Michael Carroll & Co advises and represents clients facing allegations of abuse within a family or domestic setting. These cases are often sensitive, highly personal, and can have immediate consequences for family life, contact with children, living arrangements, employment, reputation, and future proceedings.
Allegations of this nature must be handled carefully from the outset. Early legal advice is important, particularly before any police interview, voluntary attendance, court hearing, or response to bail conditions or protective orders.
Family abuse allegations can develop quickly. Police may become involved following a complaint, emergency call, social services referral, family court proceedings, or a report from a third party.
Anything said during the early stages may later be used as evidence. Legal advice should therefore be obtained before speaking to the police or attending any interview, even where the allegation is denied or the background appears complicated.
Michael Carroll & Co can advise before and during interview, explain the process, and assist with decisions that may affect the direction of the case.
Domestic and family-related allegations often arise from complex personal circumstances. There may be a history of relationship difficulties, separation, contact arrangements, family court proceedings, financial disputes, previous complaints, messages, call records, medical evidence, witness statements, or social services involvement.
The firm takes care to review the full context of the allegation, not just the complaint itself. Proper preparation may involve considering communication records, timelines, witness evidence, previous incidents, digital material, and any connected family or civil proceedings.
Family abuse allegations may lead to bail conditions, restraining orders, non-molestation orders, occupation orders, or other restrictions. These can affect where a person may live, who they may contact, and whether contact with children is permitted.
Michael Carroll & Co can advise on the meaning and effect of conditions or orders, applications to vary them, alleged breaches, and the possible consequences of non-compliance.
If advice is required in relation to an allegation of abuse within the family or domestic setting, early contact is recommended.