Your Battle, Our Compass:
Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Lawyer
Injured in a sexual abuse in Los Angeles? With 3.9 million residents and 55,000+ annual collisions, our attorneys handle every type of sexual abuse case. Call (213) 516-9809. See all our California office locations.




TL;DR — Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Lawyer
Compass Law Group represents sexual abuse victims across Los Angeles. Our firm has recovered $250,000,000+ for injury victims. No win, no fee. Free 24/7 consultation in English, Spanish, Farsi, and Korean at (213) 516-9809. See all Los Angeles practice areas. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Practice Areas We Handle in Los Angeles
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Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Lawyers: Standing with Survivors in Pursuit of Justice
California has enacted the strongest survivor protection laws in the United States, and Los Angeles survivors have more legal options today than at any point in history. In 2019, the California Legislature passed Assembly Bill 218 (AB 218), which eliminated the statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse claims and opened a three-year revival window allowing survivors to bring claims that had previously been time-barred—regardless of how long ago the abuse occurred. This landmark legislation reflected what survivors and advocates had long demanded: that institutions which enabled abuse should never escape accountability simply because a child was too traumatized to speak up within an arbitrary deadline.
Sexual abuse occurs across every institution in Los Angeles—churches and religious organizations, public and private schools, foster care systems, youth sports programs, the entertainment industry, medical facilities, and workplaces. Survivors of abuse in these settings often carry the psychological burden in silence for years or decades before seeking legal recourse. At Compass Law Group, our Los Angeles personal injury lawyers approach every sexual abuse case with the sensitivity, confidentiality, and unwavering commitment that survivors deserve. We understand that coming forward is one of the most difficult decisions a person can make, and we are here to make sure that decision leads to meaningful accountability and compensation. Our sexual abuse attorneys have experience holding powerful institutions responsible for the harm they caused or enabled, and we handle every case with the discretion and compassion that this deeply personal area of law demands.
Why Choose Compass Law Group for Your Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Case?
- Absolute confidentiality at every stage — We understand that privacy is paramount for survivors. Your identity, your story, and every detail of your case are protected with the highest level of confidentiality. California law allows many sexual abuse cases to be filed under a pseudonym (as a “Doe” plaintiff), and we pursue that protection whenever possible to shield survivors from public exposure.
- Trauma-informed legal representation — Our managing partners Joseph Shirazi (Bar #265403) and Simon Esfandi (Bar #275307) and our legal team have been trained in trauma-informed practices. We work at your pace, explain every step before it happens, and ensure that the legal process never retraumatizes the people we are fighting for. We coordinate with your therapist or counselor so that your emotional well-being is protected throughout the case.
- Institutional accountability — holding the enablers responsible — Abusers rarely act alone. Schools that ignored complaints, churches that transferred predators, foster agencies that failed to screen caregivers, and entertainment companies that looked the other way all bear legal responsibility. We pursue every entity that knew or should have known about the abuse and failed to act.
- No upfront cost — No Win, No Fee — Survivors should never face a financial barrier to justice. You pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you. Our Downtown Los Angeles office at 633 W 5th Street, 26th Floor is available 24/7 in English, Spanish, Farsi, and Korean. Call (213) 516-9809 for a confidential consultation.
Who Can Be Held Liable for Sexual Abuse in Los Angeles?
The individual abuser is always a defendant in a sexual abuse case, but California law recognizes that institutions which enabled the abuse often bear equal or greater legal responsibility. Under the doctrine of respondeat superior, an employer or organization can be held vicariously liable when an employee or agent commits sexual abuse within the scope of their authority or when the institution’s negligence created the opportunity for the abuse to occur. Under negligent supervision, hiring, and retention theories, institutions are liable when they knew or should have known about a perpetrator’s dangerous propensities and failed to act.
Mandatory reporter laws are central to institutional liability in California. Under Penal Code §11164–11174.3 (the Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act, or CANRA), teachers, school administrators, clergy, medical professionals, social workers, coaches, and dozens of other categories of professionals are legally required to report known or suspected child abuse to law enforcement or child protective services. When a mandatory reporter fails to report abuse—or when an institution actively suppresses reports to protect its reputation—that failure creates powerful civil liability. Survivors can recover damages not only for the original abuse but for the additional harm caused by the institution’s cover-up.
