She “began her career as a prosecutor in Middlesex County, handling child abuse and sex crime cases, and then moved into private practice, focusing on violence against women and children.” Murphy is an adjunct professor of sexual violence law at New England Law Boston|New England Law|Boston. Murphy was a Visiting Scholar at Harvard Law School from 2002–2003. Earlier, she taught “Reproductive Rights and Technologies” at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is the founder and director of the Victim Advocacy & Research Group. It is a volunteer legal advocacy organization that, since 1992, has provided free legal services to victims in the criminal justice system. She successfully sued both Princeton University and Harvard Law School for violating Title IX regulations “by mishandling sexual assault complaints.” Of the case against Harvard Law School, she writes
“The case began when Harvard Law School hired me as a consultant in early 2010, in connection with a Title IX matter. When I pointed out to Harvard officials that their policies were noncompliant, and they refused to fix them, I filed a complaint with the Office for Civil Rights in which I identified numerous substantive and procedural violations of Title IX that were then in place in the law school’s policy.”
With co-counsel John Williams, she sued Yale University on behalf Susan Burhans. This was another Title IX case. When serial child rapist Wayne Chapman was to be released from jail, she represented his victims to keep him in jail. She filed an appeal with the Supreme Judicial Court asking for an emergency injunction preventing his release. According to author Stuart Taylor, Jr., she is also a supporter of "guilty-until-proven-innocent" in the American Judicial system. She was quoted as saying, "I'm really tired of people suggesting that you're somehow un-American if you don't respect the presumption of innocence, because you know what that sounds like to a victim? Presumption: You're a liar."
Publications
And Justice For Some: An Exposé of the Lawyers and Judges who Let Dangerous Criminals Go Free.
How Title IX Won its Rightful Seat at the Civil Rights Table of Justice, and Why the Legs Are Still so Wobbly,
Effective Gender Activism: An Exercise in Marginalization, in Martin, J.L., Racial Battle Fatigue: Insights from the Front Lines of Social Justice Advocacy,.
Traumatized Children who Participate in Legal Proceedings are Entitled to Testimonial and Participatory Accommodations Under the Americans With Disabilities Act, 19 Roger Williams Law Review 361
Book Review: Addressing Rape Reform in Law and Practice, Sexual Assault Report, Civic Research Institute, pp. 67–68
Bullying and Harassment in Schools: Analysis of Legislation and Policy, in M.A. Paludi, Women and Management, Global Issues and Promising Solutions, volume 2: Signs of Solutions.
Unpacking the Rights of Third Parties in Criminal Cases, Family and Intimate Partner Violence Quarterly, 5, No. 1,
Sexual Harassment and Title IX: What's Bullying Got To Do With It, New England Journal on Criminal and Civil Confinement, 37, 305-324
Using Title IX's “Prompt and Equitable” Hearing Requirements to Force Schools to Provide Fair Judicial Proceedings to Redress Sexual Assault on Campus, 40 New England Law Review, No. 4, pp. 1007–1022
“Federalizing” Victims’ Rights to Hold State Courts Accountable, 9 Lewis & Clark L.Rev. 647
New Strategies for Child Abuse Prosecutions After Crawford, ABA Journal, vol. 23, #8, pp. 129–133
The Victim Advocacy and Research Group: Serving a Growing Need to Provide Rape Victims with Personal Legal Representation to Protect Privacy Rights and Fight Gender Bias in the Criminal Justice System, 11 Journal of Social Distress and the Homeless, No.1, p. 123
Special Problems Regarding the Discovery and Use of Privileged Information, Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education, Superior Court Criminal Practice Manual, Spring,
Minimizing the Likelihood of Discovery of Victims’ Counseling Records and Other Personal Information in Criminal Cases: Massachusetts Give a Nod to a Constitutional Right to Confidentiality, 32 New England Law Review, No. 4, Summer
Gender Bias in the Criminal Justice System, Harvard Women's Law Journal; 20th Anniversary Edition, June
Legal Rights of Trauma Victims, in “Trauma and Memory: Clinical and Legal Controversies,” Oxford University Press,