Passage of SB 1835 In 2024,
Greg Treat authored Senate Bill 1470 along with Representative
Jon Echols of the
House. They called it the Oklahoma Survivors' Act. It passed the senate with no nay votes, and then the house with only 3. The bill "would permit courts to reduce sentences for domestic violence survivors for crimes they committed relating to that abuse," such as for criminalized survivor
April Wilkens, who was able to watch the vote pass the House along with other incarcerated women in
Mabel Bassett. But Governor Kevin Stitt vetoed the bill along with ten other bills. Chris Boring, president of the
District Attorneys Council, applauded the veto but advocates for the measure believed it "is critical to address systemic failures in criminal justice for women in Oklahoma." The very next day after Stitt's veto, Treat called for a Senate veto override. The Oklahoma Survivor Justice Coalition advocates said that the governor had been "mislead" by the DAs into thinking it was a bad bill. They claimed that they had "heard this misinformation from the state's prosecutors and the District Attorneys Council for two years" during their efforts to get a bill passed. In a press release, they accused prosecutors of “continuously and mercilessly prosecuting survivors of domestic violence, and seeking harsh, maximum punishments, while simultaneously letting their abusers plead out and face minimal consequences.” Treat accused the DAs of going back on a deal he struck with them and saying that another bill had been drafted to ensure criminals couldn't abuse the system, The Senate veto override passed and it was the first veto override of the session. Advocates "encouraged the House to also override the veto, which is necessary for the measure to become law." Co-author Echols said he was "very surprised at the veto" but that, “We're going to pass protections for domestic violence victims this year... either...through another bill or through an override of this bill.” Representative
Monroe Nichols, now the mayor of
Tulsa, said in a statement that “In my eight years in office, I've rarely been more frustrated and confused by a governor's veto." It overcame the veto by
Governor Kevin Stitt when language from 1470 was moved to a backup bill in SB 1835.
Past legislative attempts A previous attempt at similar legislation was
Toni Hasenbeck's and
Julie Daniel's HB 1639 in 2023, called the Oklahoma Domestic Abuse Survivorship Act In a mid-September 2022
Oklahoma House interim study brought by Representative
Toni Hasenbeck, the need for new legislation that could give second look resentencing to many currently in Oklahoma prisons was highlighted. In January 2023, Hasenbeck authored and filed HB 1639 that "would allow a survivor to enter into a lesser sentencing range when evidence of abuse has been substantiated" and offered "nuance in sentencing." At least 156 women at Mabel Bassett wrote "letters claiming to have experienced intimate partner violence at the time their crime was committed." The bill was originally called the Universal Defense Act, and the
attorney general Drummond seems supportive of solutions the bill attempted to address. Hasenbeck has said “For whatever reason women have this problem in the court system that they end up with larger prison sentences then typically the men that were producing the acts to lead to the final act." Colleen McCarty says that legislation is necessary because the parole process has not helped April Wilkens and other women. Wilkens, for example, has never been able to "use the evidence of her domestic abuse in her appeal for early release." On March 1, 2023, the bill unanimously passed the Oklahoma House Judiciary—Criminal Committee.
The Sentencing Project thanked the members for passing the bill out of committee. The committee members included
Rande Worthen (chair),
Collin Dule,
John George,
Jason Lowe,
Stan May,
Lonnie Sims, and
Judd Strom. After the bill passed committee, Wilkens was quoted as saying on a phone interview that “So many women in prison with me here have told me just chilling stories about the abuse they've suffered too before coming here." Before and after the bill passed committee, advocates for Wilkens and other criminalized survivors visited the capitol to speak with legislators and conduct art projects. Though the bill passed committee, Hasenbeck did strike the title of the bill, which allowed changes to be made to the language of the bill. A similar bill was passed in California. Hasenbeck noted specifically that "women can face many forms of coercion in a relationship, including everything from the loss of economic security to the threat of dissemination of non-consensual pornography." Dr. David McLeod of Oklahoma University wrote an op-ed in support of adding retroactivity back in, saying "I encourage Oklahoma legislators to pass HB 1639 with full retroactivity, and to limit sentences to 10 years and allow courts to rehear cases and hand down shorter sentences to people who show a significant link between the domestic violence they experienced and their crime." The bill was voted on in the Oklahoma House on March 22, 2023, and passed the House in a 91–0 vote. Representative
Cyndi Munson questioned why changes were made from the original bill and Hasenbeck replied it was due to needing to make concessions.
Mother Jones reported that it was to "make the bill more palatable to other Republicans" because the
Oklahoma District Attorneys Council is "a powerful lobbying group of local prosecutors" that "reportedly opposes retroactive relief." The Oklahoma Appleseed Center for Law and Justice released a statement asking the Senate to add retroactivity back in and saying that often the prosecution of current criminalized survivors tries "to keep out the evidence of the abuse because it was prejudicial to their cases." They were "told the Oklahoma House leadership would not hear a bill on the floor that provided 'retroactive relief' to people in prison. They were, however, amenable to prospective relief for survivors who have yet to enter the justice system [and that] thee prosecution and extreme sentencing of survivors is a problem, but [Oklahoma] will only commit to fixing that problem going forward. Many other organizations, such as DVIS and SheBrews and persons involved in the OK Survivor Justice Coalition voiced their concern but hope in the bill. Hasenbeck said "she plans to develop future legislation to expand the Act so that Oklahomans such as April Wilkens...can have a chance at freedom." Hasenbeck has stated that, because of HB 1639, she has had District Attorneys in her office who dislike the bill "because they don't want to have lookbacks" on their past cases if retroactivity is retained in the language. Daniels herself was quoted as implying she didn't think the bill would pass this session, and that she "did suggest that maybe the bill just be laid over and worked on over the interim (session)...” When the session ended, the retroactive language had not been added back in and the bill did not go to the floor for a vote. The OK Survivor Justice Coalition released a statement saying they would continue to fight for those who are incarcerated for fighting against their abuser. Advocates of the coalition held a "press conference on the steps of the Capitol to plead with legislators to restore retroactivity and allow those domestic violence victims in prison to be included in the law change. The bill was released from conference but never scheduled on the House floor to be heard with the new language." This was despite House Floor leader
Jon Echols saying he "supports making the legislation retroactive." == Post-passage pushback ==