Our Los Angeles personal injury lawyers investigate every layer of institutional knowledge and failure. When a survivor’s abuse results in the loss of a loved one to suicide or other trauma-related death, our Los Angeles wrongful death attorneys pursue accountability on behalf of surviving family members. No institution is too large or too powerful for us to challenge.
Settings Where Sexual Abuse Occurs in Los Angeles
- Clergy and religious institution abuse — The Archdiocese of Los Angeles reached a landmark $660 million settlement in 2007 with over 500 survivors of clergy abuse, and hundreds of additional claims have been filed since AB 218 reopened the window. Religious organizations that transferred known abusers between parishes, concealed complaints, and failed to report abuse to law enforcement bear direct civil liability for every survivor harmed by their institutional cover-up.
- School and teacher abuse — Public school districts including LAUSD—the second-largest school district in the nation—and private schools across Los Angeles have faced sexual abuse claims involving teachers, coaches, administrators, and school staff. LAUSD alone has paid hundreds of millions of dollars in abuse settlements. Institutions that fail to conduct background checks, ignore student complaints, or reassign accused educators instead of reporting them face severe liability.
- Foster care system abuse — Children placed in the California foster care system are among the most vulnerable to sexual abuse. Foster parents, group home staff, and other residents in congregate care facilities have been the subjects of thousands of abuse claims. The LA County Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) and licensed foster care agencies can be held liable for negligent placement, inadequate oversight, and failure to investigate abuse reports.
- Youth sports coaches and organizations — Youth sports leagues, gymnastics programs, swim teams, and martial arts schools across Los Angeles have been the site of sexual abuse by coaches who used their authority and physical access to exploit young athletes. Organizations that fail to implement abuse prevention policies, require background checks, or respond to complaints are liable.
- Entertainment industry abuse — Los Angeles is the center of the global entertainment industry, and the power imbalances inherent in Hollywood have enabled widespread sexual abuse of actors, crew members, and aspiring performers—including minors. Talent agencies, production companies, studios, and management firms that enabled or concealed abuse by powerful individuals face significant civil exposure under California law.
- Workplace sexual abuse — Sexual abuse in the workplace goes beyond harassment. Physical sexual assault by supervisors, coworkers, clients, or customers creates both criminal and civil liability. Employers who fail to investigate complaints, retaliate against survivors who report abuse, or create environments where abuse is tolerated can be held liable under California’s Fair Employment and Housing Act and common law negligence.
- Medical professional abuse — Doctors, therapists, dentists, chiropractors, and other healthcare providers who sexually abuse patients violate the trust inherent in the provider-patient relationship. Under California Civil Code §43.93 and Business and Professions Code §729, sexual contact between a healthcare provider and patient during treatment is actionable regardless of apparent consent. Medical facilities that fail to investigate complaints or report abusive providers to licensing boards share liability.
- Elder care facility abuse — Elderly residents of nursing homes, assisted living facilities, and in-home care programs in Los Angeles are vulnerable to sexual abuse by staff, other residents, and outside visitors. California’s Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (Welfare & Institutions Code §15600 et seq.) provides enhanced remedies including attorney’s fees and punitive damages for abuse of elderly and dependent adults.
- Juvenile detention and incarceration abuse — Youth held in juvenile detention facilities, including those operated by the LA County Probation Department, are at heightened risk of sexual abuse by staff and other detainees. Federal law under the Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) establishes standards, and state civil claims provide compensation to survivors.
- Online grooming and exploitation — The proliferation of social media and messaging platforms has created new avenues for predators to target minors in Los Angeles. Adults who use digital communication to groom, solicit, or exploit children face criminal prosecution and civil liability. Platforms and organizations that fail to implement reasonable child safety measures may also bear responsibility.
Frequently Asked Questions — Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Attorney
Do I need to report the sexual abuse to the police before filing a civil lawsuit in Los Angeles?
