When you compose a tweet, a Facebook status, or an IG story, you're communicating with your friends and followers all in one fell swoop. That's super useful for announcing your engagement, sharing a video of your new puppy, or crowdsourcing the best chiropractor in town. If you want to keep a message private, there are plenty of ways to do that in the social landscape as well—direct messages or time-sensitive missives that disappear after only a few seconds.
In some cases, however, even just a general post directed at the wider world can be considered a direct message—and an inherently threatening one, at that. When you're forbidden from contacting a particular person, you need to be extra careful about using social media sites to rant about the situation.
The PFA Forbids All Types of Contact
The purpose of a PFA is to prevent the defendant from contacting the petitioner, by any and all means. That's why these documents are sometimes referred to as “no-contact” orders. If your ex takes out a PFA against you, you may not contact them via telephone, text, mail, email, any website or app that has a chat function, or the messaging feature of a social media platform.
Moreover, you will not be allowed in the same physical space or area as your ex or anywhere they might be—namely their home, school, car, and place of employment. There are some variations as to the distance between the two of you, but it's generally in the range of 300 feet.
If you try to contact your ex or are seen within a short distance of them, you will be found in violation of the PFA, and you may be charged with contempt of court. Although a PFA order is a civil matter, the violation of one can incur criminal charges.
So What About Social Media Posts?
Those methods of contact are fairly straightforward, and using any of them to get in touch with a person, in any circumstance, carries a reasonable expectation of direct contact with that person and no one else. But what about a social media post—a tweet, a TikTok video, an Instagram caption, a Facebook post? Such communiques are meant to be seen by large numbers of people. Does a statement addressed to a larger audience constitute direct contact with someone you've been ordered to stay away from?
The answer is yes—at least in certain circumstances. There have been many incidents in which judges have ruled that tagging a protected party on Instagram, Facebook, or any other platform, is indeed a violation of a no-contact order or restraining order.
In some cases, a social media post can be considered a violation even if it doesn't tag the petitioner or even mention them by name. If you compose a tweet, status, or other piece of content that is obliquely referring to your ex, you could be in trouble. The content would have to provide enough identifying details or references to the relationship that at least some of your followers (and/or your ex's) can easily determine the subject of the posts, even if you don't name names.
How To Fight an Unfair PFA
As new social media sites and forms of electronic contact emerge and become standard ways to connect and communicate with others, the law must do its best to keep up. Whether an update or post can be considered to violate the mandate of a PFA depends on a lot of factors, not least the nature of the post and the issuing judge's interpretation. If you have been named by an ex in a no-contact order, it's best to stay off social media altogether, particularly if you and your ex have plenty of mutual followers or friends.
Instead of taking to your devices to vent, call the LLF Law Firm. LLF Law Firm experienced team can help you fight back, legally, to regain your reputation after you have been issued a PFA. Tell us about your situation, and together we can get started on your PFA case in Pennsylvania. Call 888-535-3686 today.
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