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Public Comments

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: MEREDITH PEARCE on January 19, 2026 16:41
I AM AGAINST THIS BILL BECAUSE IT NEEDS TO OFFER REPARATIONS TO THE VICTIM IF THE CRIME WAS COMMITTED IN WV. IF THE CRIMINAL CAN PAY THE VICTIM THAT IS BEST; OTHERWISE OUR STATE SHOULD DO SO.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Illeana Olivares on January 19, 2026 16:33
This is against my Christian religious beliefs. This is cruel, we should be able to help one another like giving someone a ride to the doctor or to the store or even to CHURCH.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Sara Thomsen on January 19, 2026 16:19

HB 4433 raises serious concerns about cost and liability for our state and local governments. Expanding enforcement roles usually means higher expenses, more lawsuits, and more risk for taxpayers.

West Virginia already has real needs like schools, healthcare, infrastructure. We shouldn’t be pouring money into policies that create legal exposure instead of real solutions.

For these reasons, I strongly oppose HB 4433.

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Haley Waugh on January 19, 2026 16:02
  I oppose HB 4433 because it weakens trust between communities and local government. When people are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, everyone loses. West Virginia is stronger when families feel safe showing up for their communities, no matter their immigration status. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety. Public policy should bring people together, not push them apart. I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433. West Virginia already has real needs like schools, healthcare, infrastructure. We shouldn’t be pouring money into policies that create legal exposure instead of real solutions. West Virginians value fairness, accountability, and limits on government overreach. This bill doesn’t align with those values. Lawmakers should reject HB 4433 and uphold the civil liberties of everyone who calls West Virginia home. I oppose HB 4433 because it goes against values many West Virginians share. It goes against our dignity, fairness, and compassion.  
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Sarah Williams on January 19, 2026 16:01
I’m very concerned that not  allowing everyone who is trafficked to seek justice , will result in traffickers of all people to expand.     We should be after the people doing these atrocities, not focused on if the victims are “worth it”.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: John W. Doyle on January 19, 2026 15:49
Having read the online text of HB 4433, I must caution you to consider that the agents of the federal ICE and CBP are the most conspicuous violators of the West Virginia and U. S. Constitutions by their behavior in our state. In any just society, they would be the first to be arrested and convicted for their usual M. O., seizing and transporting people without warrant or probable cause of crime committed, ethnic cleansing and mercenary rampages. Our WV Constitution goes beyond the federal one, demanding not only equal protection  of the law for all person, but including judgement by a jury of peers, before any such actions as the current deportation industry is practicing are pursued. Over the last several months I have petitioned the Kanawha County Commission, the Governor, the Mayor of Charleston and CWV Chief of Police, to inform me by what authority do these entities cooperate with the federal round-ups. The WV Constitution warns against incursions upon rights reserved to the states, especially police powers. I recommend the WV Constitution to you for the purpose of bringing these federal paramilitary Trump Troops to justice. They are the obvious perpetrators of the criminal activity HB 4433 seeks to ban. What are the references in state law that allow government officials to subjugate our state and county police forces to this new Gestapo, in ignorance or violation of our constitution? This is a perversion of law, so twisted that it does nothing but provide cover for the accelerating progress of tyranny. Shame on all of us who would consider such a scheme. I have done what I can to help immigrants and citizens and I will continue to do so. I know our constitution is only a set of ideals, but the laws are supposed to support it, not trivialize it. Basic human decency is a law above the authority of civil law. Without it there will only be more division and anarchy, exploited by our dictatorial president.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kit McGinnis on January 19, 2026 15:15
This is a terrible and unconstitutional bill for many reasons. Please oppose HB 4433 1) I oppose HB 4433 because it weakens trust between communities and local government. When people are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, everyone loses. West Virginia is stronger when families feel safe showing up for their communities, no matter their immigration status. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety. Public policy should bring people together, not push them apart. I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433. 2) HB 4433 raises serious concerns about cost and liability for our state and local governments. Expanding enforcement roles usually means higher expenses, more lawsuits, and more risk for taxpayers. West Virginia already has real needs like schools, healthcare, infrastructure. We shouldn’t be pouring money into policies that create legal exposure instead of real solutions. For these reasons, I strongly oppose HB 4433. 3) I oppose HB 4433 because it raises real concerns about due process and constitutional rights. Expanding enforcement power without strong oversight puts fundamental freedoms at risk. West Virginians value fairness, accountability, and limits on government overreach. This bill doesn’t align with those values. Lawmakers should reject HB 4433 and uphold the civil liberties of everyone who calls West Virginia home. 4) As a West Virginian, I care about the safety and stability of my community. HB 4433 would create fear and uncertainty for families who live, work, and contribute here every day. Punitive, surveillance based policies don’t solve complex issues. They erode trust and make communities weaker, not stronger. Please oppose HB 4433 and support solutions that actually bring people together. 5) I oppose HB 4433 because it goes against values many West Virginians share. It goes against our dignity, fairness, and compassion. Our laws should protect families, respect human rights, and build community trust. This bill does none of those things. I urge lawmakers to reject HB 4433 and pursue policies that reflect our shared values. 6) This bill is unnecessary and out of touch with the real issues West Virginians are facing. HB 4433 doesn’t address affordability, healthcare, or community safety and it creates more problems instead. Lawmakers should focus on real solutions, not policies that divide communities and waste time and resources. I strongly oppose HB 4433. 7) HB 4433 will restrict the ability of faith congregations to assist marginalized people.  Giving transportation and assistance to marginalized people is our responsibility as faith practitioners, regardless of someone's legal status.  Please do not criminalize charitable works.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Preston on January 19, 2026 15:05
Get your heads out of your asses. This is the dumbest shit I’ve ever heard of. How about focusing on protecting children and getting prices of groceries brought down!
2026 Regular Session HB4135 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Daniel Farmer on January 19, 2026 14:28
Last time I checked…you had to have probable cause to go through a person’s cell phone. You can’t create exceptions because of what someone DID in the past or what they MIGHT do in the future.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Scott Miller on January 19, 2026 14:23
I just read that this bill will make it a crime to help undocumented people.  I thought this country was founded on some principles regarding helping everyone out.  Give us your tired your poor, your wretched refuse from your teaming shores and all that.  As many of the members of this body are deeply religious, I don't see how this is what Jesus would recommend. Help one another,  Jesus never asked for documentation.  There are people right now who are scared, don't know what to do and need help.  99+ percent of them are good people, trying to live life, provide for their family and dream that their children will have a better life.  Those of us in the community who care about PEOPLE, have no interest in helping human traffickers, so this bill (in regards to making it a criminal activity to aid any undocumented person) is meaningless.  For those who would aid human trafickers it is also meaningly, because they don't care about the law and are likely to help them anyway.   For thirteen years I ran a child advocacy center and learned a little about child trafficking, and none of it is good.  It seems to me it would already be a crime to help someone in their criminal activity whether they were documented or not, so really all this bill in regard to criminalizing helping undocumented people,  is to truly hurt the people the government has always said we wanted to help.  Please think about this.  Thank you
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Aj schwartz on January 19, 2026 14:21
For you to even consider not taking stories from victims because they don’t have the “correct” paperwork is horrendous, these people are just that, people. HUMANS. Just like you, skin, bone and blood. If you were attacked and taken from everything you know and love, then the government told you, your story doesn’t matter. I couldn’t even imagine. You are more willing to protect the pedos and rapist in this country than the vulnerable, it shows. The trust in the system goes down day by day because of bills like this.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Cecelia Thompson on January 19, 2026 14:04