No — a criminal police report is not required to pursue a civil lawsuit for sexual abuse in California. Civil and criminal cases operate on entirely separate legal tracks, and we can file a civil claim on your behalf regardless of whether criminal charges were ever filed or resulted in a conviction. Many survivors choose to pursue civil action even when the criminal system did not deliver justice, and the standard of proof in civil court is lower than in criminal court.
How long do I have to file a sexual abuse lawsuit in California?
For adult survivors of sexual assault, California Code of Civil Procedure §340.16 gives you 10 years from the date of the assault or 3 years from the date you discovered — or reasonably should have discovered — that a physical or psychological injury was caused by the abuse, whichever is later. For survivors of childhood sexual abuse, CCP §340.1 extends the deadline to age 40 or within 5 years of discovery of the abuse and its connection to your injury. We strongly recommend contacting us as soon as possible, because gathering evidence becomes harder over time.
Can I sue someone other than my abuser — like a school, church, employer, or institution?
Yes, and in many cases third-party institutional defendants carry far greater financial resources than the individual perpetrator. We regularly pursue claims against employers, schools, churches, hospitals, hotels, and other entities that knew or should have known about the risk of abuse and failed to act. Under California law, these institutions can be held liable for negligent supervision, negligent hiring, or creating conditions that enabled the abuse to occur. If your abuse happened at a Los Angeles Unified School District school, a church in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, or any other organization, we investigate the institution’s role in full.
What compensation can I recover in a sexual abuse civil lawsuit?
As your attorneys, we pursue every category of damages available under California law, including past and future medical expenses, therapy and mental health treatment, lost wages, loss of earning capacity, and pain and suffering. California allows substantial non-economic damages in sexual abuse cases — courts and juries in Los Angeles County consistently recognize the profound psychological harm survivors carry. In cases involving institutional cover-ups or egregious misconduct, punitive damages may also be available to punish the wrongdoer beyond actual losses.
How much does it cost to hire a sexual abuse attorney in Los Angeles?
We handle sexual abuse cases on a contingency fee basis, which means you pay nothing unless we win your case. There are no upfront costs, no hourly fees, and no out-of-pocket expenses throughout the litigation process. Our fee is a percentage of the recovery we obtain for you, and we explain the exact percentage clearly before you sign anything. This arrangement ensures every survivor has access to experienced legal representation regardless of their financial situation.
What if the abuse happened years ago — can I still file a lawsuit?
Possibly yes. California has among the most favorable statutes of limitations in the country for sexual abuse survivors, and the legislature has repeatedly extended them in recognition of the trauma that delays reporting. Under CCP §340.1 for childhood abuse, survivors may file until age 40 or within 5 years of connecting their injury to the abuse — and AB 218 previously opened a three-year lookback window that revived time-barred claims against institutional defendants. We review the specific facts of your case to determine whether a viable claim exists before advising you on your options.
Does it matter if I cannot identify or locate my abuser?
We can still evaluate your case and may be able to pursue claims against institutional defendants — such as an employer, school, or organization — even if the individual perpetrator is unknown, has died, or cannot be located. Institutional liability does not always require identifying the specific perpetrator when the evidence shows the organization created an unsafe environment or failed to protect you. We conduct our own independent investigation to uncover every responsible party.
What if my abuser was never criminally convicted or the charges were dropped?
A criminal acquittal or dropped charges does not bar your civil lawsuit. In civil court, we need only prove liability by a preponderance of the evidence — meaning it is more likely than not that the abuse occurred and caused your damages — rather than the ‘beyond a reasonable doubt’ standard used in criminal cases. Some of the largest sexual abuse verdicts and settlements in Los Angeles history involved cases where no criminal conviction was ever obtained. Your civil claim stands on its own.
Who will know about my lawsuit — is my case confidential?
We take your privacy seriously and discuss every option available to protect your identity during litigation. In many California sexual abuse cases, survivors may file under a pseudonym such as ‘Jane Doe’ or ‘John Doe,’ and we routinely seek protective orders to seal sensitive records. While civil court proceedings are generally public, we work to minimize your public exposure at every stage. Before filing, we walk you through exactly what the process involves so you can make a fully informed decision.
