Bill

Bill > S3447


NJ S3447

NJ S3447
Requires court to consider results of domestic violence assessment before dissolving certain domestic violence restraining orders.


summary

Introduced
02/09/2026
In Committee
02/09/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill requires the court to consider the results of a domestic violence assessment before dissolving a final restraining order when the defendant has two or more restraining orders against him. The defendant would be responsible for the costs of the assessment and the assessment would be considered confidential. The bill defines a "domestic violence assessment" as an assessment performed by a psychiatrist, licensed psychologist, licensed clinical social worker, or licensed professional counselor with the goal of determining the likelihood that the offender will commit future acts of violence, abuse or other unacceptable behavior that could pose a threat to the victim, the victim's family, the victim's property, or other person identified as being at risk. The substitute requires the Administrative Office of the Courts to develop standards for persons who are eligible to conduct the assessments. The bill also codifies the factors currently considered by the court in determining whether a defendant who has applied to dissolve a final order has established requisite good cause. Those factors, as set forth in Carfagno v. Carfagno, 288 N.J.Super. 424 (Ch. Div. 1995), are: (1) whether the victim voluntarily consents to dissolve the final order; (2) whether the victim fears the defendant; (3) the nature of the current relationship between the victim and defendant; (4) the number of times the defendant has been convicted of contempt for violating the final order; (5) whether the defendant has a continuing involvement with drug or alcohol abuse; (6) whether the defendant has been involved in other violent acts with other persons; (7) whether the defendant has engaged in counseling; (8) the age and health of the defendant; (9) whether the victim is acting in good faith in opposing the defendant's request for dissolution; and (10) whether another jurisdiction has entered a restraining order protecting the victim from the defendant. Finally, the bill clarifies that when there is a complaint for a restraining order, the court may order a domestic violence assessment. Current law authorizes the court to order a psychiatric evaluation.

AI Summary

This bill requires courts to consider the results of a domestic violence assessment before dissolving a final restraining order if the defendant has two or more such orders against them, with the defendant responsible for the assessment's cost and its findings kept confidential. A domestic violence assessment is defined as an evaluation by a qualified mental health professional to determine the likelihood of future violence or threats to the victim or others, and the Administrative Office of the Courts will establish standards for these professionals. The bill also codifies existing factors courts use to determine if there's "good cause" to dissolve a restraining order, such as the victim's consent and fear, the relationship status, contempt convictions, substance abuse, other violent acts, counseling participation, and the existence of restraining orders from other jurisdictions. Additionally, the bill clarifies that when a restraining order complaint is filed, the court can order a domestic violence assessment, replacing the previous authority to order only a psychiatric evaluation.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Judiciary Committee (on 02/09/2026)

bill text


bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...

bill summary

Loading...