TL;DR
If you experienced abuse as a young person in a Washington juvenile facility, you are not alone — and it is not too late to explore your options.
We can help answer your questions and connect you with an attorney if you may have a case.
Across Washington State, adults who were sexually abused as children while held in juvenile detention facilities are beginning to come forward. Many are doing so for the first time — years or even decades after the abuse occurred. Changes in Washington law and growing public awareness have opened a path for survivors who may have believed that path was closed.
This page is for anyone who may be in that position: someone who experienced abuse as a minor in a Washington juvenile facility and wants to understand what options may be available today.
Most of the people exploring claims related to juvenile detention abuse are adults now, often between the ages of 30 and 60. The abuse they experienced typically took place sometime between the 1980s and 2010s, when they were held in state or county juvenile facilities as minors.
It is extremely common for survivors of childhood sexual abuse to wait many years before talking about what happened to them. There is no “right” timeline for disclosure, and delayed reporting does not weaken a person’s experience or credibility. Many survivors reach a point where media coverage, changes in law, or personal readiness make it possible to take a step they were not ready for before.
Coming forward after many years is not unusual. It is one of the most well-documented patterns in survivor behavior, and it does not mean your experience matters any less.
Every situation is different, and no article can substitute for a confidential conversation about your specific circumstances. In general, claims in this area involve adults who were sexually abused by staff members — including guards, counselors, or other employees — while detained as minors in a Washington State juvenile facility.
You were under 18 and held in a juvenile detention facility in Washington State when the abuse occurred.
The abuse was carried out by facility staff — guards, counselors, administrators, or other employees — not solely by other detained youth.
Survivors of all genders have come forward. Boys and young men were frequently targeted and are an important part of this population.
Many survivors are now in their 30s, 40s, 50s, or 60s. Changes in Washington law may allow claims regardless of when the abuse took place.
Allegations and formal claims have been connected to a number of juvenile detention facilities across the state. Some of the counties and facilities that have drawn particular attention include:
If you were held at one of these facilities — or any other juvenile detention center in Washington — and experienced sexual abuse by staff, the information on this page may apply to you.
Many people who experienced abuse in juvenile detention carry more than the trauma itself. They may have had further contact with the justice system. They may carry a deep distrust of institutions, including the legal system. Some tried to report what happened at the time and were ignored, punished, or simply not believed.
These are not reasons to stay silent. They are part of a pattern that is well understood by attorneys and advocates who work with survivors of institutional abuse. You do not need a clean record, a perfect memory, or proof in hand to start a confidential conversation about your experience.
A first conversation with a legal team is not a commitment to anything. It is a chance to describe what happened, ask questions, and understand whether you may have options worth exploring. Here is what you should know about that process:
Your conversation is private. You control what you share and when.
Reaching out does not commit you to filing a lawsuit or taking any action at all.
Most attorneys handling these cases work on a contingency basis, meaning there is no upfront fee.
There is no pressure to move quickly. You can take the time you need to decide what is right for you.
If you were sexually abused as a young person in a Washington State juvenile facility, what happened to you was not your fault — and you are not alone in coming forward now.
A confidential conversation costs nothing and commits you to nothing. It is simply a chance to learn what may be available to you.
You’ve carried this long enough. Let us help you carry it from here. Call for a private consultation or submit your information securely online.