Biography
Lindsey M. Song, Esq. (she/her) is the current Associate Program Director of the Family Law Project, Queens Family Justice Center (QFJC) at Sanctuary for Families. As Associate Program Director, Lindsey supervises the Sanctuary Family Law team at the QFJC in providing consultations, screenings, and representation to intimate partner violence survivors in Queens. Prior to joining Sanctuary in 2015, Lindsey received a Juris Doctor degree from Georgetown University Law Center in 2014, which she attended on a Truman Scholarship.
Since 2016, Lindsey has lead the New York Cyber Abuse Task Force (NYCATF) as Co-Chair. The NYCATF is a collaboration of agencies, attorneys, and advocates working to end technology-facilitated intimate partner abuse in all its forms, which includes but is not limited to the non-consensual dissemination, or threat of dissemination, of sexual images, including deep fake images (cyber sexual abuse/nonconsensual pornography), hacking, stalking, spoofing, harassment, identity theft, impersonation, and more.
In her time as Co-Chair of the Task Force, Lindsey has become a nationally recognized expert in the area of technology-facilitated abuse and gender-based violence, presenting at the White House on the issue in 2023 and 2024, and featured in the Atlantic, New York Times, CBS, BuzzFeed News, The New York Post, and other publications for her knowledge and expertise.
Lindsey has presented at over 150 trainings and trained over 4,500 individuals on the issues of technology-facilitated abuse, ethics, evidence, and other related topics to educational, governmental, and nonprofit agencies as well as corporations including the New York City Family Justice Centers, the NYS Unified Court System Family Violence Task Force, NYS Integrated Domestic Violence Courts, several District Attorney’s Offices, Bar Associations, the Practicing Law Institute; state, local, and national nonprofits; medical schools; dozens of law firms and local area law schools, and others. Lindsey has also organized dozens of conferences and trainings addressing the intersection of tech abuse and intimate partner violence, including presentations with international representation and advocates from criminal, civil, and related areas of law and policy.