Domestic Abuse & Coercive Control

Expert Witness Reports

Our experts prepare CPR Part 35 compliant reports for cases involving domestic abuse, coercive control and related psychological harm. Reports may support civil claims, CICA applications, redress schemes, limitation arguments, family proceedings and Human Rights Act matters, with careful attention to safety, chronology and the evidential questions before the court.

01

What our domestic abuse reports cover

Domestic Abuse & Coercive Control Expert Witness Reports UK address the psychological, behavioural and relational evidence arising from abuse within intimate or family relationships. Our experts assist solicitors, claimants and defendants in civil claims, CICA applications, redress schemes, limitation disputes, family proceedings and inquest contexts, where the court or decision-maker needs clear opinion on harm, vulnerability, causation and future needs.

Typical instructions include:

  • Psychological injury following domestic abuse and coercive control
  • Civil claims involving assault, harassment or vicarious liability
  • CICA applications arising from domestic violence and exploitation
  • Redress scheme evidence for survivors of institutional abuse
  • Limitation opinions where disclosure or reporting was delayed
  • Human Rights Act claims involving state response or protection
  • Family proceedings concerning risk, contact and parental behaviour
  • Inquest evidence on vulnerability, safeguarding and systemic failings

Reports can consider the domestic abuse act 2021 and serious crime act 2015 section 76 where relevant to the pleaded issues. Our experts do not determine liability. They provide independent opinion on the clinical, behavioural or social work evidence, applying CPR Part 35 duties and addressing the questions set out in the letter of instruction.

02

Experts we instruct for domestic abuse

We work with carefully matched experts across psychiatry, psychology, social work, safeguarding and risk assessment. Where more than one discipline is needed, instructions can be coordinated so that opinions remain clear, consistent and suitable for combined reporting where appropriate.

Consultant Psychiatrist
  • Trauma-related disorders
  • Medication and prognosis
  • Capacity and vulnerability
  • Complex psychiatric histories
Clinical Psychologist
  • PTSD and anxiety
  • Coercive control impact
  • Attachment and coping
  • Therapy recommendations
Forensic Psychologist
  • Risk formulation
  • Behavioural patterns
  • Credibility factors
  • Post separation coercive control
Independent Social Worker
  • Safeguarding concerns
  • Family support needs
  • Children’s welfare
  • Care planning issues
Safeguarding Expert
  • Multi-agency records
  • Risk management
  • Protective responses
  • Policy compliance
Substance Misuse Expert
  • Alcohol dependency
  • Drug misuse history
  • Treatment engagement
  • Relapse risk
03

The reports we prepare for domestic abuse cases

01

Psychiatric Reports

Psychiatric reports address diagnosis, causation, prognosis, treatment and functional impact following domestic abuse. Each report is prepared for the relevant legal route and sets out independent opinion in a CPR Part 35 compliant format.


  • Diagnosis and causation
  • Medication review
  • Prognosis and recovery
  • Future treatment needs
02

Psychological Reports

Psychological reports assess trauma, anxiety, depression, coping, attachment and the effects of coercive control. Reports identify relevant pre-existing factors and provide structured opinion for solicitors, insurers, defendants, schemes or the court.


  • Trauma symptom profile
  • Behavioural impact
  • Therapy recommendations
  • Functional limitations
03

Safeguarding Reports

Safeguarding reports examine vulnerability, protective actions, professional response and ongoing risk. They can assist in civil, family, inquest or Human Rights Act matters and are drafted with CPR Part 35 duties in mind.


  • Risk and protection
  • Record review
  • Professional response
  • Care pathway issues
04

Combined Reports

Combined reports bring together psychiatric, psychological, social work or safeguarding opinions where the issues overlap. They help reduce duplication whilst keeping each expert’s reasoning, sources and conclusions clear for CPR Part 35 purposes.


  • Joint expert input
  • Aligned conclusions
  • Reduced duplication
  • Clear evidential scope
04

Cases and proceedings we report for

Civil damages claims
CICA applications
Redress scheme claims
Family court proceedings
Human Rights Act claims
Limitation disputes
Inquest proceedings
Harassment claims
Coercive control expert witness evidence
Post separation coercive control
05

FAQs

Can reports address coercive control without physical injury evidence?
Yes. Physical injury is not required for an expert to consider psychological harm, behavioural impact or vulnerability. The expert will review the available records, witness evidence and chronology, then explain how the reported experiences may relate to symptoms, functioning and future needs. The opinion remains independent and confined to the expert’s discipline.
Do your experts decide whether domestic abuse occurred? +
No. Findings of fact are for the court or decision-maker. The expert may comment on clinical presentation, consistency with recognised trauma responses, vulnerability, safeguarding issues and the likely effects of alleged behaviour. The report should make clear which facts are assumed, disputed or taken from the records.
Can a report support a CICA application after domestic abuse? +
Yes. A report can address diagnosis, causation, prognosis and treatment needs for a CICA application. The expert may also consider delayed reporting, psychological barriers to disclosure and the impact of abuse on daily functioning. The report should be focused on the scheme questions and the evidence available.
Are reports suitable for family proceedings involving children? +
Yes. Reports can assist where the issues include parental behaviour, safeguarding, emotional harm, contact arrangements or the impact of domestic abuse on a child or parent. The work is handled with care and without graphic detail. The expert’s role is to provide opinion within their expertise, not to replace the court’s welfare assessment.
Can experts consider delayed disclosure or limitation issues? +
Yes. Experts can explain how trauma, fear, dependency, shame, health problems or ongoing contact may affect disclosure and help-seeking. In limitation contexts, the report may address psychological barriers and functional impact over time. Legal arguments remain for solicitors, but the clinical evidence can assist the court.
What records are useful for a domestic abuse report? +
Useful records may include GP notes, mental health records, counselling records, police material, social services records, family court documents, photographs, messages and witness statements. The expert does not need every document in every case. A clear chronology and letter of instruction are often the most important starting points.
Can one report cover psychiatric and safeguarding issues? +
Sometimes. A single expert can only report within their own expertise. Where psychiatric injury and safeguarding practice are both central, separate or combined expert input may be more suitable. We help identify the right disciplines so the final evidence is proportionate, clear and useful to the proceedings.
Are reports prepared for claimants and defendants? +
Both. Reports can be prepared for claimant solicitors, defendant solicitors, insurers, public bodies or as single joint expert evidence where appropriate. The expert’s duty is to the court, not the instructing party. Opinions are based on the evidence, the questions asked and the expert’s professional judgement.

Need an expert for your
domestic abuse case?

Send the letter of instruction, pleadings or application papers, key records, a chronology and any deadlines. We will review the issues and identify suitable expert disciplines for a CPR Part 35 compliant report.