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Is Biting Someone Assault or Battery? Puka Nacua Case Explained

27th Mar 2026
Allegations that Puka Nacua made an antisemitic remark and later bit a woman during a New Year’s Eve outing in Los Angeles raise a series of legal questions extending beyond the incident itself. According to a restraining order application, the claimant alleges that Nacua used offensive language during dinner before the situation escalated into physical contact. Nacua disputes both the alleged remark and the characterisation of the encounter. The dispute—now before a Los Angeles court following the denial of a temporary restraining order—ultimately turns on a narrow but critical issue: when does conduct in a social setting, whether verbal or physical, cross the line into unlawful harassment or battery? Quick Answer: Is Biting Someone Assault or Battery? Yes. Biting can qualify as battery if it is intentional and non-consensual, particularly where it causes injury such as broken skin. In some cases, surrounding behaviour may also support an assault claim if it creates a reasonable fear of harm. The Legal Issue: When Does Biting Become Battery? Under California law, battery generally involves the intentional and harmful or offensive touching of another person without consent. The legal threshold is relatively low—serious injury is not required—but the nature of the contact matters. A bite is rarely viewed as trivial. Where it leaves a mark or breaks the skin, courts are more likely to treat the conduct as harmful rather than merely offensive, strengthening both civil claims and potential criminal scrutiny. The key issue is consent. Conduct that begins as playful interaction can still become unlawful if it goes beyond what a reasonable person would expect or accept in that context. This is where many cases fail—not because contact did not occur, but because consent or intent cannot be clearly disproven. Incident Overview According to the restraining order filing, the alleged incident occurred on December 31, 2025, following a group outing in Century City, Los Angeles. The claimant alleges that the evening began with an antisemitic remark during dinner—an allegation that is disputed—before escalating into physical conduct inside a vehicle. The filing describes two biting incidents, including one that allegedly broke the skin. The claimant states she reported the matter to police the following day and later sought court protection. Nacua’s legal team disputes the account, describing the interaction as consensual social behaviour or “horseplay”, and denies that any offensive remark was made. At this stage, these remain competing accounts. No court has made findings of fact, and no criminal charges have been confirmed. Why Courts Deny Restraining Orders — Even After Alleged Incidents A judge declined to grant a temporary restraining order on an immediate basis, with a full hearing scheduled for April 14, 2026. This outcome often causes confusion. A denied restraining order does not mean the alleged conduct did not occur. Instead, it reflects a specific legal standard. Courts typically grant temporary restraining orders only where there is sufficient evidence of immediate or ongoing risk of harm. A past incident alone is usually not enough. The applicant must show a credible likelihood of future harm, harassment, or escalation. The initial denial suggests that, based on the written application alone, the court was not satisfied that this threshold had been met. The upcoming hearing will allow both sides to present evidence, which could change that assessment. Do Offensive or Antisemitic Remarks Create Legal Liability? The filing also alleges that Nacua made an antisemitic remark, which his legal team denies. As a general rule, offensive speech—even if deeply objectionable—is not by itself a criminal offence in the United States. Legal liability typically arises only where speech involves credible threats, harassment, or forms part of a broader pattern of harmful conduct. In this context, the alleged remark may still be relevant as part of the overall factual background, particularly if a court is asked to assess escalation, intent, or the nature of the interaction. What This Case Turns On Legally The outcome is likely to depend on a small number of fact-specific issues. First, whether the contact was consensual. Social environments can blur boundaries, but consent is not assumed simply because individuals are interacting informally. Second, whether the conduct was objectively harmful or offensive. A bite that breaks the skin is more likely to meet that threshold. Third, the credibility of the evidence. Courts will assess witness accounts, consistency of statements, and any supporting medical or photographic evidence. Where narratives conflict, credibility becomes decisive. Potential Legal Exposure If the allegations were proven, both criminal and civil consequences could arise. From a criminal perspective, prosecutors would need to establish beyond reasonable doubt that the contact was intentional, non-consensual, and harmful or offensive. In social settings, that threshold can be difficult to meet. Civil claims operate differently. A claimant may seek damages for battery, emotional distress, or related harm under a lower standard of proof. Civil liability can arise even where criminal charges are not pursued. Legal Context: “Horseplay” Is Not a Defence Arguments that conduct was playful or consensual are common in cases arising from social settings. However, “horseplay” is not a legal defence if the behaviour exceeds what was reasonably agreed or results in injury. Courts focus on the objective effect of the conduct and the presence or absence of consent, not the label applied after the fact. What This Means in Practice While the case involves a high-profile athlete, the legal principles apply equally to everyday situations. Physical contact in social settings can still give rise to legal liability if it becomes non-consensual or harmful. Consent can be exceeded, and intent is often inferred from conduct rather than stated directly. For individuals and businesses alike, the key takeaway is that context does not eliminate legal risk—it often defines it. What Happens Next The next key development is the April 14 hearing, where the court will decide whether to grant a longer-term restraining order. That process will involve a more detailed examination of evidence and, potentially, witness testimony. Separately, law enforcement may continue to assess whether further action is warranted. The claimant may also pursue civil proceedings regardless of any criminal outcome. Ultimately, the case is likely to turn on a narrow but critical question: was this consensual interaction, or did it become harmful, non-consensual contact? The answer will determine whether legal liability arises—and whether the incident remains a disputed personal encounter or develops into a formal legal case with lasting consequences.

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