Legal Aid & Pro Bono Services for Domestic Violence in Orange County

An all-in-one guide to free and low-cost legal support for survivors of domestic violence in Orange County, CA: restraining orders, family law help, immigration relief, local clinics, shelter & hotline contacts.

Legal Aid & Pro Bono Services for Domestic Violence in Orange County

Why this guide matters

If you're experiencing domestic violence in Orange County, you deserve justice, safety, and legal support. While navigating family court or protective order systems can be overwhelming, you do not have to do it alone. This article is your one-stop resource: how restraining orders work in California, which local organizations provide free or low-cost help, tips for intake, and critical contacts (hotlines, self-help centers, shelters).


1. Understanding Domestic Violence Restraining Orders in California (for OC)

  • What is a Domestic Violence Restraining Order (DVRO)?
    Under California law, a DVRO is a court order that can require an abuser to stay away, stop harassing or abusing you, move out, surrender firearms, and include custody/support provisions. (Self-Help Guide to the California Courts)

  • Qualifying relationships
    You can get a DVRO against someone with whom you have a close personal or familial relationship: spouse, ex-spouse, cohabitant, dating partner, family member, etc. (Self-Help Guide to the California Courts)

  • How to file in Orange County

    • Use the Self-Help Services branch of the Orange County Superior Court. The OC Self-Help centers assist with family law, forms, reviewing legal documents, and procedural guidance. (Orange County Superior Court)

    • OC’s Self-Help centers are located at Central Justice Center (Santa Ana), Lamoreaux Justice Center (Orange), Costa Mesa Justice Complex, and West Justice Center in Westminster—check hours. (Orange County Superior Court)

    • The OC Domestic Violence Assistance Program (DVAP) helps with completing protective order forms at the Lamoreaux Justice Center, 7th Floor, Room 705. (Human Options)

  • Ex parte (emergency) orders vs regular orders
    Courts may issue emergency temporary restraining orders (without the abuser present), then schedule a full hearing to decide a longer order. (Self-Help Guide to the California Courts)

  • What orders can include
    Stay-away, no contact, move-out, custody/visitation, child and spousal support, other protections. (Community Legal Aid SoCal)


2. Major Legal Aid & Pro Bono Organizations in Orange County

Below are organizations that provide legal help, representation, or clinics focusing on domestic violence, family law, and related civil matters in OC.

Organization

Services Offered

Contact / Notes

Community Legal Aid SoCal (CLA SoCal)

Free civil legal representation, including domestic violence, family law, housing, immigration. (Community Legal Aid SoCal)

Toll-free: 800-834-5001; Local: 714-571-5200 (Community Legal Aid SoCal)

Public Law Center (Orange County)

Pro bono legal services to low-income OC residents in areas including DV, family law, immigration, housing. (Public Law Center)

They partner with the court’s Domestic Violence Assistance Program and pro bono networks. (Pro Bono Institute)

DVAP (Domestic Violence Assistance Program, OC Superior Court)

Clinic that helps people fill out protective order forms (DV / elder abuse) at the court itself. (Human Options)

Located at Lamoreaux Justice Center (7th Floor-Room 705), hours Mon–Fri 8:00–4:00 (with lunch break). (Human Options)

Farzad & Ochoa Family Law Attorneys, LLP (OC pro bono DV help)

Offers pro bono assistance to victims of serious abuse needing a restraining order in OC, particularly for the emergency temporary order hearing and subsequent hearing. (Farzad & Ochoa Family Law Attorneys, LLP)

Limited to OC matters, limited scope (restraining orders) for those of very limited means. (Farzad & Ochoa Family Law Attorneys, LLP)

Laura’s House

Offers legal advocacy, court accompaniment, education, and support services for survivors in OC. (Laura's House)

Hotline: 866-498-1511 (Laura's House)

Asian Americans Advancing Justice – SoCal

For low-income and English-limited survivors in OC, provides legal assistance in family law, restraining orders, custody, immigration. (Advancing Justice SoCal)

Supports multiple Asian languages; can take domestic violence and immigration cases. (Advancing Justice SoCal)

OC Bar Association – Lawyer Referral & Information Service (LRIS)

Refers callers to attorneys, often with free or low-cost consultations. (Human Options)

Use for finding private attorneys if legal aid cannot take your case. (Human Options)

