What if the clock ran out on justice before a survivor could even find the courage to speak? For decades, many victims of child abuse have been silenced not only by fear or trauma but by the law itself. In many states, the statute of limitations prevented survivors from taking legal action once a set time had passed, regardless of when they came to terms with their abuse.
But healing doesn’t follow a schedule. Survivors often take years, even decades, to process and confront what happened to them. In these cases, civil lawsuits offer survivors a different form of recourse.
By eliminating these arbitrary deadlines, lawmakers are giving power back to those who were once powerless. And that change could be life-altering.
Understanding the Statute of Limitations in Child Abuse Cases
The statute of limitations refers to the legally defined time frame in which a victim can file charges or bring a lawsuit against an abuser. In child abuse cases, these limits have historically been unreasonably short, often closing the window before victims even begin to process what happened to them.
According to the National Center for Victims of Crime, the average age for disclosure of child sexual abuse is 52 years old. Yet, in many states, the legal deadline expires decades earlier, sometimes as early as the victim’s 21st birthday.
This discrepancy between when victims are ready to speak and when the law allows them to act has long been a barrier to justice.
Why Survivors Delay Disclosure
Survivors of child abuse frequently grapple with a range of psychological and emotional barriers that delay disclosure:
- Shame and guilt
- Fear of retaliation
- Lack of understanding of abuse during childhood
- Psychological repression or memory fragmentation
- Distrust of authority figures or the legal system
These complex factors mean that when a survivor is finally ready to pursue justice, the legal window may have already closed.
Legislative Shifts Across the U.S.
A growing number of states have recognized the unique nature of child sexual abuse and taken steps to reform their statute of limitations laws. These reforms acknowledge that many survivors are not ready to come forward until long after the traditional legal deadlines have passed.
- New York’s Child Victims Act (2019) created a temporary “look-back window,” allowing survivors to file civil suits regardless of when the abuse occurred. This window was later extended, resulting in thousands of claims being filed.
- California’s AB 218 (2019) extended the time survivors have to file civil lawsuits until age 40 or within five years of discovering the abuse. It also opened a three-year revival window for previously expired claims.
- Vermont became the first state to permanently eliminate the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse claims in 2019. The law applies retroactively and has been upheld by the courts, setting a precedent for broader reform.
- Maine attempted a similar move in 2021, passing a law to abolish the civil statute of limitations for child sexual abuse. However, in January 2025, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court struck down the retroactive application of the law, ruling that expired claims could not be revived under the state constitution.
These differing outcomes highlight the legal and constitutional complexities surrounding retroactive changes to the statute of limitations laws, but they also signal a growing shift in how legislatures and courts view justice for survivors.
Benefits of Abolishing Statutes of Limitations
1. Empowers Survivors
Eliminating these legal deadlines gives survivors the autonomy to seek justice on their own timeline. This can be a crucial step in reclaiming control over their lives.
2. Holds Abusers and Institutions Accountable
Without time constraints, survivors can expose not just individual abusers but also institutions—such as schools, churches, or youth organizations—that may have enabled or covered up the abuse. This increases the pressure for institutional reform and child safety protocols.
3. Encourages Disclosure
Knowing that they can still pursue justice later in life may encourage more survivors to come forward. This has a ripple effect, empowering others and increasing public awareness.
4. Preserves Evidence and Testimony
Although critics argue that time weakens cases, modern forensic science, digital records, and psychological evaluations can support historical abuse claims. Courts are equipped to assess the credibility of older cases.
Addressing the Critics
Opponents often claim that removing the statute of limitations leads to unfair trials due to faded memories and lost evidence. While this concern is valid, it’s important to remember that courts already have mechanisms to assess credibility and the strength of evidence in older cases.
Moreover, the argument for fairness must also consider the inherent injustice of denying survivors their day in court simply because the trauma took decades to process.
A Step Toward Justice and Healing
The abolishment of statutes of limitations for child abuse claims is more than a legal reform—it’s a recognition of the deep, long-lasting wounds inflicted by childhood trauma. By removing these legal barriers, society takes a definitive stand: child abuse will not be excused by the passage of time.
Justice delayed does not have to be justice denied. In this case, it can still be justice served.