Criminal case
Brought by the state
Prosecutors must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, an extremely high standard. The aim is punishment of the offender, such as incarceration or fines. The survivor is a witness, not the party in control.
IT'S MORE THAN MONEY.
We represent survivors of sexual assault and abuse in civil claims in Aurora and across Colorado. A civil case is a path to compensation and institutional accountability, separate from any criminal case. You decide every step, and your first conversation with us is confidential. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Aurora from our Denver office with no fee unless we win.
No fee unless we winYou are in control
There is no obligation and no public record when you reach out. We listen, explain your options, and move at a pace that respects you. Nothing happens that you have not chosen.
A civil claim lets survivors of sexual assault and abuse in Aurora seek compensation and hold negligent institutions accountable, on a separate track from criminal prosecution.
CGH Injury Lawyers represents Aurora survivors with a confidential, trauma-informed approach from our Denver office. We handle the institutions, the investigation, and the litigation, while you keep control of every decision. Your first consultation is free and protected by attorney-client privilege.
Justice beyond the criminal courts
The criminal system and the civil system serve different purposes. Criminal courts focus on punishing an offender. Civil courts focus on making a survivor whole, providing the resources to heal and forcing institutions to answer for their failures.
For many survivors, the criminal process does not deliver accountability. Prosecutors may decline to file charges, deadlines may have passed, or a high burden of proof can lead to an acquittal despite compelling evidence. A civil claim offers a separate path that you, not the state, control.
Two separate tracks
These two systems run on parallel tracks with different goals, different standards of proof, and different outcomes. Understanding the difference is the starting point for understanding your options in Aurora.
Criminal case
Prosecutors must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, an extremely high standard. The aim is punishment of the offender, such as incarceration or fines. The survivor is a witness, not the party in control.
Civil case
You must prove your case by a preponderance of the evidence, meaning it is more likely than not that the abuse occurred and caused harm. The aim is financial compensation and accountability. You decide whether and how to proceed.
Because the civil standard is lower, you can win a civil case even when no criminal charges were filed, when charges were dropped, or when a criminal jury returned a not-guilty verdict. The two outcomes are independent. A civil claim is also yours to pursue regardless of what a prosecutor decides.
Institutional accountability
One of the most important parts of a civil case is the ability to hold institutions accountable, not just an individual. An organization that employed an abuser and failed to protect you often bears legal responsibility, and often has the resources to provide meaningful compensation.
Theory of liability
Organizations must conduct reasonable background checks before placing someone in a position of trust with vulnerable people. Hiring without checking prior complaints or history can create liability when harm follows.
Theory of liability
Even with adequate hiring, organizations must properly supervise. When administrators receive complaints about inappropriate behavior and fail to investigate or act, they share responsibility for what follows.
Theory of liability
When an organization learns of misconduct or red flags but keeps a person in a position to cause harm, it becomes liable for later abuse. This is common where institutions quietly transferred a known problem rather than removing it.
Theory of liability
In certain circumstances an employer can be held responsible for the acts of an employee within the scope of employment, particularly when the relationship created the opportunity for abuse.
The work is identifying not only who caused the harm, but which institutions created the conditions that allowed it and failed in their duty to protect you. We investigate that chain of responsibility while supporting you through what can be a difficult process of confronting an organization you once trusted.
Aurora courts and care
A civil claim arising in Aurora is rooted in Aurora: the courthouse where a case may be filed and the hospitals that may hold records central to your harm. CGH serves Aurora from our Denver office and knows this city's legal and medical infrastructure.
Courthouse
Most Aurora civil lawsuits are filed in the Arapahoe County District Court, part of the 18th Judicial District of Colorado, located at the Arapahoe County Justice Center, 7325 S. Potomac Street, Centennial, CO 80112. Aurora is primarily in Arapahoe County, though the city also extends into Adams and Douglas counties. Where the abuse occurred can determine which county court has venue. We handle 18th Judicial District cases directly and know the local civil procedure, the judges, and the defense firms that insure Aurora institutions.
Trauma and Care Records
Aurora is home to UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital, a Level I Trauma Center verified by the American College of Surgeons and designated by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, located on the Anschutz Medical Campus. Children's Hospital Colorado, also on the Anschutz Medical Campus, operates the region's only Level I Regional Pediatric Trauma Center for injured children. Where a survivor sought medical or psychological care, those records can document the harm that supports a civil claim, and we obtain them with your consent and with privacy in mind.
Serving Aurora from Denver
CGH Injury Lawyers has one office: 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205, (303) 209-9395. We do not have an Aurora office. Aurora survivors receive full, confidential representation from our Denver team, and we accommodate your schedule and comfort, including remote meetings, when meeting in person is difficult.
It is not about reliving what happened. It is about reclaiming control and forcing the institutions that failed you to answer for it.
Colorado time limits
Colorado has expanded the civil filing windows for sexual misconduct and childhood sexual abuse over recent years. Because these deadlines are specific and the stakes are high, the safest step is a confidential review of your exact timeline before you assume a claim is too late.
If you have thought that it happened too long ago, you may still have options. These laws were written precisely because survivors often need years, sometimes decades, before they are ready to come forward. We will evaluate your specific situation and tell you honestly where it stands.
Compensation
A civil claim seeks to make you whole by compensating the harm you have suffered. Colorado law recognizes several categories of damages in sexual abuse and assault cases.
