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Table of Contents
- Virginia Law Separates Conduct from Harm
- Some Charges Are About Intent, Not Outcome
- What Prosecutors Use When There Are No Medical Records
- The Alleged Victim Cannot Simply Drop the Charges
- What "No Injury" Can and Cannot Do for Your Defense
- Facing a Violent Crime Charge in Virginia
If you are facing a violent crime charge and no one sought medical treatment for the incident, it may feel like the accusation defies common sense. Many people assume that a charge of assault or battery requires proof of physical harm. That assumption is wrong, though.
Prosecutors in Virginia do not need a medical record showing a victim’s injuries to build a case against you. While that would certainly be helpful for them, in some cases, they only need evidence of conduct and intent. The absence of visible injury does not make a charge disappear, but it does shape how the case unfolds and how a defense attorney can respond.
Virginia Law Separates Conduct from Harm
Under Virginia law, assault and battery are two related but distinct acts. Battery is the unlawful touching of another person. Assault, however, does not require any physical contact at all. Under Virginia Code § 18.2-57, an assault occurs when one person intentionally places another in reasonable fear of an imminent harmful or offensive act. A raised fist, a credible threat, or an aggressive lunge toward someone can all support a charge even if no one walked away with so much as a bruise.
The charge is rooted in what you did and what the other person reasonably experienced as a result. Physical injury is not a required element.
Some Charges Are About Intent, Not Outcome
More serious charges make this legal wrinkle even clearer. Virginia Code § 18.2-51 governs malicious and unlawful wounding, which can be charged based on the intent to maim, disfigure, disable, or kill, not solely on whether a serious injury was actually inflicted. An attempt-based charge works the same way. The prosecutor will argue what you intended to do, not just what you succeeded in doing. Depending on how the alleged incident is framed, the potential charges and penalties can be significant even without a single documented injury.
What Prosecutors Use When There Are No Medical Records
Without a medical record, the prosecution draws from other sources, such as:
- Body camera footage from responding officers
- 911 call recordings, including the tone and content of what was said
- Statements made at the scene by the defendant, the alleged victim, or bystanders
- Photographs of the environment, property damage, or any visible marks
- Prior history between the parties, where admissible
None of these types of evidence requires a hospital visit to view and confirm. A case built entirely on witness accounts and body camera footage can be just as formidable as one with emergency room documentation behind it. Do not assume a thin medical record translates to a weak prosecution.
Alleged Victim Cannot Simply Drop the Charges
Once law enforcement is involved and charges are filed, the Commonwealth of Virginia, not the alleged victim, controls the prosecution. Even if the person who made the initial complaint later recants or becomes uncooperative, the prosecutor can choose to move forward. This scenario comes up frequently in domestic violence cases, but it is not limited to them. The alleged victim's willingness to testify may affect the strength of the case, but it does not end it. Prosecutors have proceeded to trial on far less.
What "No Injury" Can and Cannot Do for Your Defense
The absence of documented injury is not a defense on its own, but it is a relevant fact. A skilled defense attorney can use it to challenge the credibility or severity of the allegation, create reasonable doubt about what actually occurred, negotiate for reduced charges, or argue for a more favorable outcome if the case moves toward sentencing. What the absence of injury will not do is produce an automatic dismissal. Relying on it as your entire strategy leaves far too much to chance.
When Facing a Violent Crime Charge in Virginia, Call Us First
Violent crime charges in Virginia are built on legal standards that don’t necessarily rely on the details of the injury, if any occurred at all. If you are sitting with a charge you did not expect because you believed no real harm occurred, what matters at this point is the quality of your defense.
At The Law Offices of Daniel J. Miller, we handle violent crime cases across Virginia with a direct, strategy-first approach. Our team knows how these cases are prosecuted and what it takes to challenge them effectively. With so much on the line and possibly so much confusion surrounding the allegations against you, trust your case only to us.
If you have been charged with a violent crime in Virginia, call us at (757) 267-4949 or contact us online to schedule your consultation.