Domestic Abuse with Prior Pattern of Physical Abuse Defense in Oklahoma
A charge like this says more than one bad argument happened. Prosecutors are claiming there was a current domestic abuse incident and a broader pattern of physical abuse. That extra allegation matters because it turns the case into a felony and gives the State a longer story to tell a judge or jury.
Still, a pattern allegation doesn’t prove itself. The State has to prove the current event, the required domestic relationship, and the extra pattern requirement with the kind of evidence Oklahoma law allows. This page works alongside our domestic violence page and our broader assault, battery, and domestic abuse guide.
Quick links
- What this charge means
- What the State must prove
- Penalties
- Collateral consequences
- How prosecutors try to prove it
- Practical guide
- What happens next
- Key terms
- FAQs
- News example
Talk to a defense team before this case defines the facts for you
If you’ve been accused of domestic abuse with prior pattern of physical abuse in Oklahoma, reach out for a free consultation before statements, bond terms, or rushed plea talks lock you into a bad position. A felony domestic case can affect jail exposure, firearms rights, family court issues, and future enhancement risk. Call us at 405-633-3420 or use our secure online form.
What this charge means
Under 21 O.S. § 644.1, this felony applies when prosecutors say you committed domestic abuse and that there was a prior pattern of physical abuse. The underlying domestic abuse comes from 21 O.S. § 644. In practical terms, that means the State is alleging an assault and battery against a spouse, former spouse, dating partner, coparent, household member, current or former intimate partner, or another protected domestic relationship.
The pattern part is what makes this charge different from a basic domestic abuse count. Oklahoma law says the pattern must involve at least two separate incidences, including the current incident, and those incidents must have happened on different days. The statute also limits how the State can prove earlier incidents. For incidents before the current one, prosecutors must use a third-party witness’s sworn testimony or other admissible direct evidence that is independent of the alleged victim’s testimony.
That proof rule can become the center of the case. If the State can prove a current argument but can’t lawfully prove the required pattern, the felony charge gets much harder to sustain. Depending on the facts, prosecutors may also try to pair this case with related domestic abuse counts, a claimed violation of a protective order, or another assault-based allegation from the same event.
What the State must prove
For the underlying domestic abuse part, Oklahoma’s jury instruction 4-26A tracks the basic elements. Then the State must add the special prior-pattern requirement from the felony statute.
- You acted willfully.
- You acted unlawfully.
- You attempted or offered to use force or violence.
- You used force or violence.
- The act was against a person in a qualifying domestic or intimate relationship.
- There were at least two separate incidences, including the current incident, and they happened on different days.
- Each earlier incident is proved by sworn testimony from a third-party witness or by other admissible direct evidence that is independent of the alleged victim’s testimony.
Penalties
This offense is a felony. More specifically, it is a Class B3 felony under 21 O.S. § 20H.
- Prison:
- Up to 10 years in the custody of the Department of Corrections.
- Fine:
- Up to $5,000.
- Combined sentence:
- The court can impose prison, a fine, or both.
- Enhancement risk:
- If you have qualifying prior felony convictions, sentencing may become more severe under 21 O.S. § 51.1. You can read more in our Oklahoma sentence enhancement guide.
- Release and probation terms:
- Bond conditions, no-contact terms, treatment, counseling, and other restrictions can follow you through the case even before a conviction.
Collateral consequences
- A felony record can affect jobs, professional licenses, housing, and background checks.
- Judges often impose no-contact conditions that can affect where you live and who you can speak with during the case.
- Family-court and custody disputes can get harder once a domestic felony accusation is on the table.
- Firearms rights can become a serious issue after a domestic-violence conviction.
- Any later domestic case can become more dangerous because prosecutors may use this case as part of a future enhancement theory.
How prosecutors try to prove it
- Statements from the complaining witness, neighbors, relatives, or children who say they saw or heard the incident.
- 911 calls, body-cam video, photographs, medical records, and scene observations.
- Text messages, voicemails, social media posts, or recorded calls that prosecutors say show admissions, threats, or a timeline.
- Third-party testimony about earlier incidents, because the statute requires more than the alleged victim’s testimony alone for prior incidents.
- Other direct evidence tied to earlier events, such as photos, recordings, or witness observations that prosecutors say independently establish a pattern.
Because this charge depends on repeated incidents, the State often tries to widen the case. That can mean bringing in old arguments, prior calls for service, or witnesses from earlier days. A strong defense usually focuses on whether that older material is truly admissible and whether it satisfies the statute’s independent-proof rule.
A practical guide if you’re facing these charges
Questions to ask your attorney
- Can the State actually prove the required prior pattern with lawful independent evidence?
- Which statements, photos, recordings, or witness accounts are vulnerable to exclusion?
- Does the alleged relationship fit the domestic category the State is relying on?
- What are the real sentencing risks if the case stays a felony?
- What is the best path for this case: dismissal, reduction, negotiated resolution, or trial?
Things you can do if you’re arrested for this crime
- Use your right to stay silent instead of trying to talk your way out of a recorded statement.
- Save texts, call logs, photos, video, and location data before they disappear.
- Write down the timeline while it’s still fresh, including who was present and what was said.
- Follow bond and no-contact terms exactly, even if the other person reaches out first.
- Identify neutral witnesses early, because pattern cases often turn on who can independently confirm or deny earlier incidents.
Defenses
- No qualifying pattern: the State may prove a current dispute but still fail to prove separate incidents on different days.