To the Members of the House Judiciary Committee,

I am writing to voice my strong opposition to HB 4433. This bill is a direct attack on vulnerable people and a complete distraction from the real issues our state is facing.

I find it shameful that while we were promised a session focused on jobs and the cost of living, the committee is instead spending time on a bill that protects human traffickers. By blocking undocumented victims from seeking restitution, you are essentially telling traffickers that they can exploit people with zero financial consequences. Restitution isn't a "perk"—it is a basic requirement of justice.

Furthermore, the attempt to criminalize anyone who helps an undocumented person is dangerous. We should be encouraging people to look out for their neighbors, not threatening them with harsh sentences for basic acts of humanity. This kind of fear-mongering doesn't make our communities safer; it just makes them more divided.

Please stop targeting vulnerable people to score political points. I urge you to vote NO on HB 4433 and get back to the work you actually promised to do for our economy and our families.

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Brian Allen on January 19, 2026 14:01
Why would the state want to prevent illegal immigrants from receiving restitution for being trafficked? If someone is trafficked, it seems very likely that they were smuggled into the country and should have some recourse to recover the means to return to their home. Besides, it reads as if the victim sues for restitution from the perpetrator, not the state, so why would the state prevent that from occurring? Exempting illegal immigrants would most likely make them more of a target for trafficking. Regardless of their immigration status, they shouldn't be subject to additional exploitation.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Christina Baisden on January 19, 2026 13:50

Anyone who is a victim of human trafficking in this country deserves recourse and justice regardless of citizenship! How cruel to think otherwise.

