SPECIAL LEGAL ABUSE SECTION

Who This Section Is For

This educational archive may be useful for:

• Individuals experiencing Legal Abuse Syndrome (LAS)
If you are navigating prolonged court-related stress, these materials may help you understand the psychological, neurological, and physiological effects of legal trauma — and support emotional regulation, clarity, and resilience.

• Attorneys, therapists, and legal-support professionals
These recordings offer context for how legal processes can impact cognition, nervous system function, communication, and self-advocacy — and may assist in working more effectively with court-involved clients.

• Podcast hosts, educators, and media professionals
These materials reflect my long-standing work in legal trauma education and may serve as background or reference ahead of interviews, discussions, or educational programming on Legal Abuse Syndrome and court-related stress.

For interview or speaking inquiries related to Legal Abuse Syndrome and legal trauma education, please use the contact option below.

This page contains archived educational materials and lecture recordings created during my collaboration with the late Dr. Karin D. Huffer, author of Legal Abuse Syndrome and Unlocking Justice.

The materials reflect work originally developed for a support group in Las Vegas and focus on the psychological, physiological, and neurological effects of prolonged court-related stress.

These resources are preserved solely for educational and historical purposes.

They may be helpful for individuals navigating court-involved situations and may also serve as reference material for attorneys, therapists, and support professionals seeking to better understand legal trauma and stress-related dysregulation.

IMPORTANT NOTES

  • I no longer work with or represent any organization formerly associated with this material.

  • I do not provide legal services, legal advice, advocacy, or representation.

  • References to programs, organizations, or processes reflect the time in which the material was created and may no longer be current.

  • This content is intended strictly for education and emotional-resilience support, not legal direction.

If shared with legal or clinical professionals, please clarify that this page is an educational archive, not a legal advisory resource.

MY PRESENT ROLE

While I no longer appear in court, I continue to support individuals in preparing emotionally, cognitively, and physiologically for legal processes using trauma-informed, mind-body regulation methods developed during my work in this field.

Support may include:

  • nervous system stabilization

  • emotional regulation

  • mindset and communication preparation

  • self-advocacy readiness

  • trauma-responsive coping strategies

USE OF THESE MATERIALS

You may privately share this page with your attorney, therapist, or support team if it helps them:

  • understand your lived experience

  • contextualize court-related trauma symptoms

  • consider accommodations or communication approaches

Please do not repost, alter, or publicly distribute without permission.

OPTIONAL SUPPORT

Lecture Video about US Code 42 - 12102

Defining Disability

Click on the image below for the InterActive Book

Watch Jane's Story

Reasonable Accommodations

How We Help a Client

Would You Climb Without a Guide?

Who Are Our Clients?

What Is the Definition of Disability?

What are the first steps for a consultation?

Client-Attorney Communications

What Does It Mean to Be Symptomatic?

What methods can be used remotely?

Who, other than litigants, can become symptomatic?

How Can You Help Somebody Who Is Symptomatic?

Training, Certifications

Connect With Me

Copyright

© Danielle J. Duperret,

2020-2025

All Rights Reserved

Privacy Policy

Disclaimer