
What Is Assault in the Fourth Degree?
An Assault Fourth Degree charge is the one criminal charge that most people arrested for it seem the most surprised by. It just seemed so minor,’ is the usual reaction. There are, after all, no broken bones, no trips to the ER, no headlines. Just a shove, a grab, a flinch read as a threat, or a story told after emotions ran hot. Then the cuffs. Then the no-contact order. Then the cold realization that this ‘spat’ or exchange of heated words, or a finger to the chest, has suddenly disrupted your home, your job, your immigration plans, or your right to own a firearm... or all of them at once.
Prosecutors and the courts treat assault 4th as they do any other assault charge: seriously. So do we.
How Assault 4th Cases Unfold
The same realities apply to assault 4th as they do all assault charges: the State will use the police report to create its own narrative, and that narrative will not be kind to you.
When a domestic violence component is added, the court’s posture changes before you get a chance to present your side of the story. A domestic violence tag immediately adds pre-trial release conditions that will seem as if you have already been found guilty. The court will interpret the police report in the most literal and restrictive manner possible, and you will be issued a no-contact order, asked to surrender firearms, and comply with other strict conditions.
It's vital, then, to get representation as quickly as possible. Call us Now.

Understanding Washington’s Assault 4th Law
Washington defines assault broadly. You can be charged with Assault in the Fourth Degree even when there is no visible injury. Any intentional offensive touching or any act that causes a reasonable fear of harm can be the basis for an assault charge. That includes brief contact in a crowded kitchen, a hand on a wrist in a loud argument, or a raised arm or even a raised voice that is taken as a threat. If that sounds like emotions are being criminalized, you are not wrong. Remember, however, that the State must prove that the ‘act’ created either fear or offensive contact beyond a reasonable doubt.
Two pathways drive most of these cases:
Fear-based assault: Your conduct allegedly placed someone in reasonable fear of harm.
Offensive contact: Any unwanted touching that a reasonable person would find offensive—even brief or minimal contact—can qualify.
Assault 4th is a gross misdemeanor, with a maximum of 364 days in jail and up to $5,000 in fines. A domestic violence designation changes the process immediately and dramatically: mandatory arrest rules, no-contact orders, firearm surrender. With a domestic violence designation, the court will always err on the side of caution in its rulings and conditions... every time.
Mandatory arrest within the “four-hour rule” when officers believe qualifying DV conduct occurred. The “primary aggressor” is booked.
Immediate no-contact order (NCO) at first appearance, often removing you from your home and criminalizing even a wellness text.
Firearm surrender during the case and mandatory loss of gun rights upon conviction, with difficult restoration
Conditions of release that often include alcohol monitoring, drug testing, counseling, and compliance checks.
Victim-advocate involvement early in the process; they are not your advocates, and many complaining witnesses obtain counsel of their own. You need yours immediately.
Domestic Violence Tag: What It Means
A domestic violence tag does not change the underlying statute, but it changes your life overnight. You need to understand that the domestic violence label attaches based on your relationship to the alleged victim, and it’s probably not what you would expect. ‘Relationship’ in terms of a domestic violence charge may be a spouse or former spouse, intimate/dating partner (current or former), domestic partner, co-parent, qualifying family or household member, or even a roommate.
Treat the domestic violence tag as if it were a second case wrapped inside the first. It drives arrest decisions, fuels conditions that are easy to violate, and reshapes any plea or trial calculus. Knauss Law’s first objective is to stabilize the situation—modify orders where safety allows, protect housing and work, and stop the slow bleed of conditions that set people up to fail. Then we begin your defense.

What Happens After Arrest
An assault arrest means booking, fingerprints, and placement in a holding area until court. The first appearance happens quickly—sometimes by video, depending on the court location. The prosecutor will ask for conditions. The court will likely impose them.
Even without the domestic violence tag, Fourth-Degree Assault moves in a compressed timeline. Judges will often set release conditions even in non-domestic violence cases, especially where alcohol, a public place, or repeat police contact shows up in the report.
Regardless, you need an attorney speaking for you as early in the process as possible.
After arraignment comes discovery and pretrial hearings. Police reports and body-cam video arrive in waves, not all at once. We push for what is missing: 911 audio, neighbor statements, scene photos, medical notes, messages, and location data. We challenge probable cause where it is thin, move to suppress what was seized or said unlawfully, and force early disclosure of anything the State intends to use at trial. We also work with you on whatever conditions the court may have imposed — targeted counseling in place of generic classes, sensible monitoring schedules, and no-contact modifications that let you live, work, and parent while the case proceeds. Our aim is simple: improve your position with the court while we present your defense.
Decoding the Police Report
Think of it as a first draft.
Every report has a rhythm. We read hundreds every year. Here are the patterns that matter:
The “primary aggressor” choice. Officers arrive at a chaotic scene and then do the human thing: they pick a side in a few minutes. Everything starts with a snap judgment.
Word choice is everything. “Grabbed” versus “touched,” “shoved” versus “guided,” “blocked” versus “stood in the doorway.” Those verbs decide whether the arrest is based on ‘fear’ or ‘offensive contact.
Omissions tell stories. What does the report not mention—lighting, crowding, intoxication, medical history, comparable injuries on both sides, third-party influence, prior calls at the same address, or the timing of the 911 calls – all and more are part of the story, but not always to be found in the police report. Why? Because police reports are by nature decidedly one-sided.
Our job is to pore over the report, add your story, and present the full narrative


