POLICE MISCONDUCT IS A CIVIL RIGHTS VIOLATION. SECTION 1983 LETS YOU HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE.

Police Misconduct Attorneys On Call — No Retainer Required.

Excessive force, unlawful arrest, and rights violations by officers are legally actionable — an attorney enforces it.

Stop Paying $400/hr to Hold Government Actors Accountable.

A legal plan gives you experienced civil rights attorney access for a flat monthly rate — no retainer required.

Tell us what happened. An attorney will call you back.

Your rights were violated. Make them answer for it.

Save thousands in legal fees.

Note: Legal plans are not free services. They are affordable prepaid legal solutions provided by licensed attorneys.

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The Government Had Lawyers When They Violated Your Rights. Now You Do Too.

Civil rights attorneys charge $200–$450/hr — and most people never call one because of the cost.

A legal plan gives you access to experienced civil rights attorneys for a low monthly fee, so the price of legal help never stops you from enforcing rights the law specifically created to protect you.

  • Immediate consultations with licensed civil rights attorneys
  • Document review, complaint filing, and demand letters
  • Representation in negotiations and administrative proceedings
  • Coverage starts immediately — no waiting period
Cost Comparison
Civil Rights Attorney (hourly) $200–$450/hr
Initial Consultation $200–$400
Doing Nothing Violation goes unanswered
Legal Plan Membership ~$1/day

Real Member. Real Result.

What Happens When You Use the Law

★★★★★

"After a traffic stop that escalated into an unlawful arrest and use of force, I had no idea I had legal options. My plan attorney filed a Section 1983 civil rights claim. The city settled for damages that covered everything I lost — and the officers were subject to disciplinary review."

Marcus J.
Atlanta, GA

⏱️ Police Misconduct Claim Timeline

Act Before Your Filing Window Closes

Section 1983 claims follow state statutes of limitations — typically 2–3 years. Some states require a notice of claim within 90–180 days.

Incident Just Occurred
Best Position to File

Evidence is fresh and witnesses remember clearly. Some states require a government notice of claim within 90–180 days — failure to file this can bar your lawsuit entirely. An attorney files the notice immediately and preserves all evidence.

Within 90 Days
Notice Deadline May Apply

Many states require a notice of claim against government entities within 90–180 days. Missing this pre-lawsuit requirement bars your Section 1983 claim entirely. An attorney confirms your state's notice requirement and files immediately.

1–2 Years Out
Statute Approaching

Section 1983 statutes of limitations are typically 2–3 years depending on state. Evidence gaps forming, witnesses may be harder to locate. An attorney must confirm the deadline and file before it closes.

At or Past Limit
Check Now — Exceptions May Apply

Continuing violations, government concealment, or minority/disability tolling may extend the window. State tort claims may provide separate options. An attorney checks every available avenue immediately.

Don't wait to find out your deadline has passed. Get an attorney on it today.

Check Your Filing Deadline Now

How a Legal Plan Helps

Immediate Attorney Access

Speak with a licensed civil rights attorney as soon as you need help — no waiting, no consultation fee. Know your rights before you respond to any employer, agency, or institution.

Document Review

Have any document, policy, or settlement offer reviewed by an attorney before you sign — protecting you from waiving rights you didn't know you had.

Deadline Tracking

Civil rights claims have strict filing deadlines — EEOC charges, Section 1983 claims, and state complaints all have windows that close fast. Your attorney ensures you never miss one.

Ongoing Representation

From initial consultation through resolution — negotiations, administrative hearings, or court proceedings — your plan attorney is with you at every stage.

Legal Help for Police Misconduct Claim

Police misconduct claims arise from excessive force, false arrest, unlawful search and seizure, malicious prosecution, and deliberate indifference to serious medical needs.

Section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act allows individuals to sue state and local officials for constitutional violations.

An attorney builds the case and pursues accountability.

A legal plan connects you with experienced Civil Rights Law attorneys who can assess your situation, protect your rights, and guide you through every step of the process — at a fraction of traditional legal costs.

What You Need to Know
  • Excessive force and brutality claims under Section 1983
  • False arrest and malicious prosecution
  • Unlawful search, seizure, and property damage
  • Failure to intervene by bystander officers
  • Qualified immunity challenges and government liability

Get Legal Help in 3 Simple Steps

No retainer. No hourly fees. Just real attorney access.

1
Submit Your Details

Tell us about your civil rights situation so we can connect you with the right legal support.

2
A Legal Rep Calls You Back

A legal plan representative reaches out, explains your options, and gets you access to experienced attorneys at an affordable monthly rate.

3
Speak with a Provider Attorney

Get connected with a licensed civil rights attorney — consultation, rights assessment, complaint filing, and full legal support pursuing what you're owed.

How Civil Rights Claims Typically Work

Step 1
Understand Your Rights

Before taking any action, speak with a civil rights attorney. Understanding your legal position early prevents costly mistakes and ensures you take the right steps from the start.

Step 2
Build Your Case

Your attorney helps gather and preserve evidence, file required documents on time, and develop the strongest possible legal strategy for your specific situation.

Step 3
Resolve Your Matter

Whether through negotiation, settlement, or representation in court or administrative proceedings, your attorney works toward the outcome that best serves your interests.

Why Legal Representation Matters

Know Your Rights

The law provides significant protections in civil rights matters. An attorney ensures you understand and exercise every right available under federal and state law.

Avoid Costly Mistakes

Without legal guidance, people routinely waive rights, miss deadlines, or sign agreements that harm their long-term interests. An attorney prevents these expensive errors.

Better Outcomes

Research consistently shows that individuals with legal representation achieve significantly better outcomes than those who navigate the system alone.

What Our Members Say

★★★★★

"After a traffic stop that escalated into an unlawful arrest and use of force, I had no idea I had legal options. My plan attorney filed a Section 1983 civil rights claim. The city settled for damages that covered everything I lost — and the officers were subject to disciplinary review."

Marcus J.
Atlanta, GA
★★★★★

"Officers searched my home without a warrant and destroyed property. I didn't think I could fight city hall. My plan attorney filed a Fourth Amendment Section 1983 claim. The city settled within four months — paying for all damages plus attorney fees."

Carla B.
Memphis, TN

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