What evidence do I need to support my sexual abuse civil claim?
You do not need to have all evidence assembled before calling us — gathering evidence is our job. Useful evidence can include medical or therapy records, text messages, emails, photographs, witness statements, prior complaints made to an institution, personnel records, and police or incident reports if they exist. We also retain expert witnesses including therapists, psychologists, and medical professionals to document the full extent of your injuries and their long-term impact. Do not delete any communications or records you believe may be relevant.
What if I was partly at fault or was under the influence at the time of the assault?
California’s comparative fault laws do not apply the same way to sexual assault that they do to car accidents — consent and fault are not interchangeable concepts, and your prior conduct does not diminish your right to recovery. An abuser or institution cannot reduce their liability by pointing to your behavior or state of mind. We will aggressively defend your right to full compensation against any such arguments raised by the defense.
How long will my sexual abuse lawsuit take to resolve?
Cases in Los Angeles Superior Court vary widely in timeline depending on the defendant’s willingness to settle, the complexity of institutional liability, and court scheduling. Some cases resolve in 12 to 18 months through negotiated settlement; others proceed to trial over two to three years or longer if the defendant contests liability. We pursue the most efficient path to maximum recovery while keeping you informed at every stage. We never pressure survivors to accept an inadequate settlement simply to close a file quickly.
Will I have to testify or confront my abuser in court?
Not necessarily. The majority of sexual abuse civil cases in California resolve through settlement before trial, which means you may never have to testify in open court. If your case does proceed to trial, we prepare you thoroughly and take every step to make the process as manageable as possible, including requesting accommodations from the court when appropriate. We keep your wellbeing — not just the legal outcome — at the center of how we approach your case.
Can I sue if the sexual abuse occurred at a Los Angeles hotel, rideshare, or workplace?
Yes. We pursue civil claims against hotels in areas like Downtown Los Angeles, Hollywood, and Santa Monica that fail to maintain adequate security, against rideshare companies whose vetting processes allow dangerous drivers to operate, and against employers throughout LA County who ignore harassment or abuse complaints. California law imposes a duty of care on businesses and employers to protect people on their premises or within their care. If that duty was breached and you were harmed, we investigate and pursue every liable party.
What happens during a free consultation with your firm?
During your free, confidential consultation, we listen to your account of what happened, explain your legal rights and options under California law, and give you an honest assessment of your potential claim — with no obligation to retain us. You can meet with us in person at our Los Angeles office or speak with us by phone or video, whichever is most comfortable for you. We never charge for this initial meeting, and everything you share with us is protected by attorney-client confidentiality from the moment we speak.
How We Value a Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Case
Sexual abuse cases carry some of the highest damages in California personal injury law because the harm is profound, long-lasting, and touches every aspect of a survivor’s life. Unlike a broken bone that heals in weeks, the psychological injuries from sexual abuse—post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, anxiety, substance abuse, difficulty forming relationships, and suicidal ideation—can persist for a lifetime. When the abuse occurred during childhood, the developmental impact is even more severe, affecting educational attainment, career trajectory, and the survivor’s ability to form healthy attachments throughout adulthood.
Compass Law Group evaluates sexual abuse cases across the full spectrum of harm. We work with forensic psychologists, psychiatrists, and life-care planners to document the lasting impact of the abuse and translate that harm into a damages case that reflects the true cost of what was taken from the survivor. When institutions covered up the abuse and allowed it to continue, we pursue punitive damages under Civil Code §3294 to hold those institutions accountable not just for the harm they caused but for the conscious decision to protect abusers over survivors.
Compensation Available for Sexual Abuse Survivors in Los Angeles
- Past and future therapy and counseling costs — Most survivors require years or decades of specialized trauma therapy including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), and psychiatric medication management. Lifetime therapy costs can reach $200,000 to $500,000 or more.
- Emotional distress and psychological suffering — California places no statutory cap on non-economic damages in sexual abuse cases. The profound emotional pain—shame, fear, anger, depression, PTSD, nightmares, flashbacks, hypervigilance, and difficulty with intimacy—is compensable and often constitutes the largest component of a sexual abuse damages award.
