I would say that even as adults, not just children, there is no trauma-informed process here either, so it's not just about the legal side, but also about having someone that's coming from it with understanding that the person you're dealing with has gone through trauma. There's no capacity there for the investigator or the third parties that are involved to treat them. Unfortunately, you have to treat them with a very different scope than you would treat anybody else, because of the situation they're in.
From a recommendation standpoint, there needs to be full support from day one that isn't dependent, and full legal advice that isn't dependent—having someone like a victim services worker who can actually help you through the process and say “this is what the policy says, these are the stages you're going to go through and these are the next steps”. It's someone who is your advocate throughout the complaints process, so that it's not just “here's this wall of lawyers and risk managers that you're going to battle with directly”, who, at the end of the day, are protecting the rights of the entity, the respondents and the members of the organization.