Survivors across Pennsylvania are coming forward with accounts of sexual abuse by staff at juvenile detention centers, state youth-development centers, secure treatment units, and private residential placement facilities. The accounts span decades and facility types — state-operated, county-run, and private contractors paid to house children in the Commonwealth's care — and describe a recurring pattern: staff using authority over young people in custody to abuse them, supervisors who failed to intervene, and retaliation against children who tried to report.
Since 2024, hundreds of survivors have joined civil lawsuits against facility operators, county governments, and the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services. A Delaware County grand jury has documented systemic failures at a county-run detention center, several facilities have closed or lost their state licenses, and the Commonwealth has reached settlements with some former residents. The litigation continues to grow as additional survivors come forward, and lawyers are reviewing new claims from former residents of facilities across the state.
If you were sexually abused as a child while placed in a Pennsylvania juvenile facility, the law provides a path to accountability — and to recognition of what was taken from you.
Every detail you share through this case review — your story, the facility where you were placed, any records or treatment history you have, and how the abuse affected you — stays between you and our intake team. We do not sell, rent, or share your information with third parties, and your participation is never made public.
Damages vary by case, and every survivor's situation is different. Common categories of damages in juvenile facility sexual abuse matters include:
Therapy, trauma-focused counseling, psychiatric care, inpatient stays, medication, and follow-up treatment for PTSD, depression, anxiety, substance-use disorders, and related conditions tied to abuse suffered while in state custody.
Long-term therapy, ongoing psychiatric treatment, residential or intensive outpatient programs, and the cost of recovery that often continues for years — and sometimes decades — after the abuse.
Wages lost to time off work, interrupted education, and the lasting reduction in earning capacity that can follow trauma sustained during the years a young person should have been finishing school and starting adult life.
Emotional distress, humiliation, loss of trust, and the diminished quality of life caused by sexual abuse suffered in a place that was supposed to keep you safe.
Damages available to spouses and family members for the strain that the lasting effects of childhood institutional abuse place on close relationships.
For families who lost a loved one to suicide or substance-use death connected to the trauma: funeral and burial expenses, loss of future support, and loss of society and companionship.
In certain cases, facility operators, county governments, and state agencies may be held accountable for negligent hiring and supervision, failure to protect children in their custody, failure to report known abuse, concealment of prior complaints, and retaliation against young people who tried to come forward. Where the conduct is especially egregious, punitive damages may also be available.
See if You QualifyAt Slater Slater Schulman LLP, we represent survivors of sexual abuse suffered while in the custody of Pennsylvania juvenile facilities. Our attorneys work closely with each client, with the discretion and care these cases demand, to pursue accountability from the institutions that failed to protect the children placed in their care.
Our attorneys handle complex civil cases involving childhood sexual abuse in institutional settings — juvenile justice facilities, state-licensed treatment programs, and private residential placement contractors. The team reviewing your case has worked in this category before.
We come ready to take cases through to trial when defendants resist a fair resolution. The credible threat of trial is what drives settlements — and it's a posture not every firm can credibly hold.
You pay nothing up front and nothing during the case. Fees only apply if we recover compensation on your behalf.
This is an advertisement for Slater Slater Schulman LLP 101 West Elm Street, Ste 520, Conshohocken, PA 19428. Jason Duncan, Esq. Jason Duncan, Esq., of Slater Slater Schulman LLP 800-251-6990 of Harrisburg, PA is the attorney responsible for the content of this advertisement. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.