Outcomes We Fight For
We work with our clients to reach outcomes that reflect what actually happened and protect what still matters—work, parenting, immigration status, professional licensing, and your ability to move on. Assault 4th cases, with or without ‘domestic violence’ elements are resolved in several ways:
Dismissal where the evidence is thin, due process has not been followed, the fear/offensive contact element fails, or self-defense is established.
Reduction to a non-DV offense when the label causes more harm than the facts justify.
Conditions that work—targeted counseling instead of generic programs, sensible monitoring schedules, and NCO modifications that let you work, parent, and comply without setting traps you will inevitably “violate.”
Early relief from conditions when compliance and progress are real.
We also coordinate with trusted family-law counsel when parenting plans, temporary orders, or safety planning intersect with your criminal case. The last thing you need is two lawyers working at cross purposes in two different courts.
First 72 Hours: Critical Steps
You need to move fast. You need to start with an experienced criminal defense attorney who knows the court. You need to contact Knauss Law as quickly as possible.
Then you need to follow these early guidelines to prevent unforced errors, lock down what helps you, and shape conditions you can actually live with.
Do not talk about the facts. Come to think of it, do not talk about any aspect of the case in any regard to anyone. Ever. Not the police, not friends, not the alleged victim, even if they ask, and not to social media. “Clarifying” things creates evidence against you and narrows your defense.
Obey court orders precisely. An NCO is not a suggestion. One text can create a second case with worse leverage than the first.
Preserve what helps you. Save messages, take photos, write down a timeline while it is fresh. Identify witnesses the police ignored.
Call us early. Early intervention changes conditions of release, controls discovery fights, and stops unforced errors.
These steps sound simple. They are not easy. We will handle the calls, the conditions, and the early court work so you do not make the mistake that turns a winnable case into a permanent problem.


Defending Assault 4th Charges
There is no one-size-fits-all defense to any assault charge. The right strategy is fact-driven and disciplined.
Self-defense or defense of others. The law allows reasonable, proportional force in the face of imminent harm. The “reasonable” part is where cases are won or lost. We anchor the timeline with bodycam, 911 audio, neighbor statements, scene diagrams, and medical notes consistent with defensive movement
Accidental contact / lack of intent. Washington’s definition still requires intentional offensive touching or reasonable fear. A stumble in a cramped space during a loud argument is not the same as a shove through a doorway.
No offensive contact / no reasonable fear. Emotion is not the standard. Jurors hear “angry” and assume “assault.” We separate heat from harm.
Credibility and motive. Relationships are complicated. We do not litigate character; we test reliability—consistency across statements, message tone before and after, who called 911 first, whether injuries match the story, and whether anyone had leverage to gain by exaggerating.
Your defense begins with you not talking to the police – or anyone – only your lawyer. Call us, we will begin to structure your case from there.
If the government does not have ‘proof’ we will see that the case goes no further. If self-defense fits the facts, we will move quickly to present it to the court. If there are procedural errors, we will point them out. If facts call for a negotiated landing, we will insist on terms that protect your record, your rights, and your future.
Common Myths About Assault 4th
“No injury means no assault.” No. Fourth-Degree Assault can be fear-based or an offensive touch with no visible mark.
“If the other person wants to drop it, the case goes away.” The prosecutor decides, not the complaining witness.
“I will just explain it to the judge at arraignment.” Explanations without counsel almost always backfire and lock you into a version you cannot fix later.
“Complying with monitoring guarantees leniency.” It does not. Compliance avoids new problems; it does not erase the old ones.
“If I ignore the no-contact order and nothing bad happens, the court will understand.” It will not. NCO violations are prosecuted aggressively and wreck otherwise defensible cases.

Frequently Asked Questions
When Everything’s on the Line
You are not a file number or a “routine” Fourth-Degree Assault to us. You are someone whose life can be reshaped by a label the government attached in minutes. We move quickly to stabilize the situation, challenge the story in the report, manage conditions that set people up to fail, and press for outcomes that reflect what actually happened.
You do not need lectures. You need a plan. We build it with you and execute it relentlessly.
Call Knauss Law. Every hour after an arrest is either used well or used against you. We know the difference—and we make it count.
