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Sexual Abuse Lawyers Serving Georgia

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Filing a Civil Abuse Claim in Georgia

A civil sexual abuse claim in Georgia belongs to you — not a prosecutor. It can proceed whether or not charges were ever filed, and it's decided on the preponderance of the evidence rather than beyond a reasonable doubt. That difference is why survivors routinely win civil cases the criminal system never touched.

Georgia civil claims can also name the institutions that made the abuse possible — schools, religious organizations, employers, medical providers, hotels, and youth programs. Institutional defendants are typically what turn a claim into meaningful recovery: therapy and care costs, lost income, pain and suffering, and in egregious cases punitive damages.

Georgia Time Limits

Statutes of limitations are state law, and they've been changing fast in survivors' favor — extensions, eliminations, and lookback windows that revive older claims. Here's where Georgia stands today:

A revival window has closed

Georgia filing deadlines, in plain language

Georgia's Hidden Predator Act gives child sexual abuse survivors until age 23 (or a discovery-based option), and a temporary revival window against perpetrators that ran from 2015 to 2017 has since closed.

  • Under Ga. Code Sec. 9-3-33.1, survivors can sue up to age 23 or within two years of when they knew or should have known of the abuse.
  • The 2015-2017 revival window applied to claims against perpetrators only, not against institutions.

Deadlines change and depend on your specific facts, so treat this as a starting point — a lawyer licensed in Georgia can confirm exactly where your case stands, for free.

Source: CHILD USA, NCSL

What Your Case Could Be Worth

There is no flat number — value turns on the facts — but a civil sexual abuse claim can recover several kinds of damages. Economic damages cover the concrete costs: therapy and counseling, medical care, and lost income or reduced earning capacity, past and future. Non-economic damages compensate the pain, trauma, and life impact that don't come with a receipt. And where an institution's conduct was reckless or it actively covered up abuse, a court may add punitive damages to punish and deter. A lawyer serving Georgia can give you a realistic read once they understand what happened.

Who Pays: Going After the Institution

An individual abuser rarely has the assets to make a judgment meaningful. The institutions that enabled them usually do — and in Georgia that can mean schools and universities, churches and dioceses, employers, hotels, youth and sports programs, healthcare and treatment facilities, foster and juvenile agencies, and rideshare companies. Experienced survivor attorneys build the case against the negligent institution as well as the perpetrator, which is what turns accountability into real recovery.

How a Civil Claim Actually Works

It starts with a free, confidential consultation — no obligation. If you move forward, your attorney investigates, gathers evidence, and files the complaint, frequently under a pseudonym to protect your identity. Many cases resolve through a negotiated, confidential settlement; others move through discovery toward trial. The attorney carries the legal load and the deadlines; you set the goals and the pace.

Your Privacy and Your Pace

Filing a claim does not mean your name goes public. Survivor cases are routinely filed as Jane or John Doe, courts can seal identifying records, and most resolve confidentially. A trauma-informed attorney protects your privacy from the first conversation and never pushes you to share more than you're ready to.

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FAQ

What Survivors Ask Us

Submit the confidential form on this page. Within one business day, the Abuse Justice Center matches you with a vetted civil attorney serving Georgia whose practice covers your kind of case — free, with no obligation.

Network attorneys take survivor cases on contingency: nothing up front, no hourly billing, and the attorney is paid a percentage only if your case recovers compensation.

Don't assume so. Civil time limits for sexual abuse have been extended or eliminated in many states, and some have lookback windows reviving older claims. A Georgia attorney can tell you exactly what applies — for free.

No. A civil claim in Georgia is separate from the criminal system and is decided on the preponderance of the evidence. It can proceed with no police report and no criminal charge — many successful civil cases involved neither.

There's no fixed figure — value depends on the facts and on which institutions are liable. Claims can recover therapy and medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering, and sometimes punitive damages. A Georgia lawyer can give you a realistic assessment at no cost.

Civil claims in Georgia can reach schools, religious organizations, employers, healthcare providers, hotels, and youth programs that enabled or concealed abuse — often the most meaningful path to recovery.

Usually, yes. Survivor claims are frequently filed under a pseudonym such as Jane or John Doe, courts can seal identifying details, and most cases settle confidentially. Your attorney can request these protections from day one.

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