Keith Levell was called a liar when, as a child, he first tried to speak out about the horrific sexual abuse he was enduring at boarding school.
He then remained silent for almost 30 years before finally being able to tell police.
Despite finally seeing his abusers from a school in Worcestershire jailed last year, his latest ordeal is the fight for compensation for the pain he has suffered all his life.
Mr Levell, now 67 and living in Plymouth, is among thousands of survivors of child sexual abuse in England and Wales who experts say are being failed by the government because key recommendations from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IISCA) have not been implemented.
The inquiry made 20 recommendations after concluding in 2022, including a redress scheme and the abolition of a law compelling victims to issue legal proceedings by the age of 21.
Lawyer Peter Garsden, who is fighting for compensation on behalf of dozens of victims, has written to the Home Office to ask why, more than two years on, nothing has changed.