Tracey Thurman did everything a victim is told to do. She left her abusive husband. She reported threats. She obtained a restraining order. She called the police again and again — documenting a danger everyone could see coming.
On June 10, 1983, after months of ignored warnings, Tracey was brutally attacked outside her home while help arrived too late to stop the violence. What followed wasn’t just a criminal case, but a constitutional battle that forced America to confront how domestic violence victims were treated by the justice system.
Her lawsuit against the Torrington Police Department changed policing nationwide, transforming domestic violence from a “private matter” into a public responsibility.
This case isn’t only about violence — it’s about warning signs, institutional failure, and the moment one survivor reshaped the law for millions who came after her.