What Is Assault Causing Bodily Injury in Fort Bend County?
Assault causing bodily injury in Texas is the intentional, knowing, or reckless act of causing physical pain, illness, or impairment to another person. It is most commonly charged as a Class A misdemeanor, but can become a felony depending on who was attacked and whether prior convictions exist.
Experienced Assault Defense in Fort Bend County
When your future is on the line, the attorney you choose matters. Varghese Summersett brings more than 100 years of combined legal experience, five Board Certified attorneys, and a team of more than 70 legal professionals. The firm has earned 1,600+ dismissals and 800+ charge reductions across Texas.
Leading the firm’s Fort Bend and Houston criminal defense practice is Mike Hanson, Senior Counsel and Area Lead. Mike is Board Certified in Juvenile Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and has tried more than 60 criminal cases before a jury. Before joining Varghese Summersett, Mike served as an Assistant District Attorney in both Tarrant County and Fort Bend County — meaning he knows exactly how the prosecution builds its assault cases here. He also served as a Judge Advocate for the Texas Army National Guard and continues to serve in the U.S. Army Reserve JAG Corps.
The firm has handled assault cases at every level, from first-time misdemeanor charges to felony family violence matters. Varghese Summersett appears regularly in the media and has been recognized by Super Lawyers, Best Lawyers in America, and national trial lawyer organizations. The firm’s four offices — Fort Worth, Dallas, Southlake, and Houston — give clients access to a deep team with local knowledge of Fort Bend County courts, prosecutors, and procedures.
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Related Charges and Concerns
Assault causing bodily injury often comes with additional complications. If the alleged victim is a family or household member, the charge is automatically labeled family violence, which carries lifelong consequences beyond jail time. A second family violence conviction can be elevated to a felony. If a weapon was involved, the charge may be elevated to aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
Even a misdemeanor assault conviction in Fort Bend County can affect your ability to own a firearm, hold certain professional licenses, pass a background check, and secure housing or employment. Many people charged for the first time do not realize how much is at stake until it is too late.
People facing these charges often ask:
- Can this charge be dismissed or reduced?
- Will I lose my job or my right to own a gun?
- What happens if the alleged victim doesn’t want to press charges?
- Can I be charged with assault if there were no visible injuries?
- What is the difference between a misdemeanor and a felony assault?
These are all reasonable questions. The answers depend on the facts of your case — and those facts are exactly what an experienced Fort Bend assault bodily injury attorney will investigate before your first court date.
Texas Law on Assault Causing Bodily Injury
Under Texas Penal Code § 22.01, a person commits assault if they intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly cause bodily injury to another person. “Bodily injury” means physical pain, illness, or any impairment of a physical condition — this is a low bar. It includes a scratch, a bruise, or even temporary pain with no visible mark.
To convict you, the State must prove each of the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
- You committed an act — not an omission
- The act caused bodily injury to another person
- You acted intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly
The burden rests entirely on the State. You have no obligation to prove your innocence, explain yourself, or testify at trial. The prosecution must prove every single element beyond a reasonable doubt — the highest standard in the law.
Penalties for Fort Bend Assault Bodily Injury in Texas
The charge level — and the punishment — depends on who the alleged victim was and whether prior convictions exist.
- Class A Misdemeanor: Standard assault causing bodily injury against a non-family member or stranger. Punishable by up to one year in county jail and up to a $4,000 fine.
- Class A Misdemeanor (Family Violence): Assault causing bodily injury against a family or household member, or a dating partner. Same punishment range, but the family violence label creates additional collateral consequences.
- Third Degree Felony: Assault causing bodily injury against a family or household member with a prior family violence conviction. Punishable by 2–10 years in state prison and up to a $10,000 fine.
- Third Degree Felony: Assault against a public servant, security officer, or emergency personnel. Same punishment range.
- Second Degree Felony: Assault causing bodily injury that impedes breathing or circulation (choking) of a family or household member. Punishable by 2–20 years in state prison.
A family violence finding also triggers a federal firearms prohibition under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(9), meaning a conviction — even on a misdemeanor — can permanently bar you from possessing a firearm.
Typical Bond Amounts for Assault Causing Bodily Injury in Fort Bend County
Based on an analysis Varghese Summersett completed of over 10,241 bonds in Fort Bend County, here is what bonds typically look like for assault causing bodily injury charges:
| Charge | Typical Bond Range | Most Common Bond |
|---|---|---|
| Assault Causes Bodily Injury (§ 22.01(a)(1)) | Varies — average around $4,163 | $2,000 |
| Assault Causes Bodily Injury — Family Member (§ 22.01(a)(1)) | Varies — average around $5,051 | $2,000 |
| Assault Family/Household Member — Prior Conviction (§ 22.01(b)(2)(A)) | Varies — average around $31,328 | $30,000 |
| Assault Impeding Breath/Circulation — Family Member (§ 22.01(b)(2)(B)) | Varies — average around $37,192 | $10,000 |
Bond amounts can be reduced through a bond hearing. An attorney can argue your ties to the community, employment history, lack of prior criminal record, and the circumstances of the alleged offense to get you or your loved one out of the Fort Bend County Jail faster.
Common Defenses to Assault Bodily Injury Charges
Every element the prosecution must prove is also an opportunity for your defense attorney to create reasonable doubt. Here is how a skilled defense team challenges these cases:
Self-Defense
Under Texas Penal Code § 9.31, you have the right to use force against another person when you reasonably believe it is immediately necessary to protect yourself. If the alleged victim was the aggressor, the physical evidence — photos, medical records, witness statements — can support a claim of self-defense. The State must then disprove self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Defense of Others
You are also permitted to use force to protect a third party under the same standard. If you intervened to protect a child, a friend, or a bystander from harm, that can be a complete defense to assault charges.
