Survivor testimony presses lawmakers to strengthen privacy and post-death standing in proposed "Overcomer" law (H.4876)
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Summary
Representative Carol Faiola read redacted testimony from a survivor urging passage of H.4876 to limit abusers' legal standing after death, expand survivor privacy protections and broaden the definition of coercive control; she asked the committee to consider naming it the "Overcomer's Law."
Representative Carol Faiola brought the personal testimony of a constituent to the Joint Judiciary Committee in support of H.4876, asking lawmakers to strengthen protections for survivors of abuse.
Faiola read an edited, redacted letter from a survivor who called herself "Rebecca," describing how a lifetime restraining order had shaped her life and how existing state procedures allowed an abuser to be notified and sign a death certificate when a protected relative died. "We believe that if there is a lifetime restraining order in place, the perpetrator should not be next of kin for any legal considerations," the testimony said, as delivered by Representative Faiola.
Faiola told the committee that the bill's key provisions would limit legal standing of abusers after death, include survivor notification of abuser death, expand the definition of coercive control, strengthen survivor privacy protections and establish survivor education and resource programs. She asked the chairs to accept the redacted testimony into the record and to preserve the survivor's anonymity.
Committee members thanked Faiola for bringing the testimony and asked for written follow-up; no formal action was taken at the hearing.
Next steps: Representative Faiola and supporters said they would submit the survivor's written testimony for the record and work with the committee on technical details.