- Lost earning capacity — Childhood sexual abuse disrupts educational achievement and career development. Adult survivors frequently experience unemployment, underemployment, and inability to maintain stable employment due to PTSD symptoms, substance abuse, and difficulty with authority figures. Vocational experts calculate the difference between the survivor’s actual earnings and their projected earnings absent the abuse.
- Punitive damages — Available under CC §3294 when an institution acted with malice, oppression, or fraud—which includes knowingly concealing abuse, transferring abusers, retaliating against reporters, or destroying evidence. Punitive damages in institutional sexual abuse cases have reached tens of millions of dollars in California.
- Medical costs — Physical injuries from sexual abuse including STIs, chronic pain conditions, and reproductive health complications require ongoing medical treatment that is fully compensable.
California’s Landmark Protections for Survivors
California has enacted the most comprehensive legal framework in the nation for sexual abuse survivors. Understanding these laws is essential to knowing your rights:
- Assembly Bill 218 (AB 218, effective January 1, 2020) — This transformative legislation eliminated the statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse claims filed on or after January 1, 2020, and opened a three-year revival window (through December 31, 2022) allowing survivors to file claims that had previously been time-barred under the old statute of limitations. AB 218 also allows survivors to recover treble (triple) damages against institutions that engaged in a cover-up of childhood sexual abuse. This means that if an institution knew about the abuse and actively concealed it, the damages award can be tripled. Hundreds of revival-window cases filed in Los Angeles are still being litigated.
- CCP §340.1 (Childhood Sexual Abuse) — As amended by AB 218, this statute now provides that a survivor of childhood sexual abuse may bring a claim at any time. Before AB 218, the deadline was age 26 or three years from the date the survivor discovered the psychological injury was caused by the abuse. The current law removes time limits entirely for new claims, and the revival window allowed previously expired claims to be refiled.
- CCP §340.16 (Sexual Assault by Two or More Persons) — Provides an extended 10-year statute of limitations for sexual assault committed by two or more persons acting in concert. This provision addresses gang assaults, coordinated abuse by multiple perpetrators, and situations where institutional complicity effectively made the institution a co-participant in the abuse.
- Civil Code §1708.5 (Sexual Battery) — Establishes a specific civil cause of action for sexual battery, defined as contact with an intimate part of another person committed without consent and for the purpose of sexual arousal, gratification, or abuse. This statute provides a clear legal framework for civil claims independent of any criminal prosecution.
How Institutions Defend Against Sexual Abuse Claims
Institutions accused of enabling sexual abuse deploy aggressive legal strategies designed to discourage survivors from pursuing their claims. Compass Law Group anticipates and overcomes every tactic:
- Statute of limitations defenses — Even after AB 218, institutions challenge whether specific claims fall within the revival window or argue that the survivor’s delayed discovery was unreasonable. We document the well-established psychological research on delayed disclosure and work with trauma experts who explain why survivors of childhood abuse often do not recognize the connection between the abuse and their psychological injuries until decades later.
- Institutional “no knowledge” defenses — Schools, churches, and organizations frequently claim they had no knowledge of the abuser’s conduct. We conduct exhaustive discovery into internal complaints, personnel files, transfer records, and communications to uncover what the institution knew and when. Cover-ups leave paper trails, and we find them.
- Attacking the survivor’s credibility — Some defense attorneys attempt to undermine a survivor’s credibility by pointing to inconsistencies in memory, delayed reporting, or mental health history. We prepare our clients thoroughly and retain forensic psychologists who educate judges and juries about trauma’s well-documented effects on memory, disclosure patterns, and behavior.
- Lowball settlement offers designed to exhaust survivors — Institutions and their insurers may offer early, inadequate settlements hoping that emotionally exhausted survivors will accept rather than endure prolonged litigation. We ensure our clients understand the full value of their claims before any settlement decision is made.
