If you practice in family law, education law, personal injury, or criminal defense, you are increasingly likely to encounter a term from the behavioral science world: Functional Behavior Assessment, or FBA. It may appear in school records, psychological evaluations, behavioral health reports, or expert disclosures. Attorneys who understand what an FBA is — and what it can and cannot tell a court — are better positioned to use it strategically, challenge it effectively, and avoid being caught off guard by it.

This post explains the clinical framework behind an FBA, how it is conducted, what a well-executed FBA looks like versus a deficient one, and how it applies across the legal practice areas where behavioral evidence matters.

 

What Is a Functional Behavior Assessment?

A Functional Behavior Assessment is a structured clinical process designed to identify why a specific behavior is occurring. The foundational principle comes from applied behavior analysis (ABA): behavior does not happen in a vacuum. Every behavior serves a function — it produces an outcome that matters to the individual, whether or not that outcome is intentional or consciously understood.

Behavioral science organizes the functions of behavior into four primary categories:

 

To identify which function is driving a specific behavior, clinicians use what is called the A-B-C framework:

By systematically analyzing these three components across multiple observations, settings, and data sources, a clinician builds a functional hypothesis: a clinically supported explanation for why the behavior is occurring. That hypothesis directly drives the behavioral intervention plan (BIP) — which is why an FBA is only as good as the rigor with which it was conducted.

An FBA doesn’t just describe what a person does. It explains why they do it. That distinction is what makes it legally significant.

 

How Is an FBA Conducted? What Attorneys Should Look For

A properly conducted FBA is a multi-method, multi-informant process. When reviewing an FBA as part of a legal matter — whether to rely on it, challenge it, or retain your own expert — you should understand what a rigorous FBA involves and how to spot the shortcuts that undermine reliability.

Components of a Defensible FBA

 

Red Flags That Indicate a Deficient FBA

Not all FBAs are created equal. In litigation, the quality of the FBA matters as much as its conclusions. Indicators of a poorly conducted FBA include:

 

A deficient FBA is not just a clinical problem. In legal settings, it is a vulnerability — either for the party relying on it, or an opening for the party challenging it.

 

How FBAs Are Used Across Legal Practice Areas

Education Law: IDEA Compliance and IEP Disputes

The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) requires that schools conduct an FBA and develop a Behavior Intervention Plan (BIP) when a student with a disability is removed from their educational placement for more than ten cumulative school days in a year, or when the behavior in question is determined to be a manifestation of the child’s disability. This is commonly called the manifestation determination process.

Beyond disciplinary removals, best practice under IDEA calls for an FBA whenever a student’s behavior is impeding their learning or the learning of others. However, compliance with this standard varies widely across districts, and failure to conduct an appropriate FBA is one of the most common grounds for finding a denial of Free and Appropriate Public Education (FAPE).

In education law cases, an expert with FBA expertise can help you address questions such as:

 

A school district’s failure to conduct a proper FBA before escalating discipline is not just a procedural misstep. It can constitute a denial of FAPE — and that has compensatory education and placement implications.

 

Family Law: Behavioral Evidence in Custody and Time-Sharing Disputes

In custody litigation, behavioral observations are frequently offered as evidence by both parents. The problem is that behavior without a clinical framework is easily misinterpreted — and courts are often left to draw conclusions from lay testimony about behavioral phenomena that have specific clinical explanations.

Consider some common scenarios:

 

An FBA-based expert opinion in a family law case gives the court a clinical explanation for behavior that would otherwise be filtered entirely through the competing narratives of two adversarial parties.

 

Personal Injury and Civil Litigation: Documenting Behavioral Harm

When a child or adult with a developmental or psychiatric disability sustains an injury, behavioral change is often among the most significant — and least well-documented — consequences. Medical records capture physical findings. Psychological evaluations assess cognitive and emotional functioning. But changes in behavior, adaptive functioning, and day-to-day independence often fall through the gaps.

An FBA conducted as part of a litigation-related assessment can:

 

In cases involving autistic individuals, individuals with intellectual disabilities, or those with acquired brain injuries, FBA-based evidence can be particularly compelling because it translates behavioral observations into a structured clinical framework that courts can evaluate.

 

Criminal Defense: Behavioral Function and Culpability

In criminal matters involving defendants with developmental disabilities, autism spectrum disorder, or significant behavioral health histories, an FBA can be a powerful tool for contextualizing the behavior at issue.

Relevant applications include:

 

In criminal cases involving defendants with developmental disabilities, the difference between “willful misconduct” and “behaviorally driven response” is often the difference between conviction and acquittal — or between a lengthy sentence and an appropriate disposition.

 

Questions Attorneys Should Ask About Any FBA in Their Case

Whether you are relying on an FBA prepared by a school or treatment provider, or considering retaining a behavioral expert, these questions will help you assess its clinical and evidentiary value:

 

The Bottom Line for Attorneys

Behavioral evidence is present in more legal cases than most attorneys realize. When behavior is at issue — whether it’s a child’s response to a custody transition, a student’s escalating school disciplinary record, a plaintiff’s post-injury functional decline, or a defendant’s conduct during an alleged offense — the question of why that behavior occurred is almost always legally relevant.

A Functional Behavior Assessment is the clinical tool designed to answer that question. Understanding what a rigorous FBA looks like, where deficient FBAs create vulnerability, and how behavioral function translates into legal argument gives attorneys a meaningful advantage in cases where behavior is evidence.

If behavior is evidence in your case, behavioral science should be part of your strategy.

 

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