“Silence is violence” hits hard because it’s true in a very specific way: silence is the environment abuse depends on—especially when the abuser is someone with authority, status, or access. Reporting isn’t just about punishment. It’s often about protection—for you, for other kids, and for the next person who might be targeted.
This article explains what reporting is, what information helps, and how this site is designed to support reporting in a safer, more private way.
1) What “reporting” can mean
Reporting isn’t one single door. Depending on your situation, it might look like:
- Reporting to Tennessee DCS (Child Abuse Hotline / online portal)
- Reporting to local law enforcement
- Documenting what happened so you can report when you’re ready
- Talking with a victim advocate / counselor / attorney to plan next steps
If a child may be in danger right now, that’s a different urgency level (see the safety section below).
Tennessee DCS explicitly offers both phone and online reporting, and states that online reports are monitored 24/7/365.
2) Why reporting matters: it can protect others, not just you
A common fear is: “What if I’m the only one? What if I get crushed and nothing changes?”
That fear makes sense. But one reason reporting matters is that many abusers do not stop after one victim—especially when the setting gives them repeated access.
One concrete example of this pattern comes from the John Jay College study of abuse allegations involving Catholic clergy (1950–2002). Among accused priests/deacons in that dataset:
- 55.7% had 1 allegation
- 26.9% had 2–3 allegations
- 13.9% had 4–9 allegations
- 3.5% had 10+ allegations
That means 44.3% had multiple allegations (100.0% − 55.7% = 44.3%). Even though that study is specific to one institution and time period, it illustrates a reality survivors and investigators see repeatedly: when someone has access + trust + secrecy, harm can repeat.
Reporting can:
- create an official record,
- trigger safeguarding actions,
- help authorities connect patterns across time,
- and make it easier for another survivor to be believed.
3) If you decide to report: what information helps most
You don’t need perfect memories to report. “I’m not sure” is allowed. Approximate details are still valuable.
Helpful details often include:
About the situation
- Your age (or age range) at the time
- Approximate timeframe (year range / season / grade)
- Setting (home, church, youth group, school, counseling, sports, etc.)
- Where it happened (city/county if known)
About the person
- Name (if you know it)
- Role (pastor, teacher, parent, coach, volunteer, etc.)
- Organization (church/school/program name)
About what happened
- A simple description of the behavior (no need to “prove” it in your words)
- Any grooming behaviors (special attention, secrecy, gifts, private meetings, isolation)
- Whether you suspect other possible victims
- Any witnesses or contemporaneous disclosures (“I told ___ back then”)
About current risk
- Whether the person currently has access to children
- Whether there is a child you believe may be at risk now
Tip: If you have physical evidence, save it safely. Don’t feel pressured to upload files to websites. (This site is designed to avoid file uploads for safety and legal reasons.)
4) How this site helps you report in a safer way
This site is designed to be a private bridge between silence and reporting—not a public accusation platform.
What we’re building for privacy
- Private submissions only (no public “wall” of accusations)
- No public naming of alleged abusers on this site
- Optional contact info (you choose whether we can follow up)
- A reference code option so you can return later without sharing your identity
- Restricted access on the back end (only a minimal number of trained admins)
How this supports reporting
- It helps you write down your account once, clearly, in one place.
- It helps you identify which reporting path fits your situation.
- It helps reduce isolation by sharing non-identifying “community signals” (patterns and counts) so survivors don’t feel alone—without putting you in the blast radius of a public allegation.
5) Anonymity: what we can do, and the honest limits
We can design for strong privacy, but it’s important to be straight with you:
- We can keep your story off the public internet.
- We can minimize the data we collect.
- But no website can guarantee absolute anonymity in every circumstance (for example, if legally compelled by a valid court order).
Also, because the topic involves child safety, if a report suggests a child is currently being harmed or at immediate risk, there may be reasons a report must be escalated to protect that child (see next section).
6) Safety first: when to contact authorities right away
If you believe a child is in immediate danger, call 911.
If you suspect child abuse or neglect in Tennessee, the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services provides these reporting routes:
- By phone: Child Abuse Hotline (including 1-877-237-0004)
- Online: TN’s online reporting system (CARAT), with guidance on when to call instead of using the portal
Tennessee also states that all persons are required to make a report when they suspect abuse, neglect, or exploitation of children.
If the concern involves online sexual exploitation, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) CyberTipline is a major reporting channel.
7) You’re allowed to do this in stages
Some people report immediately. Others need time. Either can be valid.
A “staged” approach might look like:
- Document what happened (privately)
- Talk to a safe person (advocate, therapist, trusted friend)
- Choose a reporting path
- Follow through with support
The goal is not to pressure you. The goal is to make action possible—safely.
If You or Someone You Know is Being Abused
If you experienced abuse—especially by someone in authority—you can share your story privately here. You control what you share, whether we can contact you, and when you’re ready to take the next step. Reporting can be part of healing and part of protection: not just for you, but for others who may still be at risk.