Mandatory Reporting Laws and Institutional Accountability in California
California’s Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act (CANRA), codified in Penal Code §11164–11174.3, imposes criminal penalties on mandatory reporters who fail to report known or suspected child abuse. Over 40 categories of professionals are designated as mandatory reporters in California, including teachers, school counselors, clergy (in most contexts), physicians, nurses, social workers, coaches, and child care workers. When a mandatory reporter fails to report suspected sexual abuse—or when an institution pressures reporters to remain silent—the failure constitutes both a criminal offense and powerful evidence of institutional negligence in a civil lawsuit. Our attorneys investigate the reporting chain to determine whether mandatory reports were made, suppressed, or ignored, building a case for institutional liability that goes far beyond the individual abuser.
What to Do If You Are a Survivor of Sexual Abuse in Los Angeles
- Your safety comes first — If you are currently in an unsafe situation or are in immediate danger, call 911 or the RAINN National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-4673 (available 24/7). The Peace Over Violence hotline at (213) 626-3393 provides crisis support specifically for Los Angeles residents. You deserve to be safe, and help is available right now.
- Preserve any evidence you can—but know that your testimony matters most — If the abuse was recent, evidence preservation is important but should never come at the cost of your well-being. Text messages, emails, social media communications, photographs, journals, and any written documentation can support your case. If a recent physical assault occurred, a forensic medical exam (SART exam) at a hospital can preserve physical evidence—this exam is free and confidential in California, and you do not have to file a police report to receive one.
- This is not your fault—it was never your fault — Regardless of the circumstances, regardless of how long ago the abuse occurred, regardless of your relationship to the abuser—you are not responsible for what was done to you. Perpetrators and the institutions that protect them are responsible. California law recognizes this, and the legal system exists to hold them accountable.
- Consider speaking with a therapist or counselor — Processing the trauma of sexual abuse with a trained professional can help you make informed decisions about your next steps. Many therapists in Los Angeles specialize in sexual trauma and offer sliding-scale fees. Your therapy records can also support your legal claim by documenting the psychological impact of the abuse over time.
- Contact a sexual abuse attorney for a confidential consultation — You do not need to have reported the abuse to police in order to file a civil lawsuit. You do not need physical evidence. You do not need to have told anyone before now. Call Compass Law Group at (213) 516-9809 for a completely confidential conversation about your options. We will listen, we will believe you, and we will explain every legal path available to you. There is no cost and no obligation.
Statute of Limitations for Sexual Abuse Claims in California
Childhood sexual abuse: Under CCP §340.1 as amended by AB 218, there is no statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse claims filed on or after January 1, 2020. Survivors may bring claims at any time, regardless of how long ago the abuse occurred. Before AB 218, the deadline was age 26 or three years from discovery of the psychological injury. The AB 218 revival window (January 1, 2020 through December 31, 2022) also allowed survivors to refile claims that had previously expired, and many of those revival cases are still actively litigated in Los Angeles courts.
Adult sexual assault: Under CCP §340.16, adult survivors of sexual assault committed by two or more persons acting in concert have 10 years to file a civil claim. For other adult sexual assault claims, the general personal injury statute of limitations of two years under CCP §335.1 applies, though the discovery rule may extend this deadline if the survivor did not immediately recognize the connection between the assault and resulting psychological injuries.
Criminal vs. Civil Sexual Abuse Cases in California
Survivors of sexual abuse in California can pursue both criminal and civil cases simultaneously, and the two proceedings serve different purposes:
- Criminal cases are prosecuted by the District Attorney’s office (in Los Angeles, the LA County DA) and can result in incarceration, sex offender registration, and probation for the perpetrator. The burden of proof is “beyond a reasonable doubt.” The survivor does not control the prosecution and does not receive financial compensation through the criminal process (though restitution may be ordered).
- Civil cases are filed by the survivor (through their attorney) and seek financial compensation for the harm caused. The burden of proof is “preponderance of the evidence”—a significantly lower standard than criminal court. Critically, civil cases can name institutions as defendants, not just the individual abuser. A civil case can proceed even if criminal charges were never filed, were dropped, or resulted in acquittal.
Many survivors find that the civil legal process provides a sense of justice and accountability that the criminal system cannot, particularly when institutions that enabled the abuse are forced to answer for their failures in court.
