When the System Fails: How the Evidentiary Abuse Affidavit Keeps Survivors from Falling Through the Cracks
The EAA is a free, notarized legal tool that captures abuse in a survivor’s own words admissible in court even if she can no longer testify. Learn how it fills the gaps left by unenforced restraining orders and unserved warrants.
The EAA Can Help Even If You Never Go to Court
Document The Abuse explains why documenting abuse matters even when survivors aren't ready for legal action. The Evidence Affidavit App (EAA) is a secure digital tool that helps survivors record incidents at their own pace, preserve details over time, recognize patterns, and protect their options for the future — whether or not they ever pursue a court case. Documentation supports emotional processing, safety planning, and access to services like housing, workplace accommodations, and victim assistance programs.
She Found Her Voice
This article explains how the Evidentiary Abuse Affidavit (EAA) supports abuse victims by transforming lived experiences into structured legal documentation. Through storytelling, it highlights how survivors gain clarity, credibility, and confidence in court through evidence-based documentation.
How Victims of Abuse Can Safely Document Without Increasing Risk
Traditional evidence standards fail survivors of abuse by requiring unrealistic proof. Learn how the Evidentiary Abuse Affidavit (EAA) empowers survivors to document abuse on their own terms—legally, securely, and without re-traumatization.
What Is Evidentiary Abuse and Why It Matters in Legal Cases
This article explains evidentiary abuse, a form of coercive control where abusers manipulate or interfere with evidence to gain advantage in legal cases. Learn how evidentiary abuse affects survivor credibility, why it matters in court, and how trauma-informed practices can help prevent injustice.