M.G.L. c.209A is intended to provide protection from household and family members engaged in “abuse.” The law defines “abuse” as:

  “Abuse”, the occurrence of any of the following acts between family or household members:

  (a) attempting to cause or causing physical harm;

  (b) placing another in fear of imminent serious physical harm;

  (c) causing another to engage involuntarily in sexual relations by force, threat or duress;

  (d) coercive control.

  “Coercive control”, either:

  (a) a pattern of behavior intended to threaten, intimidate, harass, isolate, control, coerce or compel compliance of a family or household member that causes that family or household member to reasonably fear physical harm or have a reduced sense of physical safety or autonomy, including, but not limited to:

  (i) isolating the family or household member from friends, relatives or other sources of support;

  (ii) depriving the family or household member of basic needs;

  (iii) controlling, regulating or monitoring the family or household member’s activities, communications, movements, finances, economic resources or access to services, including through technological means;

  (iv) compelling a family or household member to abstain from or engage in a specific behavior or activity, including engaging in criminal activity;

  (v) threatening to harm a child or relative of the family or household member;

  (vi) threatening to commit cruelty or abuse to an animal connected to the family or household member;

  (vii) intentionally damaging property belonging to the family or household member;

  (viii) threatening to publish sensitive personal information relating to the family or household member, including sexually explicit images; or

  (ix) using repeated court actions found by a court not to be warranted by existing law or good faith argument; or

  (b) a single act intended to threaten, intimidate, harass, isolate, control, coerce or compel compliance of a family or household member that causes the family or household member to reasonably fear physical harm or have a reduced sense of physical safety or autonomy of: (i) harming or attempting to harm a child or relative of the family or household member; (ii) committing or attempting to commit abuse to an animal connected to the family or household member; or (iii) publishing or attempting to publish sexually explicit images of the family or household member.

The concept of “coercive control” under M.G.L. c.209A s.1 was added by the Legislature to curtail more insidious forms of abuse among household members.

The party that suffered the abuse can go to Superior, Family, District court, or Boston Municipal Court (if a dating relationship then Family, District, and Boston Municipal Court) and file for an Abuse Prevention Order.

Call me today if you are the victim of abuse and seek to file an Abuse Prevention Order.

-MS

Michael J. Shivick, Esq. Business