On January 29, 2026, the New York City Council voted 48–0 to override the mayor's veto and enact Local Law Intro 1297-A — reopening the lookback window under the Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law (GMVA) for 18 months. The window runs through July 29, 2027. This is the most significant opportunity for survivors of gender-motivated violence in New York since the original 2022 window. This guide explains what it means, who qualifies, and what you need to know before the deadline closes.
What Is the GMVA?
The Victims of Gender-Motivated Violence Protection Law, codified at NYC Administrative Code §§ 10-1101 through 10-1107, is a New York City civil rights law that creates a private right of action for survivors of gender-motivated violence. It allows victims to sue their attackers — and the institutions that enabled or concealed the attack — directly in civil court for money damages.
The GMVA was enacted in response to the U.S. Supreme Court's 2000 decision in United States v. Morrison, 529 U.S. 598, which struck down the federal civil remedy provision of the Violence Against Women Act. NYC created its own local civil remedy so that survivors would retain a path to justice in court regardless of whether a federal avenue existed.
⚖️ Key Case: Breest v. Haggis (1st Dep't)
The Appellate Division, First Department held in Breest v. Haggis that sexual assault and rape are inherently motivated by gender-based animus — meaning survivors do not need to separately prove that the act was motivated by gender. The nature of the act itself satisfies the gender-motivation element. This ruling dramatically expanded GMVA claims by eliminating one of the most contested elements.
The History That Led to the 2026 Window
The 2022 Amendments: First Window + Extended SOL
In 2022, the NYC Council extended the GMVA statute of limitations from 7 to 9 years and created a two-year lookback window (March 1, 2023 – March 1, 2025) to allow survivors to revive previously time-barred claims. Hundreds of lawsuits were filed under the window.
The Bronx Ruling That Changed Everything
In 2024, a Bronx Supreme Court judge ruled that the 2022 amendments could not be applied retroactively to institutional defendants for incidents that predated the law. This ruling resulted in the dismissal of over 450 cases — devastating to survivors who had come forward under the 2022 window. The ruling was widely criticized as conflicting with the legislative intent of the amendments.
Intro 1297-A: The Legislative Response
The NYC Council passed Intro 1297-A as a direct, explicit response to the Bronx ruling. The law creates a new, standalone 18-month lookback window beginning January 29, 2026 — structured to address the retroactivity concerns raised by the court. The Council made clear in the legislative record that this window is intended to revive all claims, including those previously dismissed during the 2023–2025 window. Mayor Adams vetoed the bill; the Council overrode the veto 48–0.
What the 2026 Window Covers
Time Period
The window runs from January 29, 2026 to July 29, 2027. During this period, any otherwise time-barred claim under the GMVA may be filed — regardless of when the violence occurred.
How Old Can the Incident Be?
There is no floor. The window covers acts that occurred at any point before January 29, 2026. Incidents from the 1970s, 1980s, or 1990s — decades ago — are within scope if they meet the other requirements.
Previously Dismissed Claims
If your claim was filed under the 2023–2025 window and was dismissed due to the Bronx ruling or for any statute of limitations reason, it may be revived under the 2026 window. The legislative record of Intro 1297-A specifically addresses this scenario. You should consult with an attorney immediately if this applies to you — do not assume a prior dismissal is final.
✅ Standard SOL After the Window Closes
After July 29, 2027, the window closes permanently. However, the standard GMVA statute of limitations — 9 years from the date of the act — remains in place for incidents that are not time-barred. If the violence occurred within the last 9 years, you may still have a standard (non-window) claim regardless of the window deadline.
What Acts Does the GMVA Cover?
The GMVA covers crimes of violence committed "because of gender or on the basis of gender, and due, at least in part, to an animus based on the victim's gender." Following Breest v. Haggis, sexual assault and rape are presumptively covered without additional proof of gender animus. The law covers:
- Sexual assault and rape
- Forcible touching and groping
- Domestic violence with gender-based motivation
- Stalking and harassment with gender-based animus
- Any crime of violence against a person because of their gender
Physical injury is not required. A 2024 federal court decision confirmed that GMVA claims may proceed without proof of physical harm — psychological injury and trauma are sufficient.
Criminal conviction is not required. The perpetrator does not need to have been arrested, charged, or convicted. The civil standard of proof (preponderance of the evidence) is entirely separate from the criminal standard.
Who Can Be Sued
NYC Admin. Code § 10-1104 imposes liability on any "person" who commits, directs, enables, participates in, or conspires in gender-motivated violence. This expressly includes:
- Individual perpetrators
- Employers — where the violence occurred in an employment context and the employer knew or should have known
- Institutions — schools, churches, hospitals, youth organizations, and any entity that supervised or employed the perpetrator
- Property owners — where the violence occurred on premises that were not maintained safely
Institutional defendants are critical because they typically have deeper pockets, insurance coverage, and bear responsibility for failing to prevent or conceal the perpetrator's conduct.
What Damages Are Available
A successful GMVA claim can recover:
- Compensatory damages: Medical and mental health treatment costs (past and future), lost income and earning capacity, and other economic losses caused by the violence
- Pain and suffering / emotional distress: Damages for the trauma, PTSD, anxiety, depression, and the impact of the violence on your life, relationships, and well-being — physical injury is not required
- Punitive damages: In cases of especially egregious conduct or institutional concealment, the jury may award additional damages designed to punish the defendant
- Attorney's fees: GMVA claims may entitle the prevailing plaintiff to attorney's fees from the defendant
⚠️ The Window Closes July 29, 2027 — No Extensions Are Guaranteed
After the first GMVA window closed in 2023–2025, hundreds of cases were dismissed before the 2026 window reopened. There is no guarantee of another window after July 2027. If you have a potential GMVA claim, consult an attorney now — before evidence fades, witnesses become unavailable, and the deadline passes permanently.
The Window Is Open. Don't Wait.
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Learn More and Get Help →Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to live in New York City to file a GMVA claim?
No. The GMVA applies to acts of gender-motivated violence that occurred in New York City — not where you live now. If the violence took place in any of the five boroughs, you qualify regardless of your current residence or immigration status.
What if I don't remember the exact date of the incident?
You do not need to know the exact date. In many cases, particularly those involving historical abuse, the approximate time period and surrounding circumstances are sufficient. Courts have long recognized that survivors of trauma may not recall precise dates. An attorney can work with you to establish the relevant facts within the window's requirements.
What if I've never spoken to anyone about what happened?
Many successful GMVA claims have been brought by survivors who never previously disclosed the violence. Your testimony — your account of what happened — is evidence. Physical evidence, contemporaneous records, communications, and corroborating witnesses can strengthen the case, but the absence of prior disclosure is not a bar to bringing a claim.
My claim was already dismissed. Can the 2026 window revive it?
Possibly — and potentially yes, depending on why it was dismissed and when. If it was dismissed during the 2023–2025 window due to retroactivity concerns (the Bronx ruling) or statute of limitations grounds, the 2026 window was specifically designed to address that. You should contact an attorney as soon as possible to assess whether refiling is viable.
How is a civil GMVA case different from a criminal complaint?
A civil case is brought by you — the survivor — in civil court, seeking money damages from the perpetrator and any responsible institutions. A criminal case is brought by the state (the prosecutor's office) seeking to punish the defendant with imprisonment. The two are completely independent. You can bring a civil GMVA claim even if no criminal charges were ever filed, even if charges were filed and the defendant was acquitted, and even if the criminal statute of limitations has long expired. The outcomes are also independent — a criminal acquittal does not prevent a civil win, and vice versa.