Djuna Perkins is an associate with Brody, Hardoon, Perkins and Kesten, LLP. She has tried dozens of cases in the Superior and District Courts of Massachusetts. She has also appeared before the Massachusetts Appeals Court and the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination.
Practice Areas
Ms. Perkins’ practice focuses on civil recovery for victims of crime, sexual harassment, and discrimination. She has helped countless victims of crime and sexual abuse and harassment obtain substantial settlements to compensate them for their injuries, including:
A high school student sexually abused by his therapist and teacher;
A woman raped at knifepoint at an apartment complex with insufficient security;
A woman whose supervisor forced her to have sex with him for fear of losing her job;
A young man who was sexually abused by his music teacher;
In 2005, Ms. Perkins wrote an amicus brief for Jane Doe, Inc. and other victim advocacy groups in Commonwealth v. King, 445 Mass. 217 (2005), a case in which the Supreme Judicial Court preserved and expanded upon the rule allowing hearsay testimony to corroborate a sexual assault victim’s first report of the assault.
Prior Experience
Ms. Perkins joined BHPK following ten years working as a prosecutor in the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office and the Office of the Attorney General. Most recently, Ms. Perkins served as Chief of the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office Domestic Violence Unit, which focused on the prosecution of felony domestic violence and sexual assault cases. As an assistant district attorney, Ms. Perkins prosecuted hundreds of offenders. Known for her attention to detail and sensitivity to victims, Ms. Perkins’ tenacious prosecutions persuaded dozens of serial batterers to plead guilty, sparing their victims from testifying in court. Ms. Perkins also established and implemented protocols for the prosecution of domestic violence cases in the Dorchester Domestic Violence Court.
Before becoming an Assistant District Attorney, Ms. Perkins worked as an Assistant Attorney General in the Narcotics and Special Investigations Division, the Appellate Division and the Victim Compensation Division.
Teaching and Publications
Ms. Perkins has taught Criminal Law to graduate students at Northeastern University’s College of Criminal Justice. She has also lectured extensively on domestic violence, trial advocacy and the criminal justice system for the following organizations:
Harvard Law School
Boston University School of Law
Northeastern University School of Law
Suffolk University Law School
Massachusetts District Attorneys Association
National Institute for Trial Advocacy
Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education Seminar, “Trying Domestic Violence Cases in Massachusetts: A Practical Overview of the Prosecution and Defense of Domestic Violence Cases”
Boston University School of Public Health
Boston Police Academy
Boston Police Department
New England Campus Police Conference
Attorney General’s Conference, Building Bridges of Support for Moms Who Are Victims of Violence, domestic violence training for law enforcement
Revere Citizen Police Academy
Boston Center for Adult Education Retired Persons Association
Association of Residential Security Managers
New England Area Housing Managers Association
Boston Community Health Center
Saheli
Ms. Perkins is the author of the following publications:
“Rethinking the Fresh Complaint Rule in Sexual Assault Cases: A Response to Commonwealth v. Montanez, 89 Mass. L. Rev. 2 (2004)
“When Does a Police Officer’s Failure to Act Result in Liability?” Law Enforcement Newsletter, Quinlan Publishing Company, Boston, Massachusetts (1997)
“Must Police Inform a Custodial Suspect of the Presence of an Attorney He Did Not Request?” Law Enforcement Newsletter, Quinlan Publishing Company, Boston, Massachusetts (1996)
“The Nose Knows: Using Trained Dogs to Detect Drugs,” Law Enforcement Newsletter Special Report, Quinlan Publishing Company, Boston, Massachusetts (1995)
Awards and Honors
In 1999, Ms. Perkins was selected as a trainer for Project Harmony’s International Domestic Violence Community Partnership Program, a U.S. State Department funded program to provide grassroots support and training about domestic violence in Russia and the Ukraine.
Education
Ms. Perkins received her bachelor’s degree from Smith College, and earned her law degree from Boston University School of Law in 1992.
Professional and Community Affiliations
Ms. Perkins is admitted to the bar in Massachusetts, the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts and the First Circuit Court of Appeals. She belongs to the Massachusetts Bar Association and the Women’s Bar Association. She serves as a hearing officer for the Board of Bar Overseers; as a member of the Board of Directors of the Women’s Bar Foundation; as a member of the Justice and Accountability Committee of the Governor’s Commission on Sexual and Domestic Violence; and as a member of the Joyce Kilmer School Site Council in West Roxbury.
One Exeter Plaza Boston, Massachusetts 02116
Phone: 617 880 7100 Fax: 617 880 7171