If they are a victim of human trafficking then why wouid we treat the situation as if they came here of their own free will? As if THEY were the problem? That is something I want each of you to think about.....
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Gerald Beller on January 19, 2026 13:34
This bill makes it illegal to help people in dangerous and difficult circumstances that ha ve nothing to do with their ,legal status.  Victims of traffickers who are in danger need and require help, not further assault on those who do help them. This law would make it much harder to prevent harm traffickers expose on their victims. There's a reason that we are enjoined to follow the lead of the Good Samaritan, not those who create victimize those he tries to help.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: William Wolfe on January 19, 2026 13:33
“When a foreigner resides among you in your land, do not mistreat them. The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt. I am the LORD your God." -Leviticus 19:33-34 This bill turns justice on its head by ensuring that VICTIMS of human trafficking cannot seek restitution if they are undocumented. It also makes empathy into a crime by punishing people who are trying to follow the word of God and help their neighbors. Vote no on this cruel, disgusting bill.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kim on January 19, 2026 13:24
What in Gods name is wrong with you people??? You ever considered that trafficked humans are here against their will??? Are you so bigoted that you don’t care about someone being raped over and over because they aren’t from here? Or they are brown? Y’all make me sick. Do something to help the people of WV!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Christy Cardwell on January 19, 2026 13:22
I beg of you to reconsider this patently unAmerican bill. We are a nation built on immigration. This bill does nothing to solve any problems. It hurts innocent victims of human trafficking. It punishes people for coming here to make a better life for their families. It punishes people for working hard to contribute to our society. I realize we need immigration reform, but this is NOT the way to do it.
2026 Regular Session HB4543 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 19, 2026 13:17
HB 4543 raises serious concerns about enforceability, consistency, and equal application of the law. Current practice already shows that harassment and stalking are often dismissed as protected speech unless physical contact occurs, due to limited enforcement capacity and oversight. Before creating expanded residency restrictions for people convicted of harassment or stalking of minors, the Legislature should address whether law enforcement has the resources, training, and oversight mechanisms to monitor compliance in a fair and constitutional manner. Creating broad residency prohibitions without clear enforcement standards risks selective or uneven application and raises due-process concerns under Article III, § 10 of the West Virginia Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment. Laws that are not realistically enforceable or that rely on discretionary surveillance risk creating de facto subclasses of people subject to heightened monitoring without adequate safeguards. Public safety policy should be evidence-based, enforceable, and applied uniformly—not symbolic measures that cannot be consistently carried out.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: PISOS LAMINADOS on January 19, 2026 13:17
IF YOU WANT TO CORRECT THE IDEOLOGY OF THE PIG AND THE MENTALITY OF THE SLAVE CATCHER, YOU MEET THEM WITH EQUAL FORCE. ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE. NO POWER TO THE PIG.
2026 Regular Session HB4540 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 19, 2026 13:11
I support HB 4540’s requirement that the Division of Motor Vehicles provide written notice of all fees owed and impending suspension at least 30 days before a driver’s license is suspended for failure to respond or appear in court. Losing a license without clear notice can force people to lose access to employment, groceries, medical care, and other basic needs in a state with limited public transit. Access to reliable transportation affects food and water security, economic stability, and public safety. Procedural fairness before suspension better aligns with due-process principles under the West Virginia Constitution (Art. III, § 10) and helps prevent avoidable hardship.
2026 Regular Session HB4538 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli FLynn on January 19, 2026 13:08
HB 4538 — Public Comment: I support efforts to protect privacy and due process in automated traffic enforcement, but HB 4538 as written raises concerns about uneven enforcement and technology use that could still result in citations mailed to motorists without a real-time stop or meaningful interaction. The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable government searches and seizures, and strict standards are necessary to ensure automated systems do not become de facto revenue tools without individualized probable cause. Evidence used must be reliable, transparent, and subject to independent verification. Technology should assist public safety, not replace fundamental safeguards. Requiring law-enforcement officer presence and clear signage where cameras are used — and prohibiting unattended automated enforcement outside work zones — better aligns enforcement with constitutional protection of motorists’ rights.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Dana Light on January 19, 2026 12:58
I oppose HB 4433 because it weakens trust between communities and local government. When people are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, everyone loses.
West Virginia is stronger when families feel safe showing up for their communities, no matter their immigration status. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety.
Public policy should bring people together, not push them apart. I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Cindy L Jaworski on January 19, 2026 12:49
This bill is a thin disguise for discriminating against immigrants. Find a better process for helping to curb human trafficking.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Frank Muth on January 19, 2026 12:49
HB 4433 is a disaster in the making. We already have situations where undocumented people are being kidnapped by unidentified masked people without due process and often under violent conditions.  HB4433 will create more fear and community distrust, both amoungst the undocumented and the documented residents of our state. Undocumented residents have been abducted when they show up for their court appointments while they are in the process of obtaining legal documentation.  Often, documented members of the community assist them with transportation to their appointments.  HB4433 will criminalize people who are simply acting in the time honoured West Virginia way of helping our neighbours. That will spread even further, as most of us don't have any idea who in our communities are documented residents and who are not. Are we now supposed to ask our neighbours for their papers before we lend a helping hand? Absurd bills like this ill-informed and reactionary attempt at legislation are costly in terms of enforcement and in terms of resultant lawsuits.  HB4433 does nothing to help West Virginians and will cripple us even further in terms of cost and community trauma. Kill this disastrous bill immediately.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Nancy Pennington Tissue on January 19, 2026 12:44
Please do not act on this bill.  It is INHUMANE  to refuse help for any woman or girl or young boy caught up in sex trafficking REGARDLESS of their color, nationality, or immigration status.  Would you refuse the very help you would expect for your own daughter or granddaughter or that of a neighbor to one dragged out of her own country to service people (unfortunately white American men fall into this category).  These aare the aliens Jesus said for us to protect AND welcome!!  Tell Elliot Pritt we in Fayette County are particularly watching him!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Sarah Reggi on January 19, 2026 12:32
We should not prevent VICTIMS of human trafficking from seeking restitution. I’m appalled that this bill has been created and that our legislators are waisting their precious time on it when we have a real opportunity to do introduce and discuss bills that would be much more meaningful for the everyday West Virginian.
2026 Regular Session HB4503 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jayli Flynn on January 19, 2026 12:26
HB 4503 raises concerns about discretionary and selective traffic enforcement rather than uniform safety standards. West Virginia law already governs lane use, speed, and the duty to move over for emergency vehicles (W. Va. Code §§ 17C-6-1 et seq.; 17C-14-15). When drivers traveling at the lawful speed are treated as obstructing traffic while others exceed speed limits, enforcement becomes inconsistent and invites selective stops. Laws that rely on broad officer discretion risk being used for statistics or revenue rather than public safety, raising due-process concerns under Article III, § 10 of the West Virginia Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment. Traffic policy should reduce discretion, increase predictability, and prioritize safety—especially in a state with an aging population and limited pedestrian infrastructure.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jasper Larson on January 19, 2026 12:21
This bill is disgusting use of government time for the purpose of silencing victims. Our government should be protecting people not making their lives harder and harder with every new bill pushed through.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Michaella Bowles on January 19, 2026 12:10
I oppose this bill. No one should continue to experience trauma and inhumanity all because of a legal status. They are not here by their own will to begin with and deserve humanity.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Peggy Burkhardt on January 19, 2026 12:09
I OPPOSE  this bill as I believe it is my Christian and civic  duty to help neighbors in need regardless of their immigration status. This is the opposite of holding people accountable for engaging in the slave trade of human trafficking. This bill is would further stigmatize and harm our immigrant communities and those who care about them. It would also penalize people for living out Gospel values of welcoming the stranger and loving our neighbors as ourselves. Unless one is a Native American, our ancestors were all immigrants. Think about how you would have wanted your ancestors to be treated!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kaitlyn Shriver on January 19, 2026 12:06
I oppose HB 4433. Criminalizing the “harboring and transportation” of persons with illegal work authorization is a dangerous and slippery slope akin to actions taken in WWII to try and revoke the constitutional protections of citizens and their ability to protect their neighbors from the revocation of their rights. This is a dangerous, irresponsible bill that ignores historical precedent and instead of serving to protect victims of true trafficking, actually prohibits the protection of these individuals and makes them more susceptible to the whims of criminal actors. To then also include a section of the bill that removes all possibility of a person’s ability to seek restitution for their treatment at the hands of a smuggler is cruel at best. West Virginia would be better served by legislators who actually serve its interests in clean water, improved infrastructure, and protections for small business. These nonsense bills that cater to national concerns rather than the concerns of this state are embarrassing and ill-suited. These are a waste of time and money. Trafficking is an important issue, but I’m concerned that professionals who understand trafficking may not have been consulted when structuring these changes. Can the legislators responsible for this bill reference any specific circumstances that suggest a need for this legislation? Has anyone with illegal work status ever even sued? This is a waste of our state funds and valuable time.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Cynthia D Cole Fulton on January 19, 2026 12:00
As a West Virginian, I care about the safety and stability of my community. HB 4433 would create fear and uncertainty for families who live, work, and contribute here every day.
Punitive, surveillance based policies don’t solve complex issues. They erode trust and make communities weaker, not stronger.
Please oppose HB 4433 and support solutions that actually bring people together.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Troy Miller on January 19, 2026 11:50
Please simply vote this bill into the dumpster. As it stands, this bill essentially creates a protected class of criminals who traffic undocumented people by protecting them from their victims. That may not be the bill's intent, but that is its effect. As such, please simply vote this bill into the dumpster. Thank you, Troy Miller Kearneysville, WV
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Karla Fuentes Velasquez on January 19, 2026 11:49
  • This bill is unnecessary and out of touch with the real issues West Virginians are facing. HB 4433 doesn’t address affordability, healthcare, or community safety and it creates more problems instead.
Lawmakers should focus on real solutions, not policies that divide communities and waste time and resources. I strongly oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Susan Perry on January 19, 2026 11:44
This bill contains a provision that states that any person providing transportation to illegal aliens is guilty of a crime.  This could hamper efforts to rescue persons who are the victims of trafficking.  If a victim is able to escape from his/her traffickers, this bill would deter groups who help to rescue victims.  How is the victim supposed to get to the police? I would encourage the committee to take your time with this bill.   Review what other states have done.  No need to reinvent the wheel.
2026 Regular Session HB4185 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Mara Rhoades on January 19, 2026 11:26
How does this help benefit citizens of West Virginia who can barely afford groceries? WV is struggling in so many categories. But let's make it legal for them to own an automatic machine gun? They are attributed to some of the deadliest mass shootings in the United States, makes sense.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Seth Anders on January 19, 2026 11:24
Quit wasting time and resources on stupid evil 💩 like this. Yall are racist. the 💩 in the bill is sick. I hope yall like brimstone cause theres no way your going anywhere but hell passing 💩 like that. There's a million things you could be focusing on considering you're the poorest state in the nation, highest in drug overdoses, almost last in education, and near the highest cancer rates in the country. But yes focus on this stupid 💩. I hope you enjoy your time in office. Elections are coming, and your time there will be very short if you continue trying stupid 💩 like this. Signed- a citizen sick of the dumb 💩
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rachel Dash on January 19, 2026 11:12
HB 4433 will create costs and liability for state and local governments. There will be higher expenses, more lawsuits, and more risks for taxpayers. West Virginians value fairness, accountability, and limits on government overreach. Additionally, how do you think your constituents will react when the publicity from all the CLERGY in WV who are committed to helping those who are undocumented are arrested for trafficking?
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kristina Whiteaker on January 19, 2026 11:06
I am concerned that the changes to code included in HB 4433 are meant to prohibit and criminalize aid to immigrants. Of course the state has an interest in taking action against sex trafficking, but the language in this bill seems much more expansive than that. Actions by the government that would prohibit citizens from providing legitimate aid to refugees and humans who have come to this country seeking a better life are fundamentally anti-Christian and immoral. Matthew 25:40, “as you did it to the least of these, you did it to me” Matthew 7:16, “You shall know them by their fruits” Matthew 22:39: “Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself” Deuteronomy 10:18-19, “ you are to love those who are foreigners, for you yourselves were foreigners in Egypt.” Please consider the implications of this bill and make sure that it does not do more harm than good . Thank you  
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Vito Graziano on January 19, 2026 11:02
I completely oppose HB 4433 because it punishes vulnerable people instead of addressing real harm. Denying undocumented survivors of human trafficking the right to seek restitution and criminalising basic acts of compassion—like offering a ride—undermines justice, public safety, and long-standing advocacy efforts. This bill would discourage victims from coming forward, isolate communities, and waste resources that should be focused on preventing trafficking and holding traffickers accountable. West Virginia should protect survivors and strengthen communities, not divide them.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kate on January 19, 2026 10:53
I believe this new bill goes against what American stands for. Helping people in need (even people who are not American citizens) is something I love about American. I feel like as a country we are moving away from being kind and helpful to those in need. Stop being mean.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Logan on January 19, 2026 10:49
An all around terrible bill that does nothing to help West Virginian’s. Victims of trafficking deserve assistance regardless of their status - we are all human.  The lack of empathy and compassion in this bill is disgraceful. Please focus on real issues and stop pandering to what you think the GOP and Trump want you to focus on. Your first and only priority should be the people of WV.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Alissa Wise on January 19, 2026 10:49
The parts of this bill that will make it a felony to help a human being that is being targeted by ICE needs to be removed. Read your history books. Under this bill, it would’ve and will be illegal to hide Anne Frank! Shame on you if you pass this bill as is.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jamie Diehl on January 19, 2026 10:31
