Your home is inviolable

In Spain, your home is inviolable.This is not just a phrase — it is a constitutional right and one of the strongest protections you have as a survivor of domestic violence. 🏠 YOUR HOME = YOUR SAFE SPACE.No one — absolutely no one — can enter without your permission.Not an ex-partner.Not a spouse you’re separated from.Not someone who “used… Read More Your home is inviolable

Safety + empowerment + vigilance + recovery.

Just because you’re feeling great, fantastic, renewed… don’t lose sight of the truth:your abusers will not be feeling the same. And that’s exactly why you stay grounded, steady, and smart. Healing does not mean becoming careless.Freedom does not mean forgetting what you survived.Confidence does not mean abandoning caution. This is the chapter where you rise… Read More Safety + empowerment + vigilance + recovery.

🇪🇸 DIVORCE IN SPAIN INVOLVING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

When a divorce in Spain involves domestic violence (“violencia de gĂ©nero”), the process is handled with special legal protections and urgency to safeguard the victim. Below is a clear overview of how it works — legally, practically, and emotionally. 🇪🇸 DIVORCE IN SPAIN INVOLVING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE 1. Immediate Protection Comes First If domestic violence has occurred, the family court (“Juzgado… Read More 🇪🇸 DIVORCE IN SPAIN INVOLVING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

Budapest Convention

Cross‑border cyber/intrusion cases between the UK and Spain are handled through international cooperation — mainly the Budapest Convention, Mutual Legal Assistance (MLA) channels and police cooperation (Europol/Interpol/Eurojust), plus bilateral arrangements — but since Brexit some EU tools (like the European Investigation Order) no longer apply to the UK, so investigations often rely on MLA requests and… Read More Budapest Convention

Legal overview — Why hidden cameras are illegal in Spain

If you’ve discovered — or suspect — hidden cameras in your home, that is a serious violation of your privacy and possibly a criminal offence in Spain. Below is a clear explanation of what this means legally, what to do immediately, and how to protect yourself emotionally and practically. ⚖️ 1. Legal overview — Why hidden cameras… Read More Legal overview — Why hidden cameras are illegal in Spain

Illegal lockout, coercion, usurpation or related offences

If your husband changes the alarm/lock codes so you cannot access your home, that can be a criminal act in Spain (illegal lockout, coercion, usurpation or related offences). Don’t try to “fix” it by doing anything illegal yourself — take steps to protect your safety and your legal rights. Below I’ll explain what’s likely going on… Read More Illegal lockout, coercion, usurpation or related offences

Why wiping someone else’s hard drive is illegal (what the law says)

You can’t legally wipe someone else’s hard drive in Spain without clear lawful authority — doing so is very likely a criminal offence (and creates civil/data‑protection liability). Below I explain why, the likely crimes and penalties, and what to do instead (if you’re the victim). I will not give any instructions on how to carry out destructive acts.… Read More Why wiping someone else’s hard drive is illegal (what the law says)

Legal Framework for Protection

In Spain, family members can be included in a restraining order if their actions constitute harassment, stalking, or domestic violence. Spanish law provides mechanisms to protect individuals from such behaviors, including those perpetrated by family members. Legal Framework for Protection Under Organic Law 1/2004, victims of domestic violence can request a civil protection order (orden de protecciĂłn) through Article 544-ter… Read More Legal Framework for Protection

⚖️ Legal View (Court’s Perspective)

If a spouse is taking legal advice from a struck-off solicitor, this is not viewed favourably by the court. đź§  Psychological View (Behavioural & Motivational Meaning) From a psychological and relational standpoint, this behaviour can signal several underlying patterns: đź§© How Courts Integrate These Impressions Judges are not psychologists, but they do notice behaviour patterns.If a spouse repeatedly: the court may… Read More ⚖️ Legal View (Court’s Perspective)

⚖️ 1. Legal Perspective: Divorce Filings in Spain

âś… If you already filed first When one spouse files for divorce in Spain, that filing initiates the legal process â€” it becomes the active case.If your partner files a year later, the court generally will not open a new, separate case. Instead, the judge will usually: Spain’s legal system doesn’t allow two divorce cases for the same marriage to run simultaneously. The… Read More ⚖️ 1. Legal Perspective: Divorce Filings in Spain