The San Diego Family Justice Center in downtown San Diego opened in 2002 as the nation's first comprehensive one-stop center for survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, elder abuse, and sex trafficking, co-locating more than 25 agencies and over 200 service providers at 1122 Broadway. The center obtains Domestic Violence Restraining Orders and Gun Violence Restraining Orders to remove firearms from dangerous situations, a legal intervention supported by the same victim-advocacy infrastructure that Alliance for HOPE International helped build when the two organizations co-founded the Family Justice Center model. Forensic nurses trained in evidence collection conduct medical examinations for survivors pursuing criminal prosecution, while a mock courtroom on-site prepares clients for testimony and remote court-appearance rooms allow participation in hearings from the center's secured offices. The model's success prompted the U.S. Department of Justice to allocate more than $20 million in grants to replicate the concept at 15 additional sites across the country during the program's first year. Immigration attorneys, family-court advocates, and pro bono legal teams from organizations including Casa Cornelia Law Center provide custody, support, divorce, paternity, and confidential-address assistance under the same roof. The center's most complex intervention is its coordinated safety-planning process, which assembles law enforcement, prosecutors, counselors, medical staff, and chaplains into a single personalized care plan for each client — a multi-agency triage serving more than 1,000 individuals per month.