In New Jersey, you can be charged with assault without making any physical contact with another person. To constitute assault, your actions must merely put another person in reasonable fear or imminent apprehension of an immediate battery. For example, if you raise your fist with the threat to hit someone, or intentionally drive your car at another person, you can be charged with assault.
In essence, a battery is a completed assault. A battery requires a touching of some kind. The touching must be non-consensual, and it must be something that a reasonable person would find offensive. A slap, kick, punch or shove qualifies as a touching sufficient to lead to a charge of battery, but so can a kiss or even a hug. The perpetrator does not, however, need to actually touch the victim. For example, if you strike a person with a thrown object, that can be battery.
The law recognizes a number of viable defenses to allegations of assault and battery:
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