Hillsborough County Child Abuse Attorney
Child abuse charges carry consequences that reach far beyond criminal penalties. A conviction can end careers, terminate parental rights, result in placement on the Florida sexual offender or abuse registry, and follow a person for the rest of their life. Hillsborough County child abuse attorney Omar Abdelghany at OA Law Firm represents people facing these charges and works to ensure that every piece of evidence is examined, every legal challenge is raised, and every defense option is fully pursued.
What Florida Law Actually Charges Under the Child Abuse Umbrella
Florida’s child abuse statutes are broader than most people expect. Under Florida Statute 827.03, child abuse includes intentional infliction of physical or mental injury, an intentional act that could reasonably be expected to cause physical or mental injury, and active encouragement of another person to commit such an act.
Aggravated child abuse is a more serious category. It applies when someone knowingly or willfully abuses a child and in doing so causes great bodily harm, permanent disability, or permanent disfigurement. Charges can also arise from alleged neglect, which is a separate statutory offense defined as failing to provide necessary care, supervision, or services to a child.
Penalties scale significantly depending on the charge. Standard child abuse is a third-degree felony, punishable by up to five years in prison. Aggravated child abuse is a first-degree felony carrying up to thirty years. Felony convictions for child abuse also trigger mandatory reporting obligations on the defendant’s record and can result in immediate loss of any professional license that involves contact with children.
In Hillsborough County, these cases are handled in the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit. The State Attorney’s Office prosecutes these matters aggressively, and investigations often begin before any arrest is made, sometimes triggered by a report from a mandatory reporter such as a teacher, physician, or daycare worker.
How These Cases Are Built Before Charges Are Filed
Child abuse investigations in Hillsborough County typically involve multiple agencies working in parallel. Law enforcement, the Florida Department of Children and Families, and sometimes the Child Protection Team based at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital coordinate early in the process. By the time an arrest is made, investigators may have already interviewed the child, reviewed medical records, photographed alleged injuries, and documented statements from witnesses or family members.
The Child Protection Team plays a particularly significant role. CPT physicians are trained to offer medical opinions about whether injuries are consistent with abuse or with a non-abusive explanation. Those opinions carry substantial weight in court, but they are not infallible. Defense attorneys can and do challenge these opinions with independent medical expertise.
Forensic interviews of the child are also central to many cases. Florida’s Crimes Against Children guidelines call for structured forensic interviewing, but interviews are still conducted by people with biases, training variations, and leading tendencies. If a forensic interview was conducted improperly, or if a child’s account changed across multiple interviews, those inconsistencies matter.
DCF involvement runs on a separate track from the criminal case. A DCF investigation can result in removal of children from the home, safety plans, or dependency proceedings regardless of whether criminal charges are ultimately filed or sustained. Omar Abdelghany advises clients on both tracks from the outset, because what a person says during a DCF interview can and often does affect the criminal case.
Defenses That Get Examined in Child Abuse Cases
The most significant defenses in child abuse cases are often factual rather than legal. Medical evidence can be misinterpreted. Conditions like bleeding disorders, bone diseases such as osteogenesis imperfecta, and certain skin conditions can produce findings that superficially resemble abuse. An independent review by a qualified medical expert can change the entire trajectory of a case.
Accidental injury is another genuine defense. Children sustain injuries through play, falls, and accidents, and the circumstances surrounding an injury are not always as clear as the initial report suggests. When evidence of the child’s activity history, the home environment, or prior similar incidents supports an accidental explanation, that defense deserves to be built carefully with corroborating evidence.
False allegations occur in child abuse cases. They arise most often in the context of custody disputes, family conflicts, or situations where a child has been coached or influenced by an adult. If the timeline of allegations correlates with a custody battle or a family breakdown, that context is legally relevant and should be explored.
Constitutional challenges are also available. If law enforcement conducted a search without a warrant or proper justification, or if a statement was taken in violation of Miranda rights, Omar will move to suppress that evidence. The prosecution’s case is often significantly weakened when key evidence is excluded.
Questions Clients Ask About Child Abuse Charges in Hillsborough County
Can I speak to my child if DCF is investigating?
Not without understanding what is legally permitted and what could harm your case. A DCF safety plan may restrict contact with your child, and violating those terms creates additional legal exposure. Before you take any action involving contact with the child or other witnesses, speak with an attorney.
What happens if I was the only adult present when the injury occurred?
Being the sole adult present at the time of an alleged injury often becomes a focus of the investigation. It does not establish guilt, but prosecutors may treat it as circumstantial evidence. The defense would look carefully at alternative explanations for the injury and work to show that the evidence does not eliminate other possibilities.
Can child abuse charges be dropped or reduced before trial?
Yes. Charges can be dropped if the evidence does not support the elements of the offense, if key evidence is suppressed, or if the State cannot prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt. Charges can also be reduced through negotiations. Omar evaluates every case to determine what outcomes are realistically available and how to position the case to achieve them.
Will I automatically lose custody of my children if I am charged?
A criminal charge does not automatically terminate parental rights, but DCF has the authority to initiate dependency proceedings that can result in removal or restricted contact. These civil proceedings operate independently from the criminal case, and the outcomes are not guaranteed to align. Handling both simultaneously requires careful coordination.
Does a conviction require me to register anywhere?
Florida maintains the Abuse in Care Registry and related databases that track individuals with certain abuse-related findings. A criminal conviction can also appear on background checks that are visible to employers, licensing boards, and educational institutions. The exact registration and reporting obligations depend on the specific charge and outcome.
What if the alleged victim recants?
A recantation does not automatically end a prosecution. Prosecutors in Florida may continue to pursue charges if they believe other evidence supports the case. However, a recantation is significant and can affect the outcome at trial or during plea negotiations. It should be brought to the attention of your attorney immediately.
How does a child abuse charge affect a professional license in Florida?
Many Florida professional licenses, including those for teachers, healthcare workers, childcare providers, and social workers, require holders to report criminal charges. A conviction can result in license suspension or revocation. Even a plea to a lesser charge can trigger licensing consequences. This is one reason why how a case is resolved matters as much as whether a conviction is avoided entirely.
What Omar Abdelghany Brings to These Cases
Omar personally handles every case at OA Law Firm. There are no associates who take over after the initial meeting. He investigates the police reports, reviews the medical evidence, and talks directly with clients about what happened. He is licensed in all Florida courts, including federal court in the Middle and Northern Districts, which matters in cases where federal charges may also be on the table.
His practice is exclusively criminal defense. That focus means he understands how Hillsborough County prosecutors and investigators approach these cases, what evidence they rely on most heavily, and where cases can be effectively challenged. He provides clients with his direct contact information and keeps them informed throughout the process.
If you have been charged or believe you are under investigation, the earlier you get legal representation involved, the more options remain available.
Speak Directly with a Child Abuse Defense Attorney in Hillsborough County
Omar Abdelghany at OA Law Firm is available to speak with you around the clock. If you are facing a Hillsborough County child abuse charge, or if law enforcement or DCF has contacted you as part of an investigation, reach out to our office to schedule a consultation. Omar will give you a direct assessment of where things stand and what can be done.
