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New York City
Att: NYC Lookback Window — Closes July 29, 2027
Attention: NYC Lookback Window — Closes July 29, 2027

Did an Institution in New York Fail to Protect You?

A new law gives survivors of institutional abuse in New York City a limited window to file civil claims — even for abuse that happened decades ago. If you were abused at a juvenile detention center, school, church, hospital, or workplace in NYC, you may be entitled to compensation.
New York City
A new law gives survivors of institutional abuse in New York City a limited window to file civil claims — even for abuse that happened decades ago. If you were abused at a juvenile detention center, school, church, hospital, or workplace in NYC, you may be entitled to compensation.

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⏳ NYC Lookback Window Is Open — Closes July 29, 2027

A new law allows survivors of institutional abuse in New York City to file civil claims — even for abuse that happened decades ago. This window will not be extended. Check if you qualify →

What Changed — The New York Lookback Window Explained

For decades, survivors of sexual abuse at New York City institutions were blocked from civil justice by strict statutes of limitations. That changed on January 29, 2026, when Bill 1297-A — an amendment to the Gender-Motivated Violence Act (GMVA) — went into effect after a NYC Council veto override.

The new law creates an 18-month lookback window allowing survivors to file civil lawsuits against both individual abusers and the institutions that enabled them — regardless of when the abuse occurred, as long as it happened in NYC before January 9, 2022.

The law was a direct response to a September 2025 ruling that dismissed over 450 lawsuits by survivors of abuse in city-run juvenile detention centers — thrown out not on the merits, but on a legal technicality. Bill 1297-A fixes that technicality and explicitly extends institutional liability to schools, churches, hospitals, government agencies, and employers.

📅 Key Dates

Jan 29, 2026 Bill 1297-A takes effect — lookback window opens
Jul 29, 2027 Window closes permanently — time-barred claims likely gone forever
Mar 2023–Mar 2025 Prior GMVA window — dismissed cases from this period may now be refiled
Before Jan 9, 2022 Abuse must have occurred in NYC before this date to qualify

Who May Qualify

You may qualify to file a civil claim under the amended GMVA if:

  • You were sexually abused in New York City before January 9, 2022
  • The abuse was connected to an institution, organization, employer, or government agency — including juvenile detention centers, schools, churches, hospitals, or workplaces
  • You were previously time-barred and never filed — new claims are permitted regardless of how long ago the abuse occurred
  • Your prior lawsuit was dismissed between March 1, 2023 and March 1, 2025 due to limitations in the earlier GMVA language
  • You file your claim before July 29, 2027 — no criminal case or prior filing required

Which Institutions Can Be Held Liable

Under Bill 1297-A, institutions — not just individual perpetrators — can be sued for enabling, concealing, or failing to prevent abuse. This includes:

🏛️ Juvenile Detention CentersCity-run facilities — abuse cases from the 1960s through 2010s have been accepted
🏫 Schools & UniversitiesPublic and private K–12, school districts, colleges, boarding schools
⛪ Religious OrganizationsCatholic dioceses, churches, religious schools, clergy-run programs
🏥 Healthcare FacilitiesHospitals, psychiatric centers, residential treatment facilities
🏢 Employers & CorporationsWorkplaces where abuse was enabled, ignored, or covered up
🤸 Youth & Community OrgsSports clubs, camps, foster care agencies, community centers

What Compensation May Be Available

Civil lawsuits under the GMVA can recover compensation for a wide range of harms. Recoverable damages typically include:

  • Pain and suffering — including PTSD, anxiety, and depression
  • Past and future therapy and counseling costs
  • Lost wages and diminished earning capacity
  • Medical expenses related to physical and psychological treatment
  • Harm to personal relationships and quality of life
  • Punitive damages in cases involving deliberate institutional cover-up
Recent Benchmarks: The NYC Department of Education has paid over $160 million in Child Victims Act settlements. The NY Archdiocese announced a $300 million fund in December 2025 to resolve 1,300+ clergy abuse claims. Individual NY institution abuse verdicts in 2025 ranged from $25 million to $30 million. Compensation varies by case — consult an attorney for an assessment of your specific situation.

Recent Updates — 2026

  • Jan 29, 2026 — Bill 1297-A goes into effect after the NYC Council overrides Mayor Adams' veto. The 18-month lookback window opens immediately.
  • Dec 2025 — The NY Archdiocese announces a $300 million fund to resolve more than 1,300 pending clergy sexual abuse claims across Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island.
  • Nov 25, 2025 — NYC Council passes Bill 1297-A with 48 votes in favor, explicitly extending institutional liability under the GMVA and reopening the lookback window.
  • Sep 2025 — Bronx judge dismisses 450+ lawsuits against city juvenile detention centers on a retroactivity technicality — directly prompting Bill 1297-A.
  • Feb 2025 — NY Court of Appeals strengthens Child Victims Act protections, blocking a school district from using a procedural technicality to escape liability for teacher abuse.

The Window Closes July 29, 2027 — Don't Wait

Fill out the form above to see if you qualify. There is no cost to speak with an attorney, and you pay nothing unless compensation is recovered.

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Key Differences Between Mass Tort and Class Action Lawsuits

Structure:
  • Mass Tort: Involves multiple individual lawsuits grouped together due to common elements or defendants.
  • Class Action Lawsuits: A single lawsuit brought on behalf of a larger group, known as the class, with a designated representative plaintiff.
Individual Control:
  • Mass Tort: Each plaintiff maintains control over their case and its resolution.
  • Class Action Lawsuits: Class members have limited control over the lawsuit, with decisions made by the representative plaintiff and their legal team.
Compensation:
  • Mass Tort: Compensation and settlements are determined individually, considering the unique circumstances and harm suffered by each plaintiff.
  • Class Action Lawsuits: Compensation and settlements are typically distributed uniformly among all class members, often on a pro-rata basis.
Applicability:
  • Mass Tort: Ideal when cases involve varying degrees of harm or distinct circumstances for each plaintiff.
  • Class Action Lawsuits: Effective when numerous claimants have similar claims and a uniform resolution is practical.
Efficiency:
  • Mass Tort: May be more time-consuming and complex due to individual case management.
  • Class Action Lawsuits: Generally more efficient in terms of time and resources as it consolidates claims into one proceeding.
Understanding these differences is crucial for both plaintiffs and defendants when determining the most appropriate legal strategy for addressing a collective grievance or harm.
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