Seth Goldstein, is an attorney representing parents and children in family violence since 1995. His practice uses the successful multi-disciplinary prosecution model, bringing to a case the special expertise of various professionals involved.
Since 1994, he has been the Executive Director of the Child Abuse Forensic Institute, a resource and referral organization he created using the same approach handling child abuse based in Monterey, California. When working for the district attorney in Napa County, his program achieved a 96.5% conviction rate, at charging, charging 75% of the cases brought to the program. He currently sits as an advisory board member for the Family Violence Appeals Project, Oakland, California, that has had an amassed an unprecedented 85% success rate in its appeals.
Mr. Goldstein has worked as a consultant for the State of California on the subject of response to domestic violence; the National Counsel of Juvenile and Family Court Judges on family violence, a law enforcement investigator specializing in the investigations of Sexual Assault, Child Physical and Sexual Abuse, and Family Violence for the Berkeley Police Department, the Santa Clara and Napa County District Attorney’s Offices. He has testified as an expert witness in Criminal, Civil, Juvenile Dependency, and Family Law courts in California and other states on these subjects. He has written and been published on the topics of family violence and child abuse in various national journals and publications. His book on investigating child sexual abuse by Seth Goldstein is in its second edition.
View Seth Goldstein's Expert Witness Profile.
Seth L. Goldstein
discusses the new and different developments in the manifestation of problems involved in investigation and assessment of sexual cases and offers advice on dealing with these issues. Although many of the difficulties involved in investigation and assessment of sexual abuse allegations have remained unchanged since the first edition of this book appeared in 1987, the manner in which investigations are conducted must adapt to these new and different developments.