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Legal Information: Nevada

Restraining Orders

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Updated: 
January 9, 2024

Who can file for an order for protection against high-risk behavior?

A law enforcement officer or the respondent’s family or household member can file for a high-risk protection order if the respondent poses an immediate risk of causing a self-inflicted injury or personal injury to another person by possessing, controlling, or purchasing a firearm.1

You are considered to be the respondent’s family or household member if you:

  • are related to the respondent by blood, adoption, or marriage;
  • have a child in common with the respondent;
  • are the respondent’s domestic partner;
  • have a parent-child relationship with the respondent, including biological, adoptive, or legal parents or grandparents;
  • have acted as the respondent’s guardian; or
  • currently have or previously had a dating or ongoing intimate relationship with the respondent.2

1 N.R.S. §§ 33.570; 33.560(1), (2)
2 N.R.S. § 33.540