This question has been addressed in 1 Texas court opinion:
COA02 — February 5, 2026
After Dayton Joseph Gannon was convicted of aggravated robbery for brandishing a knife and aggressively posturing toward a victim through a laundromat's glass door, he appealed, arguing that the threat of injury was not 'imminent' because the victim was armed and separated from him by a physical barrier. The Second Court of Appeals analyzed the statutory meaning of 'imminent'—defined as 'near, at hand, or on the verge of happening'—and determined that a threat is judged by the aggressor's volatility and conduct rather than the victim's defensive capabilities. The court held that the display of a deadly weapon combined with combative posturing is sufficient to establish an imminent threat, regardless of whether the victim has a weapon or is behind glass.
Litigation Takeaway
“A threat of family violence remains 'imminent' even if the victim takes defensive measures or is separated from the aggressor by a barrier; the legal focus is on the aggressor's display of weaponry and volatility rather than the victim's relative safety.”