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Civil Justice for Survivors in Massachusetts

Free, confidential referrals to attorneys serving survivors of sexual abuse and serious personal injury across Massachusetts — including Boston, Worcester and Springfield.

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Your Civil Options in Massachusetts

If you experienced sexual abuse, assault, or a serious injury in Massachusetts, the civil courts give you a path to accountability that doesn't depend on a prosecutor or a criminal conviction. A civil claim is brought by you, on your terms — and it's decided on the preponderance of the evidence, a far lower bar than criminal court.

Civil claims in Massachusetts can reach beyond the individual who caused harm to the institutions that enabled it — schools, religious organizations, employers, healthcare providers, hotels, and youth programs. For many survivors, institutional accountability is what makes a civil case both meaningful and financially viable.

Time Limits in Massachusetts

Statutes of limitations are the deadlines for filing a claim — and for sexual abuse they have been changing fast across the country, almost always in survivors' favor. Here is where Massachusetts stands today:

Filing deadline extended

Filing deadlines in Massachusetts

Massachusetts extended its civil deadline for childhood sexual abuse, generally allowing claims until age 53 (35 years after the abuse) or within 7 years of discovering the harm, whichever is longer.

  • The 2014 reform lengthened the civil filing window and added a delayed-discovery provision.
  • Massachusetts has not eliminated the civil statute of limitations and has no general revival window for expired claims.

Statutes of limitations change often and turn on the facts of your case. Confirm your current Massachusetts deadline with a licensed Massachusetts attorney — the consultation is free and confidential.

Who Can Be Held Accountable

The most meaningful survivor cases often reach past the individual who caused harm to the institution that enabled it. In and around Massachusetts, that can include schools and universities, churches and religious organizations, youth sports and scouting programs, employers, hotels and hospitality venues, healthcare and treatment providers, juvenile detention and foster-care agencies, and rideshare platforms. Institutions are held to a duty to protect the people in their care — and when they ignored warnings, failed to screen or supervise, or actively concealed abuse, civil law can hold them responsible alongside the perpetrator.

What a Civil Claim Can Recover

A civil claim is about restoring what was taken and forcing accountability. Depending on the facts, compensation can cover the cost of therapy and medical care (past and future), lost income and diminished earning capacity, and damages for the pain, trauma, and life disruption a survivor carries. Where an institution's conduct was especially egregious, courts can also award punitive damages meant to punish and deter. No amount undoes the harm — but meaningful recovery can fund healing and signal that what happened mattered.

What the Process Looks Like

It usually begins with a free, confidential consultation — no commitment, just a conversation about your options. If you choose to move forward, your attorney investigates and builds the case, often filing under a pseudonym to protect your identity. Many claims resolve through a negotiated, confidential settlement; others proceed through discovery toward trial. Your attorney carries that weight so you don't have to, and you decide the pace and the goals at every step.

Your Privacy Is Protected

Coming forward does not mean going public. Survivor cases are frequently filed as "Jane Doe" or "John Doe," courts can issue protective orders to seal identifying information, and the vast majority of cases resolve in confidential settlements. A trauma-informed attorney builds privacy protection into the case from day one.

Choosing the Right Attorney

Look for a lawyer who specifically handles sexual abuse and survivor cases — not general practice — with a track record against institutions, a trauma-informed approach to intake, and contingency representation so you never pay out of pocket. The Survivor Justice Alliance exists to make that match for you, free of charge.

How the Alliance Helps

Share only what you're comfortable sharing, and we'll connect you with an alliance attorney serving Massachusetts — whether you're in Boston, Worcester and Springfield, or anywhere else in the state. The referral is free, confidential, and commits you to nothing.

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Questions

Common Questions

Request a free referral through the Survivor Justice Alliance. We connect you with an attorney serving Massachusetts who handles civil claims for survivors of sexual abuse and serious injury, offers a free confidential consultation, and works on contingency.

Maybe not. Statutes of limitations vary by state and many states have recently extended or eliminated time limits for sexual abuse claims. Only a Massachusetts attorney can tell you what applies to your specific case — the consultation is free.

Alliance attorneys work on contingency for survivor cases: no upfront cost, no hourly fees, and the attorney is paid a percentage only if your case recovers compensation.

No. A civil claim in Massachusetts is independent of the criminal system. It can proceed whether or not you reported to police and whether or not anyone was ever charged or convicted, because civil cases are decided on the preponderance of the evidence rather than beyond a reasonable doubt.

Often, yes. Massachusetts civil law can reach schools, religious organizations, employers, youth programs, healthcare providers, and other institutions that enabled or concealed abuse. Naming the responsible institution is frequently what makes a case both meaningful and financially viable.

Not necessarily. Many survivor cases are filed under a pseudonym such as Jane or John Doe, courts can seal identifying details, and most cases resolve in confidential settlements. Your attorney can build privacy protection in from the start.

No. The alliance connects survivors throughout Massachusetts — from Boston, Worcester and Springfield to smaller communities — with attorneys who serve the entire state.

Massachusetts Attorneys: Join Us

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