In cases involving egregious conduct, such as an institutional cover-up or deliberate indifference to a known risk, Colorado courts may also award punitive damages. These are not meant to compensate you, but to punish the wrongdoer and deter similar conduct by others. We work to identify and document every dimension of harm so nothing is left out of your claim.
Your privacy and safety
A common fear survivors share is public exposure. Colorado's legal system provides meaningful privacy protections, and your safety is central to how these cases should be handled, not an afterthought.
Anonymity
In many cases courts allow survivors to file under a pseudonym so your real name does not appear in public court records. This protection recognizes that forcing public identification can deter legitimate claims and cause further harm.
Protective orders
Courts can seal sensitive documents, limit who may attend depositions, and restrict disclosure of personal information uncovered during a case, so the process does not become another violation of your privacy.
Confidential from the start
Your initial case evaluation is completely confidential and protected by attorney-client privilege. You can explore your options and decide whether to move forward with no public record and no obligation.
Trauma-informed
Our team understands that litigation can be retraumatizing if handled carelessly. We allow support persons, build in scheduling flexibility for difficult testimony, and move at a pace that respects your emotional capacity.
How it works
Every case is different, and you set the pace. These are the stages most civil claims move through, from a confidential first conversation to trial when an institution refuses to be fair.
We listen, explain your options, and answer your questions at no cost. What you share is protected by attorney-client privilege, and there is no obligation to proceed.
We evaluate your exact timeline under Colorado law, including the elimination of the statute of limitations for sexual misconduct claims effective January 1, 2022, so you understand whether and how a claim can move forward.
Using civil discovery, we obtain records you may not have, such as complaint histories, personnel files, and institutional policies, to establish how an Aurora organization failed in its duty to protect you.
We document the full harm and pursue resolution with the responsible parties. Most civil cases resolve before trial, often through confidential settlement.
If an institution will not be fair, we are prepared to try your case in the 18th Judicial District or wherever venue lies. Courts often allow protective measures for sensitive testimony, and we prepare you thoroughly so you are never in a courtroom unprotected.
There is no right timeline for being ready. Some survivors come forward soon after; others need years. Both paths are valid. What matters is that when you are ready, you understand your options and the protections available to you.
Your team
CGH Injury Lawyers is a Colorado personal injury firm, formerly Cheney Galluzzi & Howard. We are trial lawyers willing to take a case as far as it needs to go, and we handle sensitive cases with discretion, confidentiality, and respect for the survivor's control.
Frequently asked questions
A criminal case is brought by the state and focuses on punishing the offender, potentially with jail time or fines. A civil claim is brought by the survivor seeking financial compensation for harm such as medical bills, therapy costs, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Criminal cases require proof beyond a reasonable doubt, while civil cases use the lower preponderance-of-the-evidence standard. You can pursue a civil claim regardless of whether a criminal case is filed or how it ends, and many survivors find that a civil case provides a sense of control and validation.
Often, yes. Schools, employers, healthcare facilities, religious organizations, and transportation companies may be held liable if they failed to provide adequate safeguards, ignored prior complaints, or otherwise contributed to conditions that enabled the assault. Holding an institution accountable can secure meaningful compensation and help prevent future harm by forcing organizational change. These claims involve complex theories of negligence, and we evaluate whether the organization where your assault occurred bears legal responsibility.
Not necessarily. For civil claims based on sexual misconduct, Colorado eliminated the statute of limitations effective January 1, 2022. These claims can now be filed at any time (C.R.S. 13-80-103.7). That open window also covers older abuse if the old deadline had not yet expired by January 1, 2022. Because that analysis is fact-specific, a confidential case evaluation is the way to determine where your situation stands.
Compensation can cover medical and therapy expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, emotional distress, and in some cases punitive damages. Medical expenses may include emergency care, follow-up treatment, medication, and psychological care. Lost wages account for missed work, and future damages may include reduced earning capacity. Each case is unique, and we evaluate both the immediate impact and the long-term consequences on your life, health, relationships, and ability to work or study.
In many sexual abuse cases, courts allow survivors to file under a pseudonym such as Jane Doe or John Doe, so your real name does not appear in public court documents. Courts can also issue protective orders that seal sensitive records and limit who may attend depositions. Your first consultation is confidential and protected by attorney-client privilege, with no public record.
Most civil cases arising in Aurora are filed in the Arapahoe County District Court, part of the 18th Judicial District, located at the Arapahoe County Justice Center, 7325 S. Potomac Street, Centennial, CO 80112. Aurora is primarily in Arapahoe County but also extends into Adams and Douglas counties, so where the abuse occurred can affect venue. Many civil claims resolve through confidential settlement before any trial, but where a case would be filed shapes the local procedure and the defense firms you face. We handle 18th Judicial District cases directly.
Many successful civil cases have no physical evidence. Your testimony is evidence. Civil discovery also allows your attorney to obtain documents and records you may not currently have, such as employment files, complaint records, and institutional policies. Patterns of behavior, similar complaints against the same person, and expert testimony about trauma responses can all support your case.
Yes. Civil and criminal cases can proceed at the same time, though coordination matters. In some situations it is strategic to let the criminal case conclude first, because a criminal conviction can strengthen a civil claim. Your civil attorney and the prosecutor may need to communicate to avoid conflicts.
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IT'S MORE THAN MONEY.
Free, confidential consultation. No fee unless we win. Serving Aurora from our Denver office, in English and Spanish.
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