I strongly oppose HB 4433. This bill does not target traffickers, it targets victims and the people trying to keep them alive. Denying undocumented victims of human trafficking the ability to seek restitution undermines both justice and law enforcement. Victims are often the primary witnesses against traffickers. If we punish them or the advocates who help them, we guarantee fewer prosecutions and more trafficking. Criminalizing basic humanitarian assistance, including providing transportation, creates a chilling effect on churches, social workers, medical providers, and community members who are trying to prevent exploitation and abuse. That does not make West Virginia safer. It makes crimes harder to detect and victims easier to silence. Public safety depends on cooperation, trust, and due process, not on fear-based policies that blur the line between immigration enforcement and criminal justice. We should be strengthening protections for trafficking victims and going after traffickers, not punishing survivors and the people helping them escape abuse. West Virginia can do better than this.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Cody keefer on January 19, 2026 10:30
This is a disgusting bill that goes against every bit of humanity we have left. At what point do people realize we all bleed red, disgusting. The amount of controversy this is going to cause will be detrimental. Do better.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rhonda Lane on January 19, 2026 10:27
These bills are not helping West Virginians.  We have folks who do not have running water in this state. We are at the center of the drug epidemic that was mostly caused by making health care for profit and also allowing drug companies to fund your vote Work on something that will help our citizens instead of appeasing one man please
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Edward Flagg on January 19, 2026 10:25
I live in Morgantown, WV. This bill is terrible for the people of our state. You should vote against it. If you make it so that helping undocumented people make someone a human trafficker, you are saying that a pastor helping people in his community is as bad as Jeffrey Epstein. Shame!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Nancy Cummins on January 19, 2026 10:23
I oppose HB 4433 and urge lawmakers to oppose this bill because it weakens trust between communities and local government.  People should not be afraid to report crimes, seek help, or use public services.  This bill is unnecessary and out of touch with critical, real issues we are facing such as affordability, decent healthcare and community safety.  Punitive, surveillance-based policies erode trust and weaken communities. Faith congregations should not feel intimidated – we have a responsibility to help and give assistance to marginalized people.   WV is stronger when families feel safe. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety. HB goes against values many West Virginians share. Public policy should uphold the civil liberties of all West Virginians -  bring people together, not divide them and I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Teresa Alouf on January 19, 2026 10:18
I am not well at writing but these words below adequately convey my thoughts. Please do not allow this atrocious bill to pass. Thank you. I oppose HB 4433 because it weakens trust between communities and local government. When people are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, everyone loses. West Virginia is stronger when families feel safe showing up for their communities, no matter their immigration status. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety. Public policy should bring people together, not push them apart. I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Meta Jane Harrington on January 19, 2026 10:17
All people have God given dignity.  Each person is worthy of respect.  Do not criminalize providing basic human needs.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Anita Bernhardt on January 19, 2026 10:16
This is appalling.  Helping others is the Christian way.  Punishment for those who help neighbors is so unamerican, so not a West Virginian way of life. We are all God’s children.  Do the right thing here please.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Joseph I. Golden on January 19, 2026 10:13
Please oppose HB 4433, since it allows felony charges against those, for religious and philosophical reasons, has compassion for those terrorized by ICE (and its Gestapo tactics).  If one follows the religious instruction to help those harmed or persecuted by others (eg ICE), then this bill incorrectly conflates fulfilling one's religious and philosophical duty to help others, with the crime of human trafficking. Such an addition to the current law against human trafficking, is wrong and should not be allied with how the current law stands.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jamie on January 19, 2026 10:11
I know that more than likely this will never be read.  The clan that is our legislature worship a pedophile president who has already been charged with numerous crimes and pens bogus drafts of laws such as this to deflect and ignore that.  Stop attacking our neighbors.  Stop acting as if immigrants are not paying taxes when you absolutely know that this is part of WEST Virginia’s economy. Stop acting as if this is something we want.  People cannot live or pay electric bills or childcare and you are focused on being evil instead of  actually helping.   Shame on all of you.  I want for you what you want for every vulnerable member of our state.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Maegan Bryner on January 19, 2026 10:11
I oppose HB 4433 because it weakens trust between communities and local government. When people are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, everyone loses. West Virginia is stronger when families feel safe showing up for their communities, no matter their immigration status. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety. HB 4433 also raises real concerns about due process and constitutional rights. Expanding enforcement power without strong oversight puts fundamental freedoms at risk, as we are seeing now across the country. West Virginia already has real needs like schools, healthcare, and infrastructure. We shouldn’t be pouring money into policies that have no significant bearing on our everyday lives instead of real solutions to help bring this state out of poverty. Public policy should bring people together and lift them up, not push them apart. Lawmakers should focus on real solutions, not policies that divide communities and waste time and resources. I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Shannon Bossung on January 19, 2026 10:07
  I oppose HB 4433 because it weakens trust between communities and local government. When people are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, everyone loses. West Virginia is stronger when families feel safe showing up for their communities, no matter their immigration status. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety. Public policy should bring people together, not push them apart. I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433. HB 4433 raises serious concerns about cost and liability for our state and local governments. Expanding enforcement roles usually means higher expenses, more lawsuits, and more risk for taxpayers. I oppose HB 4433 because it raises real concerns about due process and constitutional rights. Expanding enforcement power without strong oversight puts fundamental freedoms at risk. West Virginians value fairness, accountability, and limits on government overreach. This bill doesn’t align with those values. Lawmakers should reject HB 4433 and uphold the civil liberties of everyone who calls West Virginia home. As a West Virginian, I care about the safety and stability of my community. HB 4433 would create fear and uncertainty for families who live, work, and contribute here every day. Punitive, surveillance based policies don’t solve complex issues. They erode trust and make communities weaker, not stronger. Please oppose HB 4433 and support solutions that actually bring people together. I oppose HB 4433 because it goes against values many West Virginians share. It goes against our dignity, fairness, and compassion. Our laws should protect families, respect human rights, and build community trust. This bill does none of those things. I urge lawmakers to reject HB 4433 and pursue policies that reflect our shared values. This bill is unnecessary and out of touch with the real issues West Virginians are facing. HB 4433 doesn’t address affordability, healthcare, or community safety and it creates more problems instead. Lawmakers should focus on real solutions, not policies that divide communities and waste time and resources. I strongly oppose HB 4433. Finally, HB 4433 will restrict the ability of faith congregations to assist marginalized people. Giving transportation and assistance to marginalized people is our responsibility as faith practitioners, regardless of someone's legal status. As a daughter of a clergyman , I ask that you do not criminalize charitable works.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Staci Tighe on January 19, 2026 10:03
I oppose HB 4433 because it raises real concerns about due process and constitutional rights. Expanding enforcement power without strong oversight puts fundamental freedoms at risk. West Virginians value fairness, accountability, and limits on government overreach. This bill doesn’t  align with those values. Lawmakers should reject HB 4433 and uphold the civil liberties of everyone who calls West Virginia  mhome.  