No Bodily Injury
The State must prove actual bodily injury — physical pain, illness, or impairment. If the alleged victim reported pain but there is no corroborating evidence, and no immediate complaint of pain was documented, the defense can challenge whether bodily injury was actually caused or whether the report was exaggerated or false.
Lack of Intent or Recklessness
If the contact was purely accidental — no intentional, knowing, or reckless mental state — there is no assault under Texas law. Accidents happen, and the prosecution must prove the required mental state, not just that you were present when someone was hurt.
Credibility of the Complaining Witness
In many assault cases, the alleged victim is the only witness. If that person has a history of making false reports, has a motive to fabricate the allegation (custody disputes, divorce proceedings, financial conflicts), or their account is inconsistent with physical evidence, the defense can attack the foundation of the State’s entire case.
Recantation by the Alleged Victim
Many people are surprised to learn that even if the alleged victim wants to drop the charges, the State can still proceed. However, a recanting victim significantly weakens the prosecution’s case — and a defense attorney can help document that recantation properly and use it strategically.
The Legal Process: What to Expect in Fort Bend County
Fort Bend County criminal cases are heard at the Fort Bend County Justice Center, located at 1422 Eugene Heimann Circle in Richmond, Texas. Once an arrest is made, your case moves through a series of stages.
After arrest, you will be booked at the Fort Bend County Jail. A bond will be set, either by a magistrate or through a bond schedule. Your first court appearance — the arraignment — is where formal charges are read and you enter a plea. This is also when your attorney can begin gathering discovery: police reports, body camera footage, 911 recordings, medical records, and witness statements.
From there, the case either moves toward a plea agreement or trial. Most Fort Bend assault bodily injury cases are resolved before trial through negotiation, diversion programs, or motions to dismiss. If the facts support it, your attorney may file a motion to have the case dismissed entirely, challenge the legality of the arrest, or seek a pretrial diversion that keeps the charge off your record.
The Fort Bend County District Attorney’s Office prosecutes these cases aggressively — especially when a family violence designation is involved. Having an attorney with prior prosecutorial experience in Fort Bend County is a significant advantage.
What to Expect From Varghese Summersett
From the moment you call, Varghese Summersett treats your case as a priority. You will speak with a real attorney — not a paralegal or call center — who can evaluate your situation and explain your options. The firm handles cases at every stage, from the night of an arrest through trial.
The attorneys at Varghese Summersett are former prosecutors who understand how the other side thinks. Mike Hanson prosecuted cases in Fort Bend County before switching sides. That inside knowledge means the defense team knows what evidence the prosecution relies on, where the weaknesses tend to be, and how local judges and prosecutors typically approach these cases.
The firm’s approach is honest and direct. If a case can be dismissed, the team pursues that aggressively. If the facts call for negotiating a reduced charge or diversion program, that option is pursued with the same energy. Clients receive regular updates and are included in every significant decision. The goal is always the best possible outcome — not just the fastest one.
Varghese Summersett has secured dismissals and favorable outcomes in assault bodily injury cases across Texas, including cases involving family violence allegations.
If you or someone you love has been charged with assault causing bodily injury in Fort Bend County, reach out to discuss your case. Consultations are free and completely confidential. Speak with a Fort Bend assault defense attorney by calling (281) 805-2220.
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Watch: 11 Proven Defenses Against Texas Assault Charges
Attorney Benson Varghese breaks down the most effective defenses used in Texas assault cases, including self-defense, lack of intent, and credibility attacks on complaining witnesses.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can assault causing bodily injury charges be dropped in Fort Bend County?
Yes. Charges can be dismissed if the State lacks sufficient evidence, if the complaining witness recants or is unavailable, or if the defense raises a valid legal challenge. Even after charges are filed, the Fort Bend County District Attorney’s Office retains discretion to dismiss or reduce a case based on new information or legal arguments raised by defense counsel.
What happens if the alleged victim doesn’t want to press charges?
In Texas, assault cases are prosecuted by the State — not the alleged victim. Once police are involved and a report is made, the decision to prosecute belongs to the District Attorney’s Office. However, a non-cooperative or recanting alleged victim significantly weakens the State’s case and often leads to a dismissal or reduction in charges.
Does an assault charge automatically become a family violence charge if I was fighting with my spouse?
Yes. Under Texas law, if the alleged victim is a current or former spouse, dating partner, family member, or household member, the assault is automatically classified as family violence. This triggers additional legal consequences, including potential impact on firearms rights and enhanced penalties for any future offense.
Can I get an assault conviction expunged in Texas?
A conviction cannot be expunged. However, if your case is dismissed or you complete a deferred adjudication program without a conviction, you may qualify for an expunction or nondisclosure, which can remove the record from public view. An attorney can evaluate your eligibility after your case is resolved.
How soon should I hire a lawyer after an assault arrest in Fort Bend County?
As soon as possible. Evidence disappears quickly — surveillance footage is overwritten, witnesses’ memories fade, and the prosecution begins building its case from day one. An attorney who gets involved early can preserve evidence, communicate with prosecutors before charges are formally filed, and potentially prevent a felony indictment in cases where the State is still evaluating the charge level.
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Speak With a Fort Bend Assault Defense Attorney Now
An assault charge does not have to define your future. Varghese Summersett has the experience, the local knowledge, and the proven track record to give you the best possible defense in Fort Bend County. Reach out any time — day or night — for a free, confidential conversation about your case. Call (281) 805-2220 or fill out our online contact form to get started.