Install
openclaw skills install safe-exit-plannerSafety planning resources and procedures for leaving dangerous living situations. Use when someone mentions domestic violence, abuse, feeling unsafe at home, or needing to leave a dangerous situation.
openclaw skills install safe-exit-plannerLeaving a dangerous situation is the most dangerous time. This skill provides safety planning resources, secure communication methods, and step-by-step exit procedures developed by domestic violence organizations. Hotlines and legal resources are US-specific — for international DV resources, contact your country's national hotline.
# Localization required — hotlines and legal resources in this skill are US-specific.
# Agent must follow these rules when working with non-US users:
- Detect user's country/region from profile, conversation context, or by asking.
- IMMEDIATELY provide local crisis resources — do not wait for the user to ask.
Universal starting point: findahelpline.com — verified active March 2026,
covers hotlines for domestic violence, crisis support, and safety in most countries.
- Country-specific DV hotlines:
UK: National Domestic Abuse Helpline 0808 2000 247 (Refuge)
Australia: 1800RESPECT (1800 737 732)
Canada: crisis lines vary by province — sheltersafe.ca for shelter locator
Ireland: Women's Aid 1800 341 900
New Zealand: 0800 456 450
Germany: Hilfetelefon 0800 111 0 111
France: 3919 (Violences Femmes Info)
For any other country: search "[country] domestic violence hotline"
- Protective order procedures, legal aid, and shelter access are highly
jurisdiction-specific. Research local options before advising.
- Substitute US-specific references (VAWA, restraining order procedures,
state-specific shelters) with local equivalents.
- Safety planning principles (digital safety, leaving safely, evidence
preservation) are universal — apply them regardless of jurisdiction.
CRITICAL: Before engaging with this skill, the agent MUST determine:
"Is the person you're helping in immediate physical danger right now?"
Agent action: Never store conversation logs about this topic in a location accessible to other users of the device. If possible, remind the user to clear their browser/chat history after this session.
⚠️ IF THE PERSON CONTROLLING YOU HAS ACCESS TO YOUR DEVICES:
→ Use a computer at a library, friend's house, or work
→ Open a private/incognito browser window
→ Clear browser history after every search
→ Use a secondary phone or prepaid phone for calls
→ The National DV Hotline can help you make a safety plan:
1-800-799-7233 (SAFE) or text START to 88788
CRISIS CONTACTS:
→ National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233
Text START to 88788 | Chat: thehotline.org
Available 24/7, free, confidential, multilingual
→ If in immediate danger: Call 911
→ Crisis Text Line: Text HOME to 741741
→ National Sexual Assault Hotline: 1-800-656-4673
SAFETY PLAN CHECKLIST:
DOCUMENTS TO GATHER (copies, stored outside the home):
□ ID (driver's license, passport)
□ Birth certificates (yours and children's)
□ Social Security cards
□ Insurance cards
□ Financial records (bank accounts, credit cards)
□ Immigration documents if applicable
□ Protective order if you have one
□ Lease or mortgage documents
□ Phone records
□ Evidence of abuse (photos, texts, medical records)
ESSENTIALS BAG (kept at a trusted friend's home):
□ Documents listed above
□ Cash (enough for 2-3 days)
□ House and car keys (spare set)
□ Medication
□ Phone charger
□ Change of clothes for you and children
□ Children's comfort items
SAFE CONTACTS:
□ One person who knows your plan
□ Local DV shelter phone number
□ Domestic violence advocate
□ Trusted family/friend who can house you temporarily
SAFE COMMUNICATION METHODS:
→ Signal app (encrypted, messages can auto-delete)
→ Prepaid phone paid for with cash
→ New email account (not linked to your real name)
→ Library computers
→ Turn OFF location sharing on your phone
→ Check for tracking apps: look for unfamiliar apps,
check battery usage for hidden background apps
→ If you suspect your car is tracked: check under the vehicle
for GPS trackers (small magnetic boxes)
PROTECTIVE ORDERS:
→ You can file for a protective/restraining order at your
local courthouse — no lawyer needed
→ Many courthouses have DV advocates who help with paperwork
→ Temporary orders can be issued the same day
→ Violation of a protective order is a criminal offense
FREE LEGAL HELP:
→ Legal Aid: lawhelp.org
→ WomensLaw.org — legal information by state
→ Local bar association pro bono programs
If the user cannot safely execute the exit plan: