The RegistryPractice Area · Statewide

Civil Rights Attorneys in California

Counsel when the state or an institution crosses the line. This is the statewide record for civil rights in California — every attorney on the State Bar of California's official roll whose practice reaches this shelf, scored in the open by the published Growth Score.

Californians search this field under many names — civil rights attorney, civil rights lawyer, police misconduct lawyer, police brutality attorney, discrimination attorney — and the registry answers all of them from the same source. Below: the governing deadline with its citation, what to weigh as you read the roster, the questions Californians ask with the code sections that answer them, and the record city by city, from the North Coast to the border.

The clock & the craft

Statute of limitations

Section 1983 claims borrow California's two-year personal injury period.

42 U.S.C. § 1983 / Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 335.1

Claims against California public entities under state law require a government claim within six months (Cal. Gov. Code § 911.2). Bane Act and Unruh Act claims follow their underlying tort periods.

Reading the roster

Civil rights litigation is procedurally unforgiving — six-month government claims, qualified immunity motions, and federal-versus-state forum choices decide cases before the merits. Look for attorneys who practice § 1983 and Bane Act work specifically, ask about their experience with the county's federal district court, and preserve everything early: body-camera footage requests, medical records, and witness names. Fee-shifting statutes (42 U.S.C. § 1988, Civ. Code § 52.1(i)) make contingency representation common.

Civil Rights · statewide roster

Registry indexing underway

195,000+ California attorneys are being verified against official State Bar of California records. Verified listings for Civil Rights · California will appear here as indexing completes.

Official State Bar data · Scored in the open · Updated daily

Civil Rights questions, cited

How long do I have to sue for police misconduct in California?

Federal civil rights claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 borrow California's two-year personal injury statute (Cal. Code Civ. Proc. § 335.1), running from the violation. But parallel state-law claims against an officer's employing agency require a written government claim within six months under Cal. Gov. Code § 911.2 — the deadline that catches most people off guard.

What is the Bane Act?

Cal. Civ. Code § 52.1 — California's civil rights enforcement statute. It creates a claim against anyone who interferes, or attempts to interfere, by threat, intimidation, or coercion with rights secured by federal or state law. It is frequently pleaded alongside § 1983 in excessive-force cases because it authorizes actual damages, a statutory minimum, treble damages, and attorney fees, and reaches state actors without federal qualified-immunity doctrine.

What does the Unruh Civil Rights Act protect?

Full and equal access to the services of every business establishment in California, regardless of sex, race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, disability, medical condition, and other protected characteristics (Cal. Civ. Code § 51). Violations carry a statutory minimum of $4,000 per offense plus attorney fees (Civ. Code § 52), and every ADA access violation is automatically an Unruh violation (Civ. Code § 51(f)).

Can I sue a city or county in California?

Yes, but state-law claims require presenting a written claim to the entity within six months of the injury (Cal. Gov. Code § 911.2); suit follows only after rejection, within the time stated in Gov. Code § 945.6. Federal § 1983 claims are exempt from the claim requirement, but municipal liability demands proof of an official policy or custom under Monell v. Dept. of Social Services (1978) 436 U.S. 658.

What counts as housing discrimination in California?

Refusing to rent or sell, imposing different terms, or making housing unavailable based on protected characteristics — including source of income such as Section 8 vouchers — violates the Fair Employment and Housing Act (Cal. Gov. Code § 12955) and the federal Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3604). Complaints may be filed with the California Civil Rights Department or pursued directly in court.

Legal information, not legal advice.

From the answer files

Civil Rights by city

Civil Rights in Los AngelesLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCivil Rights in Long BeachLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCivil Rights in PasadenaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCivil Rights in Santa MonicaLos Angeles County · Los AngelesCivil Rights in San DiegoSan Diego County · San DiegoCivil Rights in Chula VistaSan Diego County · San DiegoCivil Rights in San FranciscoSan Francisco County · Bay AreaCivil Rights in OaklandAlameda County · Bay AreaCivil Rights in San JoseSanta Clara County · Bay AreaCivil Rights in Santa RosaSonoma County · North CoastCivil Rights in EurekaHumboldt County · North CoastCivil Rights in ReddingShasta County · Shasta CascadeCivil Rights in SacramentoSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyCivil Rights in DavisYolo County · Sacramento ValleyCivil Rights in FolsomSacramento County · Sacramento ValleyCivil Rights in SalinasMonterey County · Central CoastCivil Rights in Santa BarbaraSanta Barbara County · Central CoastCivil Rights in FresnoFresno County · San Joaquin ValleyCivil Rights in BakersfieldKern County · San Joaquin ValleyCivil Rights in South Lake TahoeEl Dorado County · SierraCivil Rights in RiversideRiverside County · Inland EmpireCivil Rights in San BernardinoSan Bernardino County · Inland EmpireCivil Rights in IrvineOrange County · Orange CountyCivil Rights in AnaheimOrange County · Orange CountyCivil Rights in Santa AnaOrange County · Orange CountyCivil Rights in Palm SpringsRiverside County · DesertCivil Rights in StocktonSan Joaquin County · San Joaquin ValleyCivil Rights in ModestoStanislaus County · San Joaquin ValleyCivil Rights in OxnardVentura County · Central CoastCivil Rights in FremontAlameda County · Bay AreaCivil Rights in VisaliaTulare County · San Joaquin ValleyCivil Rights in San Luis ObispoSan Luis Obispo County · Central Coast

Adjacent shelves of the law

Read the record. Then decide.

Describe your matter once, weigh the published scores, and place the call — the choice is always yours.

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195,000+ attorneys · 58 counties · Scored in the open