====Enforcing protection orders====
Protection If the family member against whom the protection order is made breaches one of its provisions, it is a criminal offence. This makes protection orders unique compared to regular orders can't be enforced under the ''[Family Law Act]''. Instead of routinely being enforced to go to family court, only by protection orders can be enforced in criminal court. Enforcement in criminal court will occur if police charge the family member with the offense of disobeying a court order under section 127 of the ''Criminal Code''. Once a charge is laid under section 127, which makes it an offence to breach a court order. Howeverwill proceed through the regular criminal process, section 188(2) says this: <blockquote><tt>A police officer with the accused person having reasonable and probable grounds to believe that a person has contravened a term of an order made under this Part may</tt></blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><tt>(a) take action the opportunity to enforce the order, whether plead guilty or not there is proof that the order has been served on guilty to the personcharge, and</tt></blockquote></blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><tt>(b) if necessary for in the purpose case of paragraph (a)not guilty plea, use reasonable forcego to trial.</tt></blockquote></blockquote>
===Family violence and the best interests of the child analysis===