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Barbara J Brown on January 19, 2026 10:02
Does this bill imply that we cannot offer food, shelter or other assistance to strangers in need?  If so, I strongly object.  
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Joyce Farmer on January 19, 2026 10:02
I can’t believe you all are this ignorant and cruel, you would not be living in the United States if your family had in immigrated here are you really that stupid! Do you not understand that you all are cutting of your own damn noses to spite your own damn faces these immigrants work and pay taxes that benefits the STATE and FEDERAL GOVERNMENT yet get nothing in return they provide us with wonderful restaurant, they do the work our lazy ass citizens think they are to good to do and no they are not the worst criminals we have sure there are a few that mess up but white people are the worst offenders and you know it . Grow up and stop kissing Morrissey and Trump’s asses do something that’s  good for West Virginia and its people just once show us you care that you have morals and a heart and most of all a Brain that tells you what you are doing is wrong!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jerry mcmanaway on January 19, 2026 10:01
Defeat this racist and big ugly bill
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Anne Gentry on January 19, 2026 10:01
I am unsure how this bill affects the traffickers of these undocumented women?  Instead, are we just penalizing the women who are being trafficked?  And is this a huge problem in WV that we need to take time to write such a bill and debate it?  Also, aiding our neighbors or victims of crimes is a very Christian thing to do.  What does targeting such actions do to make West Virginians safer ? I hope instead you spend time trying to raise or educational level out of dead last, raise our employment rate, especially for marginalized people. we have much work to do in WV, but attacking people who are already down isn’t one of them.  Thank you
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Pauline Wimmer on January 19, 2026 09:57
I know our legislators like to bring up religion a lot. There is NOTHING Christian about this bill. This is a disgrace and slaps anyone that lives the word of God in the face. Remember,”do unto others as you would have do unto to”.  You like to display the Ten Commandments, how about including them in the laws you make!!!!!!!!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Michael h Foster on January 19, 2026 09:56
I strongly oppose House Bill 4433 which the WV State Legislature is up for debate tomorrow on the House floor.  It strikes me as an overreaction to citizens who want to participate in their democratic rights of free speech.    This bill weakens trust between communities and local government. When people  are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, everyone loses. West Virginia is stronger when families feel safe showing up for their communities, no matter their immigration status. This bill does the opposite by creating fear instead of safety. Public policy should bring people together, not push them apart. I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Jerica Corso on January 19, 2026 09:53
This bill is ridiculous and unnecessary, not to mention completely out of touch with the REAL issues West Virginians are facing. HB 4433 doesn’t address affordability. I can barely make it by if I pay my entire power bill without installments. Healthcare; I couldn't even fathom being able to afford it for my entire family. Last, but certainly not least, Community safety; how are we supposed to be proud West Virginians, and love this wild and wonderful state if we don't even feel safe in our own neighborhoods?! How am I supposed to raise my children here if our representatives don't give 2 craps about the people that voted for them. We vote accordingly in our family and I hope my community does the same. Help us build a better place for our future generations not a more unstable one. That's all this bill does is drill more uncertainties and instability into the everyday life of average Americans. Do better!! 🤦‍♀️ Lawmakers should focus on REAL solutions to our everyday problems, not policies that divide communities and waste time and resources!! I strongly oppose HB 4433!! Also, just to throw in alittle jazz, it would help to come up with these resources if you TAXED THE RICH, PROPERLY. ☮️
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Abigail Wiernik on January 19, 2026 09:49
HB 4433 is a solution in search of a problem. West Virginia has a very small undocumented population, yet this bill creates sweeping punishments that would harm victims of trafficking, criminalize everyday acts of help, and drain public resources. Instead of addressing real issues West Virginians face—healthcare access, transportation, housing, and public safety—this bill targets a population that is statistically insignificant while creating real harm. Policies like this do not improve safety or reduce crime; they increase fear, reduce reporting, and protect abusers. Lawmakers should reject HB 4433 and focus on practical, evidence-based solutions that actually serve West Virginia communities.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Wes Holden on January 19, 2026 09:45
This bill is a totally ridiculous travesty of justice.  It is the beginning of a slippery slope to protect criminal perpetrators!  I pray that the committee will question its constitutionality. Justice for ALL !
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Alice Collins on January 19, 2026 09:41
This bill rewards traffickers for selecting undocumented victims. Victims are victims, regardless of their immigration status. This bill is uncivilized and should not be passed.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Karen Griffee on January 19, 2026 09:39
HB 4433 I am so sad and embarrassed to live in a state that would produce such a bill. Immigrants are our own families and closest friends. My grandparents were ALL immigrants, from Denmark, Norway, Scotland.  It is racist to assume these are “good” immigrants while brown people are not: they, like my own family, came here with a lab to create a good life.  They love this country and want to make it even better, as did my family. You should be ashamed of this bill.  I am.  It’s disgusting, even.  It is exactly the ignorant, racist behavior people from other states expect from WV and I’m disgusted you’re living up to it.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Paul Dalzell on January 19, 2026 09:37
This bill, if passed, would clearly violate our First Amendment right to practice our religion by helping people fill their basic needs (for food, housing, or transportation). We need to be careful not to write laws that make it impossible for faith congregations to assist marginalized people. This bill would blur what is otherwise a very clear line between criminal smuggling and providing humanitarian assistance. Lastly, HB 4433, if passed, would undoubtedly face constitutional challenges in court.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Elaine Matheny on January 19, 2026 09:37
I am against this bill as it will cause harm to our communities. Illegal immigration needs to be handled in a calm safe manner. We need to help our neighbors not terrorize them.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Johnna Bailey on January 19, 2026 09:31
To whom it may concern, I oppose HB 4433 because it raises real concerns about due process and constitutional rights. Expanding enforcement power without strong oversight puts fundamental freedoms at risk. It also goes against values many West Virginians share. It goes against our dignity, fairness, and compassion. Our laws should protect families, respect human rights, and build community trust. This bill does none of those things. I urge lawmakers to reject HB 4433 and pursue policies that reflect our shared values. This bill is unnecessary and out of touch with the real issues West Virginians are facing. HB 4433 doesn’t address affordability, healthcare, or community safety and it creates more problems instead. Lawmakers should focus on real solutions, not policies that divide communities and waste time and resources. I strongly oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Raygan Hickman on January 19, 2026 09:29
You work for your constituents, and your constituents DO NOT want this bill to be passed. This puts all of us in danger if ICE soldiers would like to target civilians. It is disturbing and frustrating that this legislature consistently votes against our safety.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kathryn Orlow on January 19, 2026 09:20
Why would you oppose a bill to help someone who has been abused tortured, Sexually violated? it pauses one to consider what lawmakers are hiding. If someone came into your home, took your daughter or your wife, or perhaps your mother, would you sit by and say nothing and expect No accountability?  
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kathryn Orlow on January 19, 2026 09:19
Why would you oppose a bill to help someone who has been abused tortured, Sexually violated? it pauses one to consider what lawmakers are hiding. If someone came into your home, took your daughter or your wife, or perhaps your mother, would you sit by and say nothing and expect No accountability?  
2026 Regular Session HB4041 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rev. Katie Knotts on January 19, 2026 09:16

