Civil Rights Intake Forms: What to Capture at the First Client Meeting
Civil rights cases span an enormous range of legal theories — from workplace discrimination under Title VII to police brutality claims under Section 1983 to fair housing violations under the FHA. What they share is complexity. Every civil rights intake involves multiple potential statutes, each with its own exhaustion requirements, deadlines, immunities, and damages frameworks. Miss a single element during the first meeting, and you may not discover it until a motion to dismiss forces you to confront what your file is missing.
A structured intake form does not replace the attorney's instinct for which claims are viable. It makes sure that instinct is working with a complete factual record rather than whatever the client happened to mention before the hour ran out.
Claim Type Identification: Start With the Statute
The first task at intake is determining which legal framework applies. Civil rights practice is statute-driven, and the statute dictates everything downstream — exhaustion requirements, defendants, available remedies, and immunities. Your intake form should prompt the attorney to classify the claim into at least one of the following categories:
- Employment discrimination — Title VII (race, color, religion, sex, national origin), ADA (disability), ADEA (age 40+), Section 1981 (race, via contract theory), Pregnancy Discrimination Act, and state equivalents.
- Police misconduct — 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 (excessive force, false arrest, unlawful search, denial of medical care, First Amendment retaliation).
- Housing discrimination — Fair Housing Act (race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status, disability), plus state and local protected classes.
- Education — Title IX (sex-based discrimination and sexual harassment), Section 504 and ADA (disability), Title VI (race and national origin in federally funded programs).
- Public accommodations — Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, ADA Title III, and state public accommodation statutes.
- Voting rights — Voting Rights Act Sections 2 and 5, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments.
Many clients present facts that implicate more than one framework. A client fired from a government job after reporting racial discrimination may have claims under Title VII, Section 1981, Section 1983, and a state whistleblower statute simultaneously. Your intake form should allow multiple claim types to be flagged, not force a single selection.
Protected Class: Document It Precisely
Every civil rights claim requires the client to be a member of a protected class — or to have been perceived as one, or associated with one. Your intake needs to capture the specific characteristic at issue: race, color, national origin, sex (including gender identity and sexual orientation post-Bostock), religion, age, disability, familial status, veteran status, or pregnancy.
Do not assume the protected class is obvious from the client's narrative. A client describing workplace harassment may initially frame it as personal conflict when the actual basis is national origin. Ask directly, and document both the client's actual protected characteristic and the basis they believe motivated the discriminatory conduct. The two are not always the same — perceived-disability claims under the ADA do not require an actual disability, and associational discrimination claims protect people who themselves may not be in a protected class.
Administrative Exhaustion: The Deadlines That Kill Cases
For employment discrimination claims under Title VII, the ADA, and the ADEA, administrative exhaustion is mandatory before filing a federal lawsuit. Your intake form must capture this information with precision, because the deadlines are unforgiving and often jurisdictional.
Key fields to include:
- Has the client filed a charge with the EEOC or a state/local fair employment practices agency?
- If yes: the charge number, filing date, and which agency.
- Has the client received a right-to-sue letter? If yes: the date it was received (not the date on the letter). The 90-day window to file suit runs from receipt.
- If no charge has been filed: the date of the last discriminatory act, and whether the client is in a 180-day or 300-day deferral jurisdiction.
- Whether the state agency has a worksharing agreement with the EEOC for dual-filing purposes.
The 180/300-day distinction matters enormously. In states with a fair employment practices agency that has a worksharing agreement with the EEOC, the filing deadline extends to 300 days. In non-deferral states, it is 180 days. Getting this wrong means the charge is time-barred and the federal claim dies with it.
Note that Section 1981 and Section 1983 claims do not require administrative exhaustion. Neither do FHA claims, though a HUD complaint or state agency filing may be tactically useful. Your form should reflect these distinctions — exhaustion fields should be conditional on claim type, not applied uniformly.
If your client's claims overlap with employment law matters, the EEOC charge status is equally critical there — the same 90-day right-to-sue deadline governs both practice areas.
Discriminatory Conduct: Build the Factual Record
The heart of any civil rights intake is what actually happened. Your form needs to capture three categories of factual evidence, each of which maps to a distinct element of proof.
Adverse Action
What did the defendant do? In employment cases, this means termination, demotion, failure to hire, failure to promote, unequal pay, or a hostile work environment. In policing cases, it means the specific use of force, the arrest, the search, or the detention. In housing, it means the denial of a rental application, discriminatory terms, or steering. Pin down the exact action, the date, and who was responsible.
Comparator Evidence
Who was treated differently under similar circumstances? A white colleague who was not disciplined for the same behavior. A non-disabled tenant whose application was approved with the same credit profile. A male student whose Title IX complaint was handled differently. Comparator evidence is often the most persuasive proof of discriminatory intent, and it is the easiest to lose if not captured at intake. Get names, dates, and the factual basis for the comparison while the client's memory is fresh.
Pattern Evidence
Is the client's experience an isolated event, or part of a broader pattern? Ask whether the client knows of other people who experienced similar treatment. This is critical for Monell liability against municipalities, for class certification in employment cases, and for establishing a pattern-or-practice theory under the FHA. Even anecdotal knowledge from coworkers or neighbors should be documented.
Government Entity Defendants: Qualified Immunity and Monell
When the defendant is a government entity or official, your intake form needs fields that no standard civil complaint form covers. Section 1983 claims against individual officers are subject to qualified immunity — the defense that the right was not "clearly established" at the time of the violation. Your form should capture enough factual detail about the officer's conduct to assess whether existing precedent puts the right beyond debate.
