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Texas Assault Causing Bodily Injury Defense Lawyers
Assault causing bodily injury is the most frequently charged assault offense in Texas. Under Texas Penal Code §22.01(a)(1), a person commits assault if they intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly cause bodily injury to another person. “Bodily injury” is defined broadly under Texas law as physical pain, illness, or any impairment of physical condition. Even minor injuries like a bruise, a scratch, or temporary pain can satisfy this element.
At Deandra Grant Law, Attorney Douglas Huff defends clients against assault causing bodily injury charges. Doug understands that these cases frequently arise from situations that are far more nuanced than the police report suggests such as bar fights where both parties were at fault, arguments between partners that escalated, misunderstandings where the contact was accidental, or situations where the defendant was defending themselves.
Penalties
Standard Assault Causing Bodily Injury
Assault causing bodily injury is a Class A misdemeanor:
- Up to 1 year in county jail
- Fine of up to $4,000
- Probation may be available
Enhanced Penalties
The charge is elevated based on the victim’s status or the defendant’s history:
- Family violence enhancement: If the victim is a family member, household member, or current/former dating partner, the assault carries additional collateral consequences including a potential lifetime prohibition on firearm possession under federal law, even though the offense level remains a Class A misdemeanor for a first offense
- Prior family violence conviction: A second assault causing bodily injury against a family member is elevated to a third-degree felony (2 to 10 years) if the defendant has a prior family violence conviction or deferred adjudication
- Prior assault conviction (non-family): A second or subsequent assault causing bodily injury can be enhanced to a third-degree felony under certain circumstances
- Assault against certain professionals: Assault causing bodily injury against an on-duty security officer, emergency services worker, or hospital employee can be elevated to a third-degree felony
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What the Prosecution Must Prove
To convict, the prosecution must establish:
- The defendant intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly caused the injury — accidental contact is not assault
- The victim suffered bodily injury — physical pain, illness, or impairment of physical condition
- The defendant’s conduct was unlawful — self-defense, defense of others, and consent are all defenses that negate the unlawfulness of the conduct
Defense Strategies
Self-Defense
Texas law provides broad self-defense rights. If the defendant reasonably believed force was immediately necessary to protect themselves against the other person’s use or attempted use of unlawful force, the assault was justified. Doug investigates the circumstances of the confrontation, identifies evidence of the other party’s aggression, and presents the self-defense case to the jury.
Mutual Combat
When both parties were willing participants in a physical confrontation, the prosecution’s narrative that the defendant was the sole aggressor may not hold up. Evidence of mutual combat can support self-defense arguments or reduce the defendant’s perceived culpability.
Accidental Contact
Assault requires intentional, knowing, or reckless conduct. If the contact was genuinely accidental such as bumping into someone in a crowd, making contact during a legitimate athletic activity, or unintentionally causing injury during a non-violent interaction, the mental state element is not satisfied.
Challenging the Injury
The prosecution must prove bodily injury. If the alleged victim’s claims of injury are exaggerated, unsupported by medical evidence, or contradicted by the physical evidence, Doug challenges the injury element directly.
False Allegations
Assault allegations are frequently fabricated or exaggerated by estranged partners seeking leverage in a divorce or custody case, by individuals seeking to gain an advantage in a civil dispute, or by complainants who were themselves the aggressor and reported first to control the narrative. Doug investigates the complainant’s motives, prior allegations, and the consistency of their account.
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Collateral Consequences
Beyond the criminal penalties, an assault conviction can carry lasting consequences:
- Firearm prohibition: A family violence assault conviction triggers a federal lifetime prohibition on firearm possession under 18 U.S.C. §922(g)(9) — the Lautenberg Amendment. This applies even to misdemeanor convictions.
- Employment: An assault conviction appears on background checks and can affect employment in healthcare, education, law enforcement, and other fields.
- Immigration: For non-citizens, an assault conviction can trigger deportation, inadmissibility, or denial of naturalization.
- Professional licensing: Licensing boards for attorneys, medical professionals, teachers, and other professions may take adverse action based on assault convictions.
- Custody and family law: An assault conviction — particularly one involving family violence — can significantly affect custody determinations and protective order proceedings.
Protect Your Future — Contact Deandra Grant Law Today
If you or someone you love is facing assault charges in Texas, contact Deandra Grant Law for a free, confidential consultation. Attorney Douglas Huff has defended clients against violent felony charges throughout his career. Our firm’s forensic science credentials and 30+ years of criminal defense experience mean you get a level of defense that most firms cannot provide.
Call (214) 225-7117 or schedule an appointment online at texasdwisite.com.
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“Deandra Grant Law – Criminal & DWI Defense handled my case with diligence and professionalism. Deandra Grant’s reputation is stellar and now I know why. She has a team of individuals who provide quality service.”
N. Coulter

(214) 225-7117
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