Attorney General Phil Weiser wins critical services for sexual assault and domestic violence survivors
Nov. 24, 2025 (DENVER) — Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser today secured an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice ensuring the department will not apply alarming restrictions to critical Victims of Crime Act and Violence Against Women Act services supporting survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence.
Last month, Attorney General Weiser and a coalition of 20 other attorneys general sued the Justice Department over unlawful conditions that threatened to cut off vital legal services for survivors who could not immediately prove their immigration status. As a result of the lawsuit, the Justice Department reversed course and today agreed to a binding resolution guaranteeing the federal government will not apply the restrictions to states’ VOCA Victim Assistance and VAWA funds and ensuring that survivors can continue relying on these crucial supports, regardless of immigration status.
“Ensuring that every survivor can safely seek immediate help — without fear, intimidation, or bureaucratic barriers — is essential to public safety,” said Attorney General Weiser. “Our community partners provide critical, often life-saving services to people escaping domestic violence and sexual assault. This agreement reinforces that survivors must be able to access these services freely and without documentation-related obstacles that could put them at further risk.”
For decades, the VAWA and VOCA programs have enabled states to support survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, human trafficking, and other violent crimes. These grants fund services such as legal representation for protective orders, custody and visitation matters, child support, housing and relocation assistance, and civil legal assistance that helps survivors escape abuse and rebuild their lives. VAWA also funds rape crisis centers that provide urgent support to victims of sexual assault. Congress deliberately designed these programs to reach every eligible survivor, regardless of immigration status, because public safety depends on ensuring that all victims can seek help, report crimes, and rebuild their lives without fear.
In October, the coalition filed a lawsuit after the Justice Department informed states that they could no longer use VAWA or VOCA funding to provide legal services to undocumented immigrants. The new “Legal Services Condition” applied not only to future awards, but also to grants that had already been issued, some dating back years. The attorneys general warned that the restriction would impose severe burdens on service providers, who do not collect or verify immigration status, and that forcing survivors to produce proof of status before receiving help would be dangerous and potentially impossible.
As a result of the attorneys general lawsuit, the department has now agreed that the challenged restriction cannot and will not be applied to any current VOCA Victim Assistance or VAWA grant awards. Based on this binding stipulation, Attorney General Weiser and the coalition are voluntarily dismissing their lawsuit without prejudice, preserving the ability to refile if the Justice Department attempts to revive this unlawful restriction in the future.
Joining Attorney General Weiser in this stipulation are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Vermont, Rhode Island, Washington, and the District of Columbia.
Read the full stipulation (PDF).
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Media Contact:
Lawrence Pacheco
Chief Communications Officer
(720) 508-6553 office
lawrence.pacheco@coag.gov