- No lawful proof of earlier incidents: if prior events rest only on the alleged victim’s testimony, the felony pattern element may fail.
- Lack of willfulness: accidental contact, mutual movement, or a chaotic scene may undercut the required mental state.
- Self-defense or defense of another: the law does not punish justified force the same way it punishes unlawful force.
- Suppression issues: unlawful questioning, phone searches, or home entry problems can weaken the State’s evidence.
How we fight these charges
- Expose the missing pattern proof by forcing the State to show exactly how each earlier incident will be proved.
- Challenge weak or overbroad evidence when prosecutors try to turn old accusations into admissible proof.
- Test the domestic-relationship claim when the facts don’t neatly fit the category the State chose.
- Suppress statements, digital evidence, or seized items when police got them in violation of your rights.
- Build a trial theme that separates provable facts from repeated accusations and emotional spillover.
What The Urbanic Law Firm does to help clients charged with this crime
- Explain the charge, the sentencing range, and the real pressure points early.
- Track court dates, bond conditions, no-contact issues, and compliance problems before they grow.
- Gather messages, records, videos, witness leads, and timeline evidence that can change the case.
- Negotiate from a prepared position when dismissal, reduction, or a better resolution is realistically available.
- Prepare the case for hearing or trial from the start instead of waiting until the pressure peaks.
What happens next
Most cases move through bond conditions, arraignment, discovery, negotiation, and then either a plea or trial setting. In domestic cases, there may also be no-contact orders, counseling demands, and parallel family-court problems. If the allegations involve repeated events, discovery often becomes a fight over older accusations and whether they can really come in.
Because every stage can affect the next one, it helps to understand the full sequence early. For a more detailed overview of the criminal process in Oklahoma, you can read more in our Oklahoma criminal process guide.
Key terms
Prior pattern of physical abuse
“Prior pattern of physical abuse” means two or more separate incidences, including the current incident, occurring on different days, where each incident relates to assault and battery or domestic abuse against a qualifying domestic or intimate relationship, and each earlier incident must be proved by a third-party witness’s sworn testimony or other admissible direct evidence independent of the victim’s testimony. (21 O.S. § 644.1) That is the extra element that turns this case into something more than a basic domestic abuse count.
Assault
Assault is any willful and unlawful attempt or offer with force or violence to do a corporal hurt to another. (21 O.S. § 641 & jury instruction 4-28) That matters here because the State often uses the assault-and-battery framework to explain the underlying domestic abuse allegation.
Battery
Battery is any willful and unlawful use of force or violence upon the person of another. (21 O.S. § 642 & jury instruction 4-28) In this charge, prosecutors still have to prove a present act of domestic abuse before they ever reach the pattern issue.
Willful
“Willful” means a purpose or willingness to commit the act or omission, and it does not require an intent to violate the law, injure another, or gain an advantage. (21 O.S. § 92 & jury instruction 4-28) That point matters when the defense is that contact was accidental, misread, or caused by a fast-moving struggle rather than a deliberate act.
FAQs
Can domestic abuse with prior pattern of physical abuse be filed as a felony in Oklahoma?
Yes. This charge is filed as a felony in Oklahoma because prosecutors are alleging a current domestic abuse incident plus a legally provable prior pattern of physical abuse.
What does prior pattern of physical abuse mean in Oklahoma for this charge?
For this charge, Oklahoma law requires at least two separate incidences, including the current incident, on different days. Earlier incidents also need the kind of independent proof the statute demands.
How do prosecutors prove domestic abuse with prior pattern of physical abuse in Oklahoma?
Prosecutors usually try to prove the current event with witness statements, photos, recordings, medical evidence, and police observations. Then they try to prove earlier incidents with third-party witnesses or other direct evidence that does not depend only on the alleged victim’s testimony.
Can a domestic abuse with prior pattern of physical abuse charge be reduced or dismissed in Oklahoma?
Yes, sometimes it can. If the State cannot lawfully prove the required pattern, cannot prove the domestic relationship, or has suppression problems, the case may be reduced, dismissed, or negotiated into a different outcome.
Can a domestic abuse with prior pattern of physical abuse case be expunged in Oklahoma?
Maybe, but it depends on how the case ends and your full record. Oklahoma expungement law is very fact specific, so you should compare the final result in your case to the rules explained in our Oklahoma expungement guide.
A recent Oklahoma news example
One of the clearer public examples is KOCO’s report, “Enid man accused of beating up girlfriend for 2 days”. In that story, police said the case involved repeated abuse allegations and multiple related charges, including domestic abuse with prior pattern of physical abuse. That article shows how prosecutors often use this felony when they believe the event was not isolated and when they think other evidence can help them tell a broader pattern story.
Serving Clients Statewide
Oklahoma County, Payne County, Cleveland County, Canadian County, Tulsa County, Logan County, Lincoln County, Pottawatomie County, and all others
Oklahoma City, Stillwater, Moore, Norman, Del City, Edmond, Mustang, El Reno, Lawton, Kingfisher, Valley Brook, Guthrie, Tulsa, Yukon, Midwest City, Choctaw, and all others
This page is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Every case is unique; consult an attorney about your specific situation. Page last updated April 17, 2026. Consult the statutes listed above for the most up-to-date law.
| THIS OFFENSE IN THE NEWS |
| RELATED OFFENSES |










