Phoenix Aggravated Domestic Violence Lawyer
Charged with aggravated domestic violence (A.R.S. 13-3601.02) in Phoenix? A domestic-violence charge brings a no-contact order, firearm surrender, and mandatory counseling, and the alleged victim cannot simply drop it. But these cases are full of reasonable doubt. Do not talk to police, call us first.
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What is aggravated domestic violence in Phoenix?
Quick answer: Aggravated domestic violence (A.R.S. 13-3601.02) is a third or later DV offense within 84 months, which makes it a Class 5 felony with mandatory prison, 4 months minimum for a third, 8 for a fourth. The defense frequently focuses on challenging whether the prior convictions are valid and countable.
On This Page
- Overview
- What Is Aggravated Domestic Violence? (A.R.S. 13-3601.02)
- Penalties for Aggravated Domestic Violence in Phoenix
- Can the Victim Drop the Charges?
- The Hidden Consequences of a DV Conviction
- How We Defend a Aggravated Domestic Violence Charge in Phoenix
- How the State Builds a Aggravated Domestic Violence Case
- Where Your Case Is Heard & What To Do Now
- FAQs
Both Sides
Former Prosecutors · Law Enforcement · Public Defenders
When you call Tamou Law Group, you reach a firm that handles criminal defense exclusively, with serious experience defending domestic violence cases across Arizona. Our team includes former prosecutors and law enforcement officers, so we know exactly how the State builds these cases, and where they fall apart.
At many large firms, the name on the building is a marketing figurehead, you rarely get them on the phone and your case goes to a junior associate. When you hire Tamou Law Group, your case is handled by a full team of attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou.
What Is Aggravated Domestic Violence? (A.R.S. 13-3601.02)
Understanding exactly what the State must prove, and how the DV designation works, is the first step.
Under A.R.S. 13-3601.02, aggravated domestic violence is a third (or subsequent) domestic-violence offense within 84 months (seven years). It turns what would be a misdemeanor into a felony, based purely on your history of prior DV convictions.
What the State Must Prove
- A current domestic-violence offense (an act under A.R.S. 13-3601 against a family or household member).
- Two or more prior DV convictions within the past 84 months.
- The priors were valid and countable, which is often challengeable.
Every element must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Related & Lesser Charges
The felony version of any DV offense, triggered by prior convictions rather than the current act.
Penalties for Aggravated Domestic Violence in Phoenix
DV penalties escalate with priors, and the collateral consequences reach far beyond the sentence.
Aggravated domestic violence is a Class 5 felony carrying mandatory prison (a minimum of 4 months for a third offense, 8 months for a fourth), with no eligibility for probation until that time is served. The entire case often turns on whether the prior convictions actually count.
Penalty Ranges at a Glance
General guidance only; your exposure depends on the facts, your record, and the DV designation.
Can the Victim Drop the Charges?
The most common, and most costly, misconception in a domestic-violence case.
The most common misconception in a domestic-violence case is that the alleged victim can drop the charges. In Arizona, they cannot. Once police make a report, the case belongs to the State, and the prosecutor decides whether to proceed, often over the victim’s objection, and even when the victim wants to reconcile.
A no-contact order is typically imposed at the first court appearance, barring you from your home and from any contact with the accuser, even if they invite it. Violating it is a new crime.
This does not leave you powerless. A victim’s reluctance, recantation, or refusal to cooperate is powerful evidence we can use, see what happens when the victim does not show to court. We also work toward getting charges dismissed or reduced to a non-DV offense. What the victim wants still matters, we just cannot rely on them to end it.
How We Defend a Aggravated Domestic Violence Charge in Phoenix
An accusation is not a conviction, and DV cases are full of reasonable doubt.
An accusation is not a conviction. Attacking the validity and countability of the prior convictions is often the whole defense. DV cases are frequently driven by a divorce, a custody fight, or jealousy, and the “victim” is sometimes the aggressor. Our approach:
- Self-defense, if you were the one being attacked, your response may be justified.
- False or exaggerated accusation, exposing the motive (custody, divorce, revenge) and the inconsistencies.
- The digital record, texts, calls, and social media that contradict the story or show voluntary contact.
- Injuries that do not match, independent review of the wounds or their absence.
- Challenging the DV relationship or the priors, which can drop the charge or the felony designation.
See also how to beat a domestic violence charge and how to get DV charges dismissed. We bring the right experts to dismantle the case.
How the State Builds a Aggravated Domestic Violence Case
Knowing the evidence is the first step to dismantling it.
Understanding how the State will try to prove a aggravated domestic violence case is the first step in taking it apart. The case turns on the prior convictions and whether the current act even qualifies as DV. The evidence usually includes:
- The 911 call and body-cam, the accuser’s first, unrehearsed account, which often changes later.
- Texts, calls, and social media, which frequently show voluntary contact or contradict the story.
- Injury photos and medical records, which may not match the alleged assault.
- The accuser’s statements, including any recantation or refusal to cooperate.
