You know what happened that night, and the charging papers sitting before you do not match it. Maybe the situation escalated faster than anyone could have predicted. Maybe the other person’s account left out everything that started it. Either way, you are the one who got handcuffed, the one who had to call someone to explain where you were, the one whose name is now attached to an aggravated assault charge that could follow you into every job interview, custody hearing, and background check for the rest of your life.
A conviction for aggravated assault in Tennessee can carry serious felony penalties, including prison exposure and long-term consequences that affect nearly every part of your future. You deserve an experienced assault defense lawyer that takes every detail of your case seriously, fights for your future, and does not stop until every available option has been exhausted. That is exactly what Legal Powers PLLC delivers.
Call (615) 762-8775 or send us an online message today for a free case review.
What Makes an Assault Aggravated?
Tennessee’s aggravated assault law, TCA 39-13-102, draws the line between simple assault and aggravated assault based on three factors: the severity of the injury, the presence of a deadly weapon, or the use of strangulation.
An assault becomes aggravated when it results in serious bodily injury, causes death, involves a deadly weapon, or involves strangulation or attempted strangulation. The law also covers violating a court order or probation agreement that prohibited you from causing bodily injury to a specific person.
Is Aggravated Assault a Felony in Tennessee?
Yes. Every version of aggravated assault is a felony in Tennessee, and whether the potential penalty you face is two years or fifteen depends less on what the outcome was and more on what the State claims you intended when it happened.
That distinction breaks down into two categories:
- Intentional or Knowing Conduct. If convicted, this level of intent is a Class C felony carrying a sentence of 3 to 15 years and a fine of up to $15,000. If the strangulation victim was pregnant, the charge escalates to a Class B felony carrying eight to 30 years.
- Reckless Conduct. If convicted, this level of intent is a Class D felony, which carries a sentence of 2 to 12 years and a fine of up to $15,000.
That gap between what you meant to do and what the State charges you with is exactly where a skilled defense attorney goes to work.
What Most Guides Get Wrong About TCA Aggravated Assault Cases
Most guides explain what aggravated assault is under TCA 39-13-102. What they skip is that the State’s characterization of your mental state is not a fact; it is an argument, and it is often one of the most contested parts of the case.
Whether you acted intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly is something the prosecution must prove, and that distinction often determines whether you get a felony conviction, a negotiated outcome, or a dismissal. We do not just respond to the charges the State files. We challenge the foundation on which the charges rest.
How to Defend Against an Aggravated Assault Charge in Tennessee
Legal Powers builds its defense around the State’s burden of proof from day one:
- Arguing self-defense. When force is the only reasonable response to a threat, we reconstruct your experience and present it to the prosecution and, if needed, to a jury.
- Challenging intent. What the State can prove about your mental state determines the class of felony, and sometimes whether you face a felony at all. We challenge the prosecution’s characterization of your conduct at every stage.
- Disputing serious bodily injury. When the medical evidence does not support a serious bodily injury, we challenge it directly.
- Contesting the deadly weapon element. Not every object qualifies as a deadly weapon under Tennessee law. When the State overstates what was present, we work to limit what prosecutors can argue to the jury.
- Challenging constitutional violations. Unlawful searches, coerced statements, and arrests without probable cause create grounds to suppress the State’s evidence. When that foundation cannot withstand scrutiny, the case becomes significantly harder to prove.
- Negotiating for reduction or dismissal. When the facts support it, we pursue charge reductions or dismissal before the case ever reaches a jury.
Every element is the State’s burden to prove. We hold the prosecution to that standard at every decision point.
Why Trust Legal Powers PLLC with Your Aggravated Assault in Tennessee?
Legal Powers PLLC was built for exactly this kind of fight. Our team includes a former prosecutor who spent years on the other side of these cases and a former judicial law clerk who watched how courts weigh evidence and make decisions from the inside. That combination means we do not guess at how the State will build its case against you. We already know.
For over two decades, we have taken that knowledge into courtrooms across Franklin, Nashville, and all of Middle Tennessee and used it to pursue dismissals, reductions, and outcomes that let our clients go home to their families and get back to their lives.
Nearly 500 clients have left us five-star Google reviews because they felt that difference. Expertise.com recognized us as a Top Criminal Law Firm because our results back up our claims.
Do Not Let Another Day Pass Without a Defense Team in Your Corner
Every day without experienced legal representation is a day you cannot get back. Schedule your free consultation with Legal Powers PLLC today and put a team that knows these courts, these judges, and these cases to work on your defense immediately.
Contact us online or call (615) 762-8775 to get started.
FAQs
How Much Jail Time for an Aggravated Assault Conviction in Tennessee?
A Class D felony carries a sentence of 2 to 12 years. A Class C felony carries a sentence of 3 to 15 years. If strangulation involves a pregnant victim, the charge is a Class B felony carrying eight to 30 years. The specific sentence depends on the offense, the defendant’s prior record, and Tennessee’s sentencing guidelines.
Can an Aggravated Assault in Tennessee Be Reduced or Dismissed?
Yes. Reductions and dismissals are real outcomes when the defense can challenge the evidence of serious bodily injury, identify constitutional violations, or dispute the mental state required for a conviction. An experienced defense attorney evaluates every available path from the first day of representation.
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