For claims against the municipality itself, Monell v. Department of Social Services requires proof that the constitutional violation resulted from an official policy, custom, or practice — or from a failure to train or supervise. Your intake should ask:
- Is there a written policy that authorized or caused the conduct?
- Has this type of conduct happened before? How many times? Is there a documented pattern?
- Was the officer trained on the relevant use-of-force policy, search-and-seizure standards, or anti-discrimination protocols?
- Did a supervisor or policymaker direct, approve, or ratify the conduct?
Also capture whether a notice-of-claim or tort claim notice is required before suit. Many states and municipalities impose a 90-day or 180-day notice requirement for claims against government entities. Missing this deadline can bar the entire action regardless of the merits.
Damages Assessment: Economic, Non-Economic, and Punitive
Civil rights damages are complex because different statutes authorize different categories. Title VII caps compensatory and punitive damages based on employer size (from $50,000 for employers with 15–100 employees up to $300,000 for 500+). Section 1981 has no cap. Section 1983 has no cap. The ADEA does not allow compensatory damages for emotional distress at all but does allow liquidated damages for willful violations.
Your intake form should capture:
- Economic damages — back pay (from date of adverse action to present), front pay (projected future lost earnings), lost benefits, out-of-pocket expenses (job search costs, relocation, medical bills resulting from the violation).
- Non-economic damages — emotional distress, humiliation, loss of enjoyment of life, reputational harm. Ask whether the client sought mental health treatment — therapy records become critical evidence, and the client should understand that emotional distress claims may open medical records to discovery.
- Punitive damages — available under Title VII (with caps), Section 1981, Section 1983, and the FHA. Not available against government entities under Section 1983. Your form should note whether the defendant's conduct was sufficiently egregious — reckless or callous indifference to rights — to support a punitive damages claim.
Witness Identification
Civil rights cases often hinge on witness testimony, particularly in cases involving verbal harassment, discriminatory statements by supervisors, or excessive force where no body camera footage exists. At intake, capture every potential witness the client can identify:
- Name, relationship to the client, and contact information.
- What the witness saw or heard, and when.
- Whether the witness is friendly, hostile, or neutral.
- Whether the witness is still employed by the defendant (which affects their willingness to cooperate).
In police misconduct cases, bystander witnesses are particularly important. Ask whether anyone was recording on their phone. Ask whether other officers were present who might contradict the defendant officer's account. If the incident was in a commercial area, ask whether nearby businesses might have security camera footage.
Document Preservation: What to Secure Immediately
The document preservation section of your intake form should function as both a checklist and a litigation hold notice. Depending on the claim type, instruct the client to preserve:
- Emails, text messages, and internal communications related to the discriminatory conduct.
- HR records — complaints, investigation files, disciplinary records, personnel file.
- Body camera footage, dashcam video, and surveillance recordings (these are often destroyed on a 30–90-day cycle — preservation letters need to go out immediately).
- Personnel file and performance evaluations.
- Medical records documenting injuries from excessive force or emotional distress.
- Pay records, W-2s, and benefits documentation for economic damages calculations.
- The EEOC charge, right-to-sue letter, and any correspondence with the agency.
- Lease agreements, rental applications, and correspondence with landlords (housing claims).
- School records, disciplinary proceedings, and Title IX complaint documentation (education claims).
For police misconduct cases, time is especially critical. Send a preservation letter to the police department on the day of intake — or as close to it as possible. Body camera footage and dispatch recordings are routinely overwritten, and once they are gone, your ability to prove the claim drops dramatically. This is similar to the urgency around evidence preservation in personal injury cases, where surveillance footage and medical records are equally time-sensitive.
Prior Complaints and Grievances
Ask whether the client filed any prior internal complaints, grievances, union grievances, or government agency complaints — even ones unrelated to the current claim. Prior complaints serve two purposes: they establish that the client engaged in protected activity (supporting a retaliation theory), and they undercut any employer argument that it was unaware of the problem.
Also ask whether other employees, tenants, students, or community members have filed similar complaints. Pattern evidence strengthens individual claims and is essential for Monell liability and class-action theories.
Attorney's Fees: Fee-Shifting and Fee Structures
Civil rights practice depends heavily on fee-shifting statutes. Title VII, Section 1983, the ADA, the FHA, and most other civil rights statutes authorize an award of attorney's fees to the prevailing plaintiff. This changes the economic calculus of case evaluation — a case with modest damages may still be worth taking if the fee award will be substantial.
Your intake form should capture:
- The fee arrangement — contingency, hourly, or hybrid.
- Whether the client has already retained or consulted other attorneys (and whether any fee-splitting arrangement exists).
- The applicable fee-shifting statute and whether the defendant is the type of entity against which fees are typically collectible.
In Section 1983 cases against municipalities, fee awards under 42 U.S.C. Section 1988 are often the primary source of attorney compensation. Document your hourly rate and your time from the first meeting forward — the lodestar calculation starts at intake.
Putting It Together
Civil rights intake is demanding because every claim type carries its own exhaustion requirements, its own immunities, and its own damages framework. A client who walks in describing a single incident may have viable claims under three or four different statutes, each with different filing deadlines and procedural prerequisites. The intake form is the tool that ensures nothing falls through the gaps — not because it asks every possible question, but because it asks the right ones in the right order.
If your practice spans multiple areas of civil rights and employment law, the Legal Bundle covers 38 legal intake sets — each structured for the specific claims, deadlines, and procedural requirements of that practice area.
Civil rights intake forms — $19.99 complete set
Fillable PDF intake form and client questionnaire built for civil rights practice. Captures claim type across Title VII, Section 1983, FHA, and ADA; administrative exhaustion status and deadlines; discriminatory conduct documentation; damages assessment; witness identification; and government entity defendant analysis — ready to use from the first client meeting.
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