I oppose House Bill 4041 not only as a West Virginian, but as someone who has lived the consequences of punitive, inflexible responses to crisis.

My brother was autistic, developmentally delayed, and schizoaffective. During a mental health crisis, he had what can only be described as a toddler-sized meltdown in a grown man’s body. We did what families are told to do; we sought law enforcement assistance because we needed help.

In that crisis, my brother bit an officer. For that, he spent eight months in jail.

He did not understand why he was there. He believed he was in jail because he hadn’t taken the trash out. That is how disconnected he was from reality. Jail did not stabilize him. It did not treat him. It did not protect him or the public. It isolated him, traumatized him, and severed him from his family.

When he was eventually released, there was no coordinated reentry, no meaningful support, and no contact with us.

He was later murdered.

I share this because HB 4041 would make outcomes like this more likely, not less. Mandatory sentencing strips away discretion in moments where discernment matters most, especially in encounters involving disability, mental illness, or crisis. A mandatory 25-year sentence for assault leaves no room to distinguish between malicious intent and a medical or psychiatric emergency.

Violence against law enforcement is serious. Officers deserve safety and support. But punishment without proportionality, treatment, or context does not create safety, it creates tragedy.

West Virginians value fairness, restraint, and accountability. We believe in protecting both public servants and vulnerable people. Laws that respond to crisis with only punishment fail everyone involved.

I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4041 and instead invest in policies that prioritize de-escalation, mental health response, judicial discretion, and true public safety so no other family has to learn, the hardest way possible, what happens when compassion is removed from the system.

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Hannorah on January 19, 2026 09:15
Please do not allow this to move forward. Trafficking victims do not need further victimized.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Peggy Rash on January 19, 2026 09:14
It seems quite counter intuitive that any substantive judiciary committee would turn on their constituents, the people of WV, to impose a criminal offense for helping someone who has not been proven to have committed a crime as HB 4433 pending before the committee this morning.  From what I can see, assisting an immigrant would be a crime because sit is presupposed that all immigrants are involved in human trafficking . . . no proof needed on which to impose a second crime.  The sponsors of this bill are ill-informed of the constitutional guarantees of this country and this state and require some education before proposing legislation that would result in such objectional and illegal outcomes.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Ally on January 19, 2026 09:14
I'm writing to ask you to OPPOSE HB 4433. The bill does not help us solve our immigration issues, but rather it punishes American citizens for trying to help. I believe that we can come up with better solutions to this issue.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Debra McCarthy on January 19, 2026 09:14
HB4433 Shame on you for introducing an anti- immigrant bill. Immigrants are our friends and neighbors. They are our restaurant owners and shopkeepers. The feed us...literally. Immigrants contribute billions to the US economy yearly. Immigrants are our families. Husbands, wives. My grandparents were immigrants. They raised eight children who worked hard to raise their own families who became farmers, teachers, medical professionals, business owners, librarians, public employees, politicians and political activists. All upstanding citizens of the United States of America. You should be ashamed of the attempt  to make immigrants the "others." That is NOT American. It is NOT the American way. You should be ashamed. I am ashamed of YOU.    
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Judy Gubinski on January 19, 2026 09:11
I oppose this bill as it threatens constitutional and human rights.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Margaret Jusiel on January 19, 2026 09:11
This insanity has to stop. Please vote against this bill, AND please support anything related in Congress that can stop ICE being able to act without impunity. EVERYONE deserves to be read their rights and to have a phone call. Thank you.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Neil Chakrabarty on January 19, 2026 09:10
What would Jesus do?  
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Robert C Klander on January 19, 2026 09:09
In the USA, Land of Liberty, Closing the gates to those in search of our  promised "Government of the people, by the people, for the people" is anti-American. For our elected officials to even consider such legislation is to deny the very idea of a Free People. I implore the committee to quash this bill with impunity. HONOR THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE and you OATH TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THESE UNITED STATES AND, WHILE YOU ARE AT IT, STOP THIS ADMINISTRATION FROM DESTROYING ALL THAT IS THESE UNITED STATES
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Glenda Hatfield on January 19, 2026 09:09
How am I, as an ordinary citizen, supposed to verify someone's legal status?  This seems like a terrible idea.  West Virginia is generally known for having good-hearted and helpful people.  With my background of being raised on a farm, and my current occupation as a healthcare clinician, I feel like I have contributed to our good reputation, by helping people with various troubles, from bandages on bleeding injuries, to helping change a tire, help to jump-start a drained battery, giving a ride to the gas station when someone runs out of gas, or providing food/water to stranded people who are waiting for help.  Should West Virginia residents have to worry about actions generally perceived as being a good Samaritan, now being criminalized?
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Vern Walker on January 19, 2026 09:08
The generality of the language around “illegal alien” in this proposed House Bill and the crimes attached to human smuggling are completely disproportionate and would only greatly increase the harm done in our communities. Before potentially criminalizing looking out for our neighbors, what needs to be done immediately through legislation is creating oversight and accountability for ICE actions. Continuing to allow masked, heavily armed men to act with impunity in our cities is absolutely unconscionable. This kind of force is harmfully disproportionate to the problem. Create legislation around ICE and better immigration and work visa laws FIRST, before criminalizing and terrorizing our communities. Do your job legislators - it is hard and complicated, so don’t take the easy way out. Address the real issues, rather than bluntly using the force of law.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Anni Corley on January 19, 2026 09:07
Victims of trafficking deserve justice regardless of their status. I oppose HB 4433.  
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Kelly Coyle on January 19, 2026 09:05

I strongly oppose bill 4433. WV has more than it's share of problems to address in legislature, and undocumented immigrants is not high priority. Immigrants, both documented and undocumented, make their communities safer and happier. They are less likely to commit crimes than US-born citizens, and that is not debatable. So let's work on that problem instead. Why are so many US-born men violent and aggressive in their communities? If you truly care about the safety and well-being of your constituents, you'll vote NO on this bill, and work on solving the issues actually harming people in WV. If you'd rather blindly obey this authoritarian regime and promote this racist bill, the people will react at the polls. Thank you for your consideration.

