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Senate committee rejects HB 4468 after sharp testimony from prosecutors, advocates and reporters over victim‑privacy rollback

March 11, 2026 | 2026 Legislature WV, West Virginia


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Senate committee rejects HB 4468 after sharp testimony from prosecutors, advocates and reporters over victim‑privacy rollback
A contentious hearing on House Bill 4468 focused on whether court and law‑enforcement records relating to victims of sexual assault, human trafficking and related offenses should remain confidential. Counsel summarized the committee substitute, which would narrow confidentiality to redact name and address but otherwise make more of the charging documents available.

Prosecutor Musciola testified the confidentiality language enacted in recent years has encouraged victims to come forward and that rolling it back could chill reporting. Leslie Rubin, a reporter for WCHS‑TV, urged restoring public access to certain court records, arguing inconsistent application of the current statute and court memoranda has created a patchwork of access that impedes public safety reporting. Nancy Hoffman, state coordinator for the West Virginia Foundation for Rape Crisis Information and Services, said the coalition of crisis centers opposed the bill and warned it would drive down reporting; "This will further reduce reporting in the state," she told the committee.

Lawmakers debated the competing goals of public awareness of alleged perpetrators and protecting victims. Several senators described how identifying information beyond name and address (time, location, job title) can make victims identifiable in small communities and urged retaining confidentiality. After extended debate and witness testimony, the committee voted on a motion to report HB 4468 to the floor; the motion failed and the bill was not reported out of committee.

What happens next: The bill will not be reported from this committee; proponents may revise language or attempt future amendments to address the confidentiality/public‑access balance.

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