Law School Legal Clinics (OC)

University law student clinics that provide pro bono legal help, including family/violence clinics. (Orange County Public Law Library)

E.g. Chapman University law clinic participates in domestic violence legal work. (Human Options)


3. Eligibility Criteria & Intake Preparation

Eligibility conditions you’ll often see:

What to have ready (if safe):

  • Safe contact information (phone or email that abuser does not monitor)

  • Abuser’s name, address, relation to you

  • Evidence: texts, call logs, photos, medical records, police reports

  • Any existing court orders

  • Income proof or public benefit documents

Possible outcomes after intake:

  • Advice / document filing help

  • Full representation for restraining order proceedings

  • Referral to another agency or clinic

  • Clinic assistance via court-based pro bono or DVAP clinics


4. Step-by-Step Guide: Getting Protection & Legal Relief

  1. Safety first. If you’re in immediate danger, call 911.

  2. Contact a legal aid provider on the list above (CLA SoCal, Public Law Center, DVAP court clinic, Farzad & Ochoa) to request help with restraining orders or family law.

  3. Visit the DVAP clinic at OC Superior Court (Lamoreaux) to fill protective order forms with staff assistance.

  4. File the petition in the proper court — domestic violence restraining order filing at OC courts.

  5. Attend your hearing(s). A temporary order may be granted ex parte first, then a contested hearing.

  6. Follow up/enforce. Report violations to law enforcement; ask your attorney or court to modify or enforce orders as needed.

  7. Pursue parallel relief — custody, support, divorce, immigration (if applicable) — with your legal aid or pro bono lawyer.


5. Self-Help & Court Resources

  • Orange County Self-Help Services (OC Courts)
    Provides free help to unrepresented persons with family law, restraining orders, forms, procedural instructions, referrals. (Orange County Superior Court)
    Self-Help centers: Santa Ana (Central Justice Center), Lamoreaux (Orange), Costa Mesa, Westminster. (Orange County Superior Court)

  • OC Superior Court – Online Self-Help / Forms
    Many protective order and family law forms are available via OC Courts self-help portal. (Orange County Superior Court)

  • Community Legal Aid SoCal – DV Program
    Offers representation, workshops, clinics, and holistic support to domestic violence survivors. (Community Legal Aid SoCal)

  • Law School Clinics (OC)
    Law schools in OC run clinics (e.g. Chapman) for legal assistance in family and violence matters. (Orange County Public Law Library)


6. Hotlines, Shelters & Support Services

  • OC Sheriff’s Domestic Violence Hotline / Victim Referral Services — 24-hour domestic violence hotline: (714) 992-1931 (OC Sheriff's Department)

  • Domestic Abuse Resources (OC Social Services Agency)
    Shelters and services: Human Options, Interval House, Laura’s House, Women’s Transitional Living Center. (County of Orange Social Services Agency)
    Hotlines: Human Options 877-854-3594; Laura’s House 949-498-1511; others listed. (County of Orange Social Services Agency)

  • Laura’s House
    Provides legal advocacy, court accompaniment, therapy, shelter, and support. (Laura's House)

  • OC Family Justice Center (OCFJC)
    A multi-agency “one-stop” center for victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, child abuse offering legal, counseling, and supportive services. (Human Options)

  • OC Bar Association LRIS
    For legal referrals to attorneys, including potentially low-cost or pro bono ones. (Human Options)


7. Tips to Work Effectively with Legal Aid / Pro Bono Programs & Stay Safe

  • Express urgency (recent violence, children, ongoing threats).

  • Call multiple organizations and ask for referrals if one is full.

  • Ask about clinics (DVAP, law school pro bono) for next-available help.

  • Be clear about language needs—some orgs serve limited-English communities (e.g. Asian Americans Advancing Justice in OC) (Advancing Justice SoCal)

  • Use safer communication methods (alternate phone, blocking abuser, trusted contacts).

  • Keep documentation from the start — messages, photos, dates, incident logs.

  • Pair legal steps with advocacy and case management from shelters or justice centers (e.g. Laura’s House, OCFJC).


8. Quick Directory (Save & Share)


Disclaimer

This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The availability, eligibility, and procedures for legal services change over time. Always verify directly with the organizations and courts before taking action.

Trusted Legal Experts In Your City