Parents often choose private schools because they believe those environments will provide smaller class sizes, stronger supervision, close communities, and greater opportunities for their children.
Many private schools do provide meaningful educational experiences and supportive environments.
But when sexual abuse occurs within private schools, the same qualities that make these institutions appealing can sometimes create circumstances where boundaries become blurred and misconduct becomes more difficult to recognize.
Students frequently develop close relationships with teachers, coaches, advisors, counselors, dorm staff, and mentors. Parents often place significant trust in schools and staff members because they believe these institutions are providing a highly supervised environment.
When that trust is violated, survivors often describe experiencing more than abuse by an individual. They describe betrayal involving authority figures, institutions, and environments specifically chosen because they were believed to be safe.
For more than 40 years, Paul Mones has represented survivors of sexual abuse and pursued institutions and organizations that allegedly failed to protect children.
If you experienced sexual abuse involving a private school employee, teacher, coach, counselor, or staff member, legal options may still exist.



