Archive for July, 2026
Jul 6, 2026

A strangulation charge in North Carolina is a Class H felony under N.C.G.S. § 14-32.4(b) — not a misdemeanor, regardless of whether the alleged victim has visible injuries. That single fact changes everything about the penalties, the process, and what’s at stake long after the case ends.

Jul 6, 2026

A strangulation charge in North Carolina can be beaten. You can challenge the specific elements the prosecution is required to prove. You can raise a legally recognized defense such as self-defense. And you can expose weaknesses in the evidence — including inconsistent statements, lack of medical documentation, or the absence of physical injury. Under N.C.G.S. […]

Jul 6, 2026

Yes. In North Carolina, assault by strangulation is a Class H felony under N.C.G.S. § 14-32.4(b). It is not a misdemeanor, not a lesser assault charge, and not something that can be informally resolved. A strangulation charge carries potential prison time, a permanent felony record, and consequences that reach into nearly every corner of your […]

Jul 6, 2026

Assault by strangulation is a Class H felony in North Carolina under N.C.G.S. § 14-32.4(b). It is not a misdemeanor, not a lesser assault charge, and not something the court system treats as a routine domestic dispute. It is a standalone felony offense. A conviction carries up to 39 months in prison, a permanent criminal […]

Jul 6, 2026

A Class H felony in North Carolina carries a potential sentence ranging from 4 to 39 months depending on the circumstances. Beyond the sentence itself, a conviction can affect firearm rights, employment, professional licensing, and immigration status long after any sentence is served. The range is wide because North Carolina uses a structured sentencing system. […]

Jul 6, 2026

Assault on a female in North Carolina is a Class A1 misdemeanor under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 14-33(c)(2) — the most serious misdemeanor classification the state has. It carries up to 150 days in jail, but the jail time is not the part of this charge that changes lives. The collateral consequences — what happens […]

Jul 6, 2026

A false domestic violence accusation can lead to an arrest, a protective order, and criminal charges before you ever get to tell your side of the story. In North Carolina, the legal system is built to move quickly once an accusation is made. It often moves before any independent investigation takes place — and before […]

Jul 6, 2026

After a domestic violence arrest in North Carolina, you can be held in jail for up to 48 hours before a judge sets the conditions of your release. That hold is longer than what applies to most other criminal charges, and it is usually the first thing that catches people off guard. It is also […]

Jul 6, 2026

Self-defense is a legally recognized defense to domestic violence charges in North Carolina. When it’s proven, it results in a complete acquittal. In fact, North Carolina law explicitly excludes acts of self-defense from the definition of domestic violence under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50B-1. The legislature didn’t leave that to interpretation. It wrote self-defense out […]

Jul 6, 2026

Domestic violence charges can be dropped in North Carolina, but not the way most people expect. The person who files the complaint — the alleged victim — does not have the power to make the charges go away. Once the State brings charges, the decision to dismiss, reduce, or prosecute belongs to the district attorney’s […]