Community of Resource & Resolution (CORR)
CORR is a nonprofit organization whose mission it is to provide recovery resources to sexual assault survivors, families, communities, and those who caused the harm. CORR was founded by Caprice Haverty, PhD, in December 2008, after she had spent twenty years providing treatment and consultation to these four groups and recognizing the lack of ongoing community support.
CORR is one of few nonprofit, cost-free support programs for those who have caused or experienced sexual harm. We offer several cost-free, monthly support groups where open dialogue, ongoing accountability, and continued involvement with paraprofessionals, professionals, peers, family members, friends, victims, and the community are provided. Attendees come together on zoom or in-person to share a meal, lend encouragement, problem solve, raise funds, and help one another with challenges such as employment, housing, relationships, and everyday accountability and responsibilities.
CORR’s main purpose is to help those who have caused sexual harm as they seek to support each other, their victims, their victim’s families, and to repair the damage of their harm. We help them to integrate with their families and victims through their commitment to do no harm, to offer amends where possible, and to support prevention by contributing to the eradication of sexual abuse. CORR provides treatment referrals and financial assistance to aid healing where necessary. We also support those who have not caused sexual harm but who feel they are at risk for doing so.
2025
Building Momentum and Expanding Impact

2025 was a year of continued momentum for CORR, marked by strengthened programs, growing community engagement, and increased professional visibility. Through consistent service delivery and outreach, CORR remained committed to providing hope, accountability, and healing to those impacted by sexual harm.
Community outreach and organizational development were key priorities. Public events and partnerships expanded awareness of CORR’s mission, while an all-day Board of Directors retreat in November strengthened collaboration and refined a professional presentation designed for civic and service organizations.
A major highlight of the year was our founder, Dr. Caprice Haverty, being selected to present a professional paper on CORR at the Association for the Treatment and Prevention of Sexual Abuse (ATSA) Conference in San Antonio, Texas. The presentation introduced CORR to an international professional audience and underscored the strength of CORR’s model.
As we close 2025, CORR looks ahead with confidence, ready to build on this momentum and expand our impact.
President’s Welcome
CORR Has Moved Me Personally

I spent my life believing: Men who commit sexual assault are bad people who will never change. The discovery that my wife had been sexually abused by her father, hardened this belief.
In 2011, my wife was hired as an administrative assistant by Caprice Haverty, PhD, and Anna Weisberg, PhD, co-Executive Directors at A Step Forward, Inc. located in Northern California. A Step Forward’s mission is to support the prevention and eradication of sexual assault through the treatment of individuals impacted by sexual assault, a mission it has carried for more than thirty years. In 2008, A Step Forward created CORR (Community of Resource & Resolution), the only non-profit program in existence offering free support groups for people with histories of sexual assault.
Alongside her time at A Step Forward, I watched my wife attend to the hard work of confronting her own history of abuse. In addition to the healing she discovered, she was able to access compassion for the people served at A Step Forward.
In 2016, I decided to attend a CORR community meeting with her. I wanted to meet the people she was encountering. Within a few meetings, my judgment began to shift. My pre-conceived notions were challenged. I could see that the people who had caused harm were remorseful and responsible. Moreover, I could see that their accountability was strengthened and supported by CORR.
I have not missed a community meeting since. I am so relieved and grateful to feel the humanity in people with histories of committing sexual assault. It is my experience that they continue to deepen the work started in treatment, changing themselves and supporting similar people. They are committed to preventing further sexual assault.
I am proud to be the board president of CORR, supporting people to do the right thing by their victims, their victim’s families, and the needs of the wider community I am honored to support.
Again, welcome to our website and please feel free to join us at a suitable CORR meeting.
Bob Jones – President, CORR Board of Directors