Where Your Case Is Heard & What To Do Now
Protecting your home, your children, and your record starts now.
A felony DV charge is prosecuted in the Maricopa County Superior Court. A no-contact order is usually imposed at arraignment, and DV cases move quickly, so the time to protect your home, your children, and your record is now.
What To Do Right Now
- Obey the no-contact order, do not call, text, or go home, even if the accuser asks you to. Violating it is a new charge.
- Do not talk to police or give “your side” of the incident, let your lawyer do it.
- Preserve the digital record, texts, call logs, and social media, and photograph any injuries you have.
- Call a DV defense lawyer immediately, to address the no-contact order, firearms, and the charge before it hardens.
Official Arizona Resources
For the primary sources behind this page, see the statute and the courts that hear these cases:
- Read the full statute, A.R.S. 13-3601.02, on the Arizona Legislature (azleg.gov)
- Maricopa County Superior Court
- Arizona Judicial Branch (azcourts.gov)
The Experts We Bring to Domestic Violence Cases
DV cases are won on the digital record, the injuries, and the real story behind the call. We bring the specialists who provide it, click any to see how.
Digital Forensics Examiners
Texts, 911 & Social Media
Recover the full text, call, and social-media record that shows what really happened, and who the aggressor was.
Use-of-Force & Self-Defense Experts
Justification
Show why your response was reasonable when you were the one being attacked.
Private Investigators
Witnesses & Motive
Find the witnesses and the motive to lie, custody, jealousy, or leverage in a divorce.
Medical & Injury Experts
What the Injuries Show
Independently review injuries (or their absence) to test whether they fit the accuser’s story.
Credibility & Recantation Analysis
The Accuser’s Account
Expose inconsistencies, prior false claims, and the reasons an accuser exaggerates or recants.
Treatment & Mitigation Specialists
Counseling & Diversion
Build the treatment record that supports diversion, reductions, and keeping a conviction off your record.
Awards & Recognition
Our recognition for Phoenix domestic violence defense is independently verified, click any award to confirm it:
- National Trial Lawyers Top 100
- National Trial Lawyers Top 40 Under 40
- Elite Lawyer 2026 – Criminal Defense
- Super Lawyers – Southwest
- National College for DUI Defense (NCDD)
Together, these place Tamou Law Group among the best Phoenix domestic violence lawyers, led by Founding Attorney Michael Tamou and a full team of attorneys, including former prosecutors.
Phoenix Aggravated Domestic Violence FAQs
Quick answers to the questions we hear most.
When does domestic violence become a felony in Arizona?
A DV charge becomes felony aggravated domestic violence on a third offense within 84 months (A.R.S. 13-3601.02). It can also be a felony when the underlying act is itself a felony, like aggravated assault.
Can the prior convictions be challenged?
Yes, and this is often the whole case. If a prior was uncounseled, outside the 84-month window, or otherwise invalid, it may not count, dropping the charge back to a misdemeanor.
Is prison mandatory for aggravated DV?
For a third offense, a minimum of 4 months in prison is mandatory before probation eligibility, and 8 months for a fourth. Avoiding the felony designation is critical.
How do I avoid a felony DV conviction?
By challenging the priors, the underlying offense, and the DV relationship, and through self-defense and credibility defenses. Reducing it below the felony threshold is the goal.
Can the alleged victim drop the charges?
No. Once police are involved the case belongs to the State, and the prosecutor decides whether to proceed, often over the victim’s objection. But the victim’s reluctance or recantation is evidence we can use.
Will a DV charge affect my gun rights?
Yes. A DV charge triggers firearm surrender, and a conviction, even a misdemeanor, brings a lifetime federal gun ban. Protecting against the conviction protects your rights.
Will I work with Michael Tamou or a junior associate?
Your defense is handled by a full team of experienced attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7.
Key Takeaways
- Aggravated Domestic Violence in Arizona is charged under A.R.S. 13-3601.02, with the DV designation (A.R.S. 13-3601).
- The alleged victim cannot drop the charges, only the prosecutor can.
- A DV conviction means firearm surrender, mandatory counseling, and custody/immigration fallout.
- Attacking the validity and countability of the prior convictions is often the whole defense.
- Obey the no-contact order and call 623-321-4699, 24/7, before the charge hardens.
What Clients Say About Tamou Law
Real Google reviews from clients we have defended across Phoenix and Maricopa County. Every review is from a criminal defense client, never padded with non-legal work.
Two Arizona Offices, One Team
We serve all of Maricopa County and the surrounding area, with free, confidential consultations 24/7 by phone and in-person meetings at either office by appointment.
Case Results Disclaimer: The results described on this page are based on specific facts and circumstances and do not guarantee or predict a similar outcome in any future case. Every case is different. Past results do not guarantee future results. No attorney-client relationship is formed by viewing this page or submitting a contact form until a written fee agreement has been signed. Tamou Law Group, PLLC is licensed to practice law in the State of Arizona. This website is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.






