Jerome N. Frank Legal Services – Yale
Legal Aid · Connecticut · Free
Yale Law School clinic providing free representation to low-income New Haven-area clients in immigration, housing, prisoners' rights, and family matters. Supervised law students handle cases under faculty oversight. Call intake for screening; caseload depends on semester. Bring photo ID, existing court orders, pay stubs, and any agency paperwork. Statewide impact with New Haven walk-in appointments by schedule.
About Legal Aid for Fathers
Legal aid in the United States is delivered through a network of nonprofit organizations, law school clinics, pro bono attorney programs, and court-based self-help centers. Most legal aid organizations serve people with incomes at or below 125–200% of the Federal Poverty Level, though some programs have higher thresholds for certain case types. Legal Services Corporation (LSC)-funded programs exist in every state and handle family law, housing, public benefits, and consumer cases. Law schools often run clinics where supervised students provide free representation. Bar associations coordinate volunteer attorneys through Modest Means and pro bono panels. For fathers specifically, the most common legal aid needs are custody, child support modifications, paternity establishment, and protective order responses — all areas most legal aid programs handle.
Legal Aid in Connecticut
Connecticut's Superior Court handles family matters through regional Judicial Districts and Family Support Magistrate Division locations. The Office of Child Support Services runs enforcement under DSS. Major cities include Hartford, New Haven, Stamford, Bridgeport, and Waterbury. Connecticut Legal Services and Statewide Legal Services of Connecticut provide civil legal aid, and every courthouse has a court service center offering free forms assistance.