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Spokane County Juvenile Detention Center Abuse: What Survivors Should Know Now

TL;DR

  • A lawsuit filed in October 2025 alleges that staff at the Spokane County Juvenile Detention Center sexually abused children detained there between 1983 and 2010
  • Fifteen survivors have come forward so far — most are now adults in their 30s through 60s
  • The complaint names the county itself, alleging that administrators ignored warning signs for decades
  • If you experienced abuse at this facility, a confidential conversation with an attorney costs nothing and commits you to nothing

A 2025 lawsuit has brought decades of alleged sexual abuse at the Spokane County Juvenile Detention Center into public view. If you were affected, this page is for you.

Have you experienced sexual assault or abuse?

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In October 2025, a lawsuit was filed against Spokane County on behalf of fifteen people who say they were sexually abused as children while held at the Spokane County Juvenile Detention Center. The alleged abuse spans nearly three decades, from the early 1980s through 2010, and involves staff members who held positions at the facility for years.

The filing is part of a broader wave of accountability across Washington State, where survivors of juvenile detention abuse are coming forward in growing numbers — many for the first time in their lives.

What the Lawsuit Alleges

The complaint centers on the conduct of detention center employees who are accused of sexually assaulting children in their custody. The plaintiffs were between the ages of twelve and seventeen at the time. According to the filing, the two staff members named in the suit held long tenures at the facility — one beginning in the early 1980s, the other serving in a supervisory role from the late 1990s through 2016.

Beyond the actions of individual staff, the lawsuit makes a broader claim: that Spokane County itself bears responsibility. The complaint alleges that administrators were aware of warning signs — including complaints and disciplinary issues — and failed to act. Survivors describe an environment where children who tried to report what was happening were ignored or dismissed.

The lawsuit does not treat this as the failure of a few individuals. It alleges that the institution itself created the conditions that allowed the abuse to continue for decades.

A Timeline of the Allegations

Early 1980s

The earliest alleged abuse begins at the Spokane County Juvenile Detention Center. One of the named staff members starts employment at the facility during this period.

Late 1990s

A second staff member joins the facility and is eventually promoted to a supervisory role — a position he holds for nearly two decades.

2010

The last year covered by the allegations in the current complaint.

October 2025

Fifteen survivors file a civil lawsuit against Spokane County, alleging systemic negligence and more than two dozen individual assaults.

This Case Is Part of a Larger Pattern

The Spokane County lawsuit is not an isolated event. Across Washington State, survivors of juvenile detention abuse have been coming forward in significant numbers. A separate legal action filed in 2025 represents nearly two hundred plaintiffs alleging abuse at state-run juvenile facilities — with some claims reaching back to the 1960s. Investigative reporting published around the same time documented widespread patterns of staff misconduct and institutional silence across multiple facilities in Washington and neighboring states.

This context matters. It means that what happened in Spokane County was not a one-off failure. It was part of a systemic problem — and survivors across the state are now being heard.

Who This May Apply To

Every person’s situation is different, and only a confidential conversation can determine whether you may have a claim. In general, the current lawsuit involves people who share the following circumstances:

Why Many Survivors Wait

If you have carried this experience for years or decades without telling anyone, that is not unusual. It is one of the most well-documented patterns among survivors of childhood institutional abuse.

Many of the people involved in this lawsuit describe barriers that go beyond the trauma itself: prior involvement with the justice system, a deep distrust of authority, or past experiences of being dismissed when they tried to speak up. Some have dealt with lasting effects on their work, their relationships, and their health.

None of these things disqualify you. None of them make your experience less real. Attorneys who work with survivors of institutional abuse understand this history and do not expect a perfect record or a perfect memory.

You do not need proof in hand or a complete recollection to start a conversation. You just need to be willing to talk — on your own terms, at your own pace.

What Reaching Out Looks Like

Speaking with an attorney for the first time is not a legal commitment. It is a private conversation where you can share what you are comfortable sharing, ask questions, and learn whether you may have options. Here is what you should know:

You Deserved Protection Then. You Deserve to Be Heard Now.

If you were sexually abused as a child at the Spokane County Juvenile Detention Center, what happened to you was a failure of the people and the institution responsible for your safety. You are not alone in coming forward now — and you are not too late.

A confidential conversation is free, private, and entirely on your terms.

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Abused Person Hiding in Shame