Evidence in Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Cases
Sexual abuse cases require a sensitive, survivor-centered approach to evidence gathering. Compass Law Group handles this process with the utmost care:
- Survivor testimony — Your account of what happened is the most important evidence in your case. California courts recognize that sexual abuse cases often lack physical evidence, particularly when the abuse occurred years or decades ago. Juries understand this, and a credible survivor’s testimony carries enormous weight.
- Therapy and medical records — Records documenting psychological symptoms consistent with sexual abuse trauma—PTSD, depression, anxiety, dissociation, self-harm, substance abuse—provide contemporaneous evidence of the abuse’s impact. We work with your treating therapists to present these records in a way that protects your privacy while supporting your case.
- Institutional records and communications — Internal complaints, personnel files, transfer documents, emails, meeting minutes, and investigative reports often reveal what institutions knew about an abuser and when. We use aggressive discovery techniques to obtain these documents, even when institutions attempt to claim privilege or destroy records.
- Pattern evidence and other survivors — California Evidence Code §1108 allows evidence of a perpetrator’s prior sexual offenses to be admitted in civil cases. When other survivors come forward against the same abuser, the collective testimony powerfully establishes the predatory pattern and the institution’s failure to stop it.
- Expert testimony — Forensic psychologists explain trauma responses, delayed disclosure, and memory fragmentation to judges and juries. Institutional abuse experts testify about industry standards for child protection, background checks, and abuse prevention protocols that the defendant failed to implement.
Sexual Abuse Statistics in Los Angeles and California
- 1 in 4 girls and 1 in 6 boys experience sexual abuse before the age of 18, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)—making childhood sexual abuse one of the most prevalent forms of violence in the United States
- Over 90% of child sexual abuse is committed by someone the child knows and trusts—a family member, teacher, coach, clergy member, or family friend—not a stranger, according to the Darkness to Light organization
- The average age of first sexual abuse is between 7 and 13 years old, and most survivors do not disclose the abuse until adulthood—if they disclose at all. This decades-long delay in disclosure is precisely why California enacted AB 218 to eliminate the statute of limitations
- The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has paid over $1.5 billion in sexual abuse settlements, making it one of the largest institutional sexual abuse cases in American history
- LAUSD has paid hundreds of millions of dollars in sexual abuse settlements involving teachers, coaches, and school staff, including a $139 million settlement in a single case involving a former elementary school teacher
Contact Compass Law Group — Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Lawyers
If you are a survivor of sexual abuse, we want you to know: we believe you, and your courage in considering this step matters. The legal system exists to hold abusers and the institutions that protected them accountable for the harm they caused. California’s laws are the strongest in the nation for survivors, and our attorneys at Compass Law Group are committed to making sure those laws work for you.
Every conversation with our firm is completely confidential. We will listen without judgment, explain your legal options clearly, and let you decide how to proceed—at your own pace. You will never be pressured, and you will always be treated with the dignity and respect you deserve. Our Los Angeles office at 633 W 5th Street, 26th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071 is available 24/7.
Call (213) 516-9809 or contact us online for a free, confidential consultation. With our No Win, No Fee guarantee, you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you. Hablamos español. We also speak Farsi and Korean.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I file a sexual abuse lawsuit in California even if the abuse happened decades ago?+
Can I sue the institution where the sexual abuse occurred, not just the abuser?+
Do I need to file a police report before I can file a civil sexual abuse lawsuit?+
Will my name be public if I file a sexual abuse lawsuit in Los Angeles?+
What compensation can I receive in a sexual abuse lawsuit in California?+
What is the AB 218 revival window and does it still apply?+
How long does a sexual abuse lawsuit take to resolve?+
Can I pursue a civil lawsuit even if the criminal case was dismissed or the abuser was acquitted?+
What if I do not have physical evidence of the sexual abuse?+
Is there a cost to speak with a sexual abuse attorney at Compass Law Group?+
Talk to a Los Angeles Sexual Abuse Lawyer Today
Call Compass Law Group at (213) 516-9809. Free consultation, no fees unless we win. 24/7. Visit our LA office.
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Understanding whether a claim exists is one of the challenges of personal injury law. This is why we offer free initial consultations to help you make this determination and allow you an avenue to vindicate your rights.
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