Clergy Abuse Lawyer in El Paso, Las Cruces & Southern New Mexico
Clergy Abuse Claims in El Paso, Las Cruces, West Texas, and Southern New Mexico
Deadline to File Claim
Confidential legal help for sexual abuse survivors in El Paso, Las Cruces, West Texas, and Southern New Mexico
James, Vernon & Weeks, P.A. and Baeza Law Firm of El Paso represent sexual abuse survivors who are seeking answers, accountability, and legal guidance after sexual abuse connected to clergy or church institutions. If you or someone you know were abused by a priest, brother, religious worker, or other church-affiliated adult, including one connected to the Diocese of El Paso, you may have legal options.
Whether the abuse occurred in Texas, New Mexico, Mexico, or elsewhere, we are here to help.
Our team understands that many survivors do not come forward right away. Some carry what happened for years before speaking about it. You do not need to carry this burden alone.
You can reach out to us and confidentially disclose as little or as much as you want. We do not need to know every detail in order to answer your questions and explain your legal options. If you remember a name, a description of the perpetrator, a parish, a school, a trip, or only part of what happened, that can be enough to begin.
Our team has extensive experience and a large body of investigation, including information about perpetrators connected to the Diocese of El Paso, that we can use to help walk you through the legal process. This is our mission: to help sexual abuse survivors seek justice, accountability, and protection of children in the future.
Will my name be made public if I come forward?
Photographs sourced from bishop-accountability.org.
- We Can Help
- Known Perpetrators
You are not alone. It was not your fault.
Why Survivors Are Coming Forward Now
Many survivors wait years before speaking about what happened. That is common. Abuse involving clergy or church authority can leave lasting fear, shame, confusion, and silence. For some people, it takes decades before they feel ready to say anything at all.
That does not make your experience less real, and it does not mean it is too late to ask questions.
At James, Vernon & Weeks, P.A. and Baeza Law Firm, confidentiality is one of the most important parts of this process. We understand how difficult it can be to reach out. When you contact our team, you can share as little or as much as you want. Our role is to listen, answer your questions, and help you understand your options.
Why This Page Exists
Many survivors are not sure which church institution, diocese, parish, school, or religious order was involved. Some only remember fragments. Others recognize a name years later in a public report or church disclosure. In this region, that confusion can be even greater because of the historical overlap between the Diocese of El Paso and communities now located within the Diocese of Las Cruces.
This page was created to help survivors in El Paso, Las Cruces, West Texas, Southern New Mexico, and nearby communities understand where to begin. It is meant to serve as a starting point for people who may not yet know exactly where their abuse fits, but who deserve answers.
Whether the abuse happened in a parish, school, youth trip, church activity, or another church-related setting, our team is here to help you understand what legal pathways may be available.
Legal Help for Survivors Across the Borderland Region
We help survivors and families throughout El Paso, Las Cruces, West Texas, Southern New Mexico, and surrounding communities. This includes people connected to churches, schools, institutions, and clergy assignments in places such as El Paso, Las Cruces, Sunland Park, Deming, Mesilla, Mesilla Park, Anthony, Alamogordo, Lordsburg, Silver City, Bayard, Hurley, and nearby areas.
Our clients and inquiries may also involve abuse that occurred outside those exact areas. If the abuse happened in Texas, New Mexico, Mexico, or elsewhere, and you believe a clergy member or church-affiliated adult may have been involved, we encourage you to reach out.
You do not need to solve the jurisdiction question before contacting us. That is part of what we help investigate.
You are not alone. It was not your fault.
How James, Vernon & Weeks, P.A. and Baeza Law Firm Can Help
Survivors need more than legal language. They need clarity, privacy, and a team that takes their concerns seriously.
When you contact us, we may be able to help you:
- understand whether your experience may connect to known clergy abuse investigations
- identify possible parish, school, or diocesan connections
- explain what information may be helpful, even if you only remember part of what happened
- answer questions about confidentiality and the legal process
- discuss how institutional responsibility may apply
- help you understand what options may exist for seeking justice and accountability
Our team has developed a significant body of investigation relating to clergy abuse claims, including information connected to perpetrators in the Diocese of El Paso. That work can help us guide survivors more effectively through the legal process.
You do not need to arrive with a perfectly organized account. If you remember a face, a name, a nickname, a parish, a trip, a building, or only a few details, that can still be enough to start the conversation.
The Diocese of El Paso Bankruptcy and Why It Matters
The Diocese of El Paso bankruptcy has raised urgent questions for survivors and families trying to understand their rights. For many people, this has been the first time they realized there may be a broader process involving publicly reported abuse claims connected to clergy in the region.
If you believe your abuse may involve a priest, religious worker, or church-affiliated adult connected to the Diocese of El Paso, it is important to understand how that process may affect potential claims and what legal options may still be available.
This is one reason early confidential legal guidance matters. Survivors should not be left to sort through diocesan structure, bankruptcy issues, and historical assignment questions on their own. Our role is to help you understand where things stand and what next steps may be available.
Published Clergy Directory
The following directory is included to help survivors and families identify names that may connect to their experiences. This list is based on publicly available reporting, church disclosures, lawsuits, settlements, and related public records.
This directory is presented as a record of published information. Terms such as accused, named, sued, or listed reflect the language used in public sources. Allegations are allegations unless proven in court.
If you recognize a name, remember a parish, or believe you may have encountered one of these individuals through a church, school, trip, or other religious setting, you may contact us confidentially to discuss your situation.
This directory is based on publicly available records and published reporting. Terms such as “accused,” “named,” “sued,” or “listed” reflect the language of those public sources. Allegations are allegations unless proven in court.
