Lutz Stalking & Cyberstalking Attorney
Stalking charges carry a weight that most people underestimate until they are standing in a courtroom. What begins as a disputed text message thread, a misread social media interaction, or a contentious breakup can escalate into a criminal case with consequences that follow someone for years. Lutz stalking & cyberstalking attorney Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm represents people throughout the Lutz area and surrounding Hillsborough and Pasco County communities who are facing these charges, working directly with each client from the first call through the resolution of the case.
What Florida Actually Criminalizes Under Its Stalking Laws
Florida Statute Section 784.048 draws a meaningful distinction between conduct that is annoying or persistent and conduct that crosses into criminal territory. The statute requires that the behavior be willful, malicious, and repeated, meaning a single incident rarely meets the legal threshold. The prosecution must establish a pattern, and the definition of “pattern” becomes one of the central battlegrounds in any stalking case.
Cyberstalking is treated as a subset of stalking under the same statute. It covers electronic communications, including emails, text messages, social media messages, and any other digital contact, that are sent with the intent to cause substantial emotional distress to a specific person. The fact that no physical presence was involved does not reduce the charge’s severity in Florida courts.
Aggravated stalking is a third-degree felony. It applies when the conduct involves a credible threat, or when the target is a minor, or when an injunction or other court order was in place at the time of the alleged conduct. Standard stalking and cyberstalking are first-degree misdemeanors, but a misdemeanor in Florida still carries up to one year in jail and a year of probation. Neither charge should be treated as minor.
How These Cases Actually Get Built and Where They Can Unravel
Stalking prosecutions in the Lutz area, handled through the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit in Hillsborough County or the Sixth Judicial Circuit in Pasco County depending on where the alleged conduct occurred, tend to rely heavily on records: call logs, email timestamps, screenshots, restraining order histories, and witness statements from people the complainant told about the alleged behavior.
The state has to prove each element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. That includes proving the conduct was willful and malicious, not accidental or emotionally impulsive. It includes proving it was directed at a specific person. And critically, it includes proving the conduct caused substantial emotional distress, which is not the same as proving the complainant felt upset or uncomfortable.
Context matters in ways that prosecutors do not always acknowledge at the outset. A series of messages between former co-parents coordinating a custody schedule looks very different from a campaign of harassment, even if the volume of contact seems high on paper. A string of unanswered texts sent during a mental health crisis does not automatically satisfy the malice element. An account on social media that the complainant could have blocked but chose to monitor is a different situation than one where the defendant found workarounds to reach someone who had clearly cut contact.
Omar reviews the underlying records carefully, looks at the timeline of the alleged conduct, examines whether any prior relationship or legal dispute between the parties affects the narrative, and analyzes whether the evidence actually supports each statutory element or whether the case has been built on assumptions.
Injunctions and Criminal Charges Often Run Together
One of the practical realities of stalking accusations in Florida is that the civil and criminal systems often move in parallel. A complainant may seek a civil injunction for protection against stalking or repeat violence through the family division of the circuit court, while law enforcement is simultaneously handling a criminal referral. The two proceedings are legally separate, but they affect each other in ways that defendants need to understand.
A civil injunction can be entered on a much lower evidentiary standard than a criminal conviction. A judge at an injunction hearing is not applying the reasonable doubt standard. That means someone can be subject to a court order restricting their movements, communications, and firearms rights well before any criminal determination has been made.
Violating that injunction, even unintentionally, elevates the underlying conduct and can produce independent criminal charges. Someone who contacts a protected party through a third person, or who shows up at a location they did not know was covered, can face a first-degree misdemeanor for the violation alone. If the violation involves a credible threat or assault, it becomes a felony.
OA Law Firm handles both sides of this. If an injunction has been filed against you alongside criminal stalking or cyberstalking charges, those proceedings need to be managed together, not independently.
Questions People Ask When Facing These Charges in Lutz
Can a stalking charge be filed even if I never threatened anyone?
Yes. The standard stalking statute does not require a threat. It requires repeated, willful, malicious conduct that causes substantial emotional distress. A pattern of unwanted contact, following someone, or appearing repeatedly at locations where you know a person will be can satisfy the statute without any threatening language being exchanged.
What makes cyberstalking different from sending too many messages?
The legal distinction comes down to intent and effect, not volume. Florida’s cyberstalking law requires that the communication be sent to cause substantial emotional distress, with no legitimate purpose. Prosecutors will argue about what constitutes a legitimate purpose, and that argument is often where cases are won or contested.
I have a custody dispute with the person who filed the complaint. Does that matter?
It can matter significantly. Active litigation between the parties, particularly custody or divorce proceedings, is relevant context for assessing the credibility of the accusation and the motivation behind it. Omar examines the full background of the relationship and any parallel legal proceedings when building a defense.
If I’m convicted of cyberstalking, will it show up on a background check?
Yes. Both misdemeanor and felony stalking convictions appear on Florida criminal records and are visible on standard background checks. For a first-degree misdemeanor, sealing or expungement may be available under certain circumstances if the case is resolved favorably. A conviction significantly limits those options.
The police showed up at my door but haven’t arrested me yet. What should I do?
Do not make statements to law enforcement before speaking with an attorney. Even cooperative, well-intentioned explanations can create problems later. Contact OA Law Firm and let Omar understand what you know about the investigation before any further contact with investigators occurs.
Can the complainant drop the charges?
The decision to prosecute belongs to the State of Florida, not the complainant. A complainant can decline to cooperate, recant, or request that charges not be pursued, but none of those actions legally obligates the prosecutor to dismiss the case. The state can proceed with other evidence if it chooses to. That said, the complainant’s position is practically relevant and affects how the prosecution moves forward.
What are the immigration consequences of a stalking conviction?
For non-citizens, a stalking or cyberstalking conviction can trigger serious immigration consequences, including potential grounds for deportation depending on how the offense is classified and whether it intersects with domestic violence definitions under federal immigration law. Omar is licensed in federal court in the Middle and Northern Districts of Florida and takes immigration consequences into account when evaluating case strategy.
Reach OA Law Firm About Your Lutz Cyberstalking or Stalking Case
Omar Abdelghany handles every case personally at OA Law Firm, which means when you retain the firm, you work directly with your attorney and not a paralegal or associate. He is available around the clock for new clients who need to speak with someone about what they are facing. For anyone in Lutz, Wesley Chapel, Land O’ Lakes, or the surrounding communities who has been arrested for or is under investigation for a stalking or cyberstalking offense in Florida, getting the right counsel early changes the trajectory of the case. Contact OA Law Firm to schedule a consultation with a Lutz stalking defense attorney who will review your situation honestly and tell you where you stand.
