On February 14, 2026, our client was arrested by LASD – Walnut Detectives and booked on a felony charge under California Penal Code § 273.5(a) — corporal injury on a spouse or cohabitant. Within days, she was served with a Request for Domestic Violence Restraining Order in the Los Angeles Superior Court, set for hearing at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse. One accusation had become two parallel cases, in two different courthouses, under two entirely different bodies of law and standards of proof.
Four days after the arrest, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office — Bureau of Specialized Prosecutions, Family Violence Division, Pomona Office — declined to file charges. The criminal case was over before it ever became a case. And the formal DA declination letter it generated became the single most powerful piece of evidence in the parallel DVRO defense at Stanley Mosk.
This anonymized Los Angeles County case study walks through exactly how that result was earned: the pre-filing investigation, the submission to the Pomona FVD, the legal architecture of PC 273.5(a), the strategic weight of a DA reject letter inside a civil restraining order hearing, and the integrated criminal-plus-family-law defense that keeps both courthouses from being used against the client. If you are facing a domestic violence arrest in LA County with a DVRO on the horizon, the first seventy-two hours matter more than almost any other moment in the case — and this is what it looks like when they are used well.
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