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Carolyn Rodis on January 19, 2026 09:00
Please OPPOSE HB 2033, do not let it get out of committee.  I believe it is our duty to help neighbors in need regardless of their immigration status.  This bill is misguided - it would further stigmatize and harm our immigrant communities and those who care about them. Thank you
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rev. Katie Knotts on January 19, 2026 08:59

I oppose HB 4433 because it weakens trust between communities and local government. When trust breaks down, everyone loses!!!

When people are afraid to report crimes, ask for help, or use public services, communities become less safe, not more. West Virginia is stronger when families feel secure showing up for their neighbors, their schools, and their towns, no matter their immigration status. HB 4433 does the opposite by creating fear and uncertainty where stability is needed.

This bill also raises serious concerns about due process and constitutional rights. Expanding enforcement power without strong oversight puts civil liberties at risk and opens the door to government overreach. West Virginians value fairness, accountability, and clear limits on power, and this bill does not reflect those values.

Punitive, surveillance-based policies do not solve complex issues. They erode trust, push people into the shadows, and make communities weaker rather than stronger. Public policy should bring people together not drive them apart.

HB 4433 goes against values many West Virginians share: dignity, fairness, compassion, and respect for human rights. Our laws should protect families and strengthen community trust. This bill does neither.

I urge lawmakers to oppose HB 4433 and instead support solutions that uphold civil liberties, build trust, and reflect the best of who we are as West Virginians.

2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Heather Jackson on January 19, 2026 08:54
the state has big problems and this bill is doing nothing to help the residents of West Virginia. We are almost last in Education, we’re losing teachers left and right because of bad benefits and low pay, we have rising prices in electricity. Cost of childcare in the state is out of control.  The state is getting mega dollars from fracking but none of it is flowing to the residents.    Take care of the people that voted you in the office by addressing issues that affect our pocketbook and our day-to-day lives rather than wasting time and money on issues dictated to you by the current federal administration. Address the problems of the state of West Virginia and take care of your own
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rebekah Bostic on January 19, 2026 08:46
I would urge the legislature not to pass this bill. While I would agree with its title of preventing human trafficking, the actual substance of the bill is meant to criminalize giving aid to undocumented people, which unjustly villainizes undocumented people and shows an appalling lack of empathy. It should not be a crime to help one’s neighbor.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: James cochran on January 19, 2026 08:45
Dear WV Lawmakers,
Please be on the right side of history and stand up against  xenophobic authoritarianism. Leave our friends and neighbors from other countries alone so we can keep having good food, people to put roofs on our houses, etc.
As a West Virginian, I care about the safety and stability of my community. HB 4433 would create fear and uncertainty for families who live, work, and contribute here every day.
Punitive, surveillance based policies don’t solve complex issues. They erode trust and make communities weaker, not stronger.
Please oppose HB 4433 and support solutions that actually bring people together.
James
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Mariah A. Tanner-Hughes on January 19, 2026 08:44
Stop wasting time on this. Immigrants are not the problem--you people consistently making our lives worse from your offices are the problem. Ensure your constituents have housing, or that they can afford to make home repairs, do something to bring us back from the worst education standing in the US.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: rebekah aranda on January 19, 2026 08:42
Good Morning, HB 4433 was a harmful bill when it passed this committee and the House last year and it remains a harmful bill this year, especially since there is no exception for legal and health professionals which was added into last year's bill. I would urge you to consider the human implications of creating a law throwing otherwise innocent citizens into jail for years simply for helping members of their community. Supporting a neighbor who needs groceries or taking someone to a medical appointment is not the equivalent of human smuggling, but this law would make it so. Not to mention, whenever I meet someone who is from another country, I have never once asked them to show me their identification papers to determine their legal status in this country. It's ludicrous to think that I would do so before offering my kid's friend a ride to practice. Are we as West Virginians so afraid of immigrants that we would throw kindness and compassion out the window in order to make life as hard as possible for a group of people who primarily just want to live and work in our communities. This bill breeds, hatred, distrust and fear, none of which are West Virginia (or Christian) values. Please vote no on HB 4433
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Lisa Hines on January 19, 2026 08:42
This bill is unnecessary and out of touch with the real issues West Virginians are facing. HB 4433 doesn’t address affordability, healthcare, or community safety and it creates more problems instead.
Lawmakers should focus on real solutions, not policies that divide communities and waste time and resources. I strongly oppose HB 4433.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rev Johanna Marcure on January 19, 2026 08:41
I oppose this bill.  First:  all people need to be protected from sex trafficking.  Second: This bill makes undocumented workers even more susceptible to being sexed trafficked.  And third: equating giving an undocumented immigrant a ride with smuggling is ludicrous. Smuggling is a crime.  Giving someone a ride is being kind.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Sally Howard on January 19, 2026 08:40
Please do not pass this bill. It will, either intentionally or inadvertently, criminalized people just trying to help their neighbors. Not to mention, illegal immigration is hardly the most pressing issue this state has to deal with.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: SUSAN BENSON on January 19, 2026 08:40
Please, please, please do not pass this bill. To make helping another human, in whatever form that takes, against the law is not right. Stand up for human dignity and respect.
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Rebecca Teezise on January 19, 2026 08:32
Please do NOT pass this bill.  Persons being trafficked need our protection and support, as “persons” in this Country and state of WV.  They are trafficked against their will.  This bill goes way too far, making me a criminal if I help my neighbor!
2026 Regular Session HB4433 (Judiciary)
Comment by: Clara on January 19, 2026 08:31
As a West Virginian, I care about the safety and stability of my community. HB 4433 would create fear and uncertainty for families who live, work, and contribute here every day. Punitive, surveillance based policies don’t solve complex issues. They erode trust and make communities weaker, not stronger. Please oppose HB 4433 and support solutions that actually bring people together.