Court Order
Contact was required to comply with another court order.
Examples:
- Family Court orders requiring face-to-face child handovers at specific location
- Mediation ordered by Family Court requiring attendance
- Property recovery order requiring contact to collect belongings
4. Did Not Contravene
You did not actually engage in the prohibited conduct.
Examples:
- Text message not sent by you (someone else used your phone)
- You were not at the location alleged (mistaken identity, alibi)
- Contact was accidental (ran into protected person at shopping centre by chance, did not approach them)
5. AVO Was Not in Force
The AVO had expired, been revoked, or was not validly made.
6. Mental Health Defence
Section 14 application for mental illness or cognitive impairment affecting capacity to understand conduct was wrong.
7. Duress
You were forced to contact protected person under threat of death or serious harm.
Challenging "Reconciliation" or "Consent"
A very common scenario: You and the protected person have reconciled, they want the AVO revoked, and they consented to or initiated the contact.
Legal position:
- Protected person's consent is NOT a legal defence — they cannot consent to you breaching the AVO
- However, reconciliation and consent are powerful mitigation in sentencing
- Strategy: Plead guilty but emphasize reconciliation in sentencing submissions to avoid imprisonment
- Alternative: Apply to court to vary or revoke AVO before any contact
Court Process - AVO Breach Charges
- Arrest: Usually arrested immediately when breach discovered by police
- Bail: Often refused for AVO breaches, particularly violent breaches. Bail application required
- First Appearance: Mention at Parramatta, Castle Hill, Blacktown Local Court
- Brief of Evidence: Police provide copy of AVO, proof of service, evidence of breach (text messages, witness statements, CCTV)
- Negotiations: Lawyer negotiates with police prosecutor about facts, withdrawal if weak case
- Plea: Plead guilty or plead not guilty
- Hearing or Sentence: Defended hearing or sentencing
AVO breach matters typically finalized within 2-4 months.
Will I Go to Jail for Breaching an AVO?
Imprisonment depends on nature of breach, violence, and criminal history:
First-Time Minor Breach (Single Text Message, No Violence):
- First offender, reconciled with protected person: Section 10 or Community Correction Order possible
- First offender, no reconciliation: Fine or Community Correction Order
- Imprisonment unlikely unless aggravating factors
Moderate Breach (Multiple Contacts, Attending Home, No Violence):
- First offender: Community Correction Order or Intensive Correction Order
- Repeat offender: 6-12 months imprisonment
Serious Breach (Violence, Assault, Stalking, Threats):
- Section 14(4) applies: Presumption of full-time imprisonment
- First offender with strong mitigation: 6-18 months imprisonment
- Repeat offender or serious violence: 12-24 months imprisonment
Multiple Breaches / Persistent Breaching:
- Pattern of breaching over time: 12-24 months imprisonment likely even without violence
| Type of Breach | First Offender | Repeat Offender |
|---|---|---|
| Single text message, no violence | Section 10 / Fine / CCO | 6-12 months |
| Multiple contacts, attending home | CCO / ICO | 6-18 months |
| Assault, violence, threats (s14(4)) | 6-18 months imprisonment | 12-24 months imprisonment |
| Persistent breaching over time | 12-18 months | 18-24 months |
Can I Get Section 10?
Possible for minor first-time breaches with strong mitigation. Section 10 achievable for:
- Single text message or brief phone call
- First-time AVO breach
- No violence involved
- Reconciliation with protected person (protected person provides statement supporting leniency)
- Accidental/minimal breach
- Strong character references from Parramatta, Norwest, Castle Hill community
- Mental health issues contributing to breach
- Early guilty plea with genuine remorse
Section 10 unlikely for:
- Violent breaches
- Multiple breaches
- Repeat AVO breaches
- Serious breaches (attending home, stalking)
Impact on Family Law Proceedings
AVO breaches significantly affect Family Court matters:
- Child custody: AVO breach convictions heavily weigh against you in custody disputes
- Supervised contact only: May result in you only having supervised time with children
- No contact orders: Family Court may order no contact with children
- Property settlement: Can affect property division
Critical: Coordinate AVO breach defence with family law strategy.
How Your Parramatta, Sydney or Norwest AVO Breach Lawyer Can Help
- Urgent bail applications (AVO breaches often bail refused)
- Establish lack of knowledge of AVO terms (not served with AVO, unaware of specific conditions)
- Establish necessity defence (emergency contact required)
- Obtain evidence of reconciliation (statement from protected person)
- Apply to court to vary or revoke AVO to prevent future breaches
- Negotiate with police prosecutors for facts amendment (reduce severity of breach alleged)
- Challenge evidence of breach (text messages not sent by you, location evidence incorrect)
- Obtain psychological/psychiatric reports for sentencing
- Obtain character references from Parramatta, Norwest, Castle Hill employers/community
- Prepare comprehensive sentencing submissions emphasizing reconciliation, remorse, rehabilitation
- Argue against section 14(4) imprisonment presumption for violent breaches
- Run defended hearings challenging knowledge element
- Appear at Parramatta, Castle Hill, Blacktown Local Courts daily for AVO breach matters
Related Domestic Violence Offences
- Domestic Violence Offences — all categories
- Stalking or Intimidation
- Common Assault
- Assault Occasioning ABH
- Bail Applications — critical for AVO breaches
- Mental Health Applications
External Resources
- Section 14 Crimes (Domestic and Personal Violence) Act - Contravene AVO
- Legal Aid NSW - AVOs
- NSW Judicial Commission
Charged with Breach AVO (Contravene ADVO) in Parramatta, Sydney, Norwest, Castle Hill or NSW?
AVO breach charges are treated extremely seriously. Bail often refused. Imprisonment likely for violent breaches or repeat offences. You need immediate expert legal representation.
- URGENT 24/7 availability — Call immediately: 0474 708 070
- DO NOT contact protected person — speak to lawyer first
- FREE initial consultation
- Parramatta office — 5 min walk to Parramatta Local Court (most AVO breach matters heard here)
- Norwest office — FREE parking for Castle Hill, Baulkham Hills, Rouse Hill clients
- AVO breach specialists — appear daily at Parramatta, Castle Hill courts for breach matters
- Expert at bail applications for AVO breach arrests
- Successfully establish lack of knowledge, necessity, reconciliation defences
- Achieve Section 10 for first-time minor breaches
- Coordinate AVO breach defence with family law strategy
- 15+ years defending AVO breach charges across Western Sydney
CALL NOW 24/7: 0474 708 070
Arrested for AVO breach? Call immediately before police interview.
Email: **@**********************om.au
Parramatta Office: Suite 48 Level 1/93 George St, Parramatta NSW 2150 — 5 min walk to court
Norwest Office: 4 Columbia Court, Norwest NSW 2153 — FREE parking, serving Castle Hill, Baulkham Hills, Rouse Hill