[WeSurviveAbuse.com] There are women today who believe that feminism is no longer needed.But sometimes the only reason it feels unnecessary is beca
[WeSurviveAbuse.com]
There are women today who believe that feminism is no longer needed.
But sometimes the only reason it feels unnecessary is because you are walking a little safer on roads other women built with their lives.
One of those women was Sandra “Sandy” Berfield.
đWho Was Sandy?
Sandy Berfield was a hardworking waitress in Massachusetts. She had recently suffered the heartbreaking loss of her child and was doing her best to rebuild her life. But even in her grief, she was not left alone.
She was being stalkedârelentlessly and obsessivelyâby a man she barely knew from work. An acquaintance. Someone she had no close relationship with.
And yet, he would not leave her alone.
đŤ The Law Failed Her
At that time, Massachusetts law only allowed restraining orders against people with whom the victim had:
A familial relationship
A romantic or intimate relationship
Lived in the same household
So even though this man was stalking Sandy, threatening her, and escalating his behaviorâshe could not get a criminally enforceable protection order.
There was no legal recognition of the danger she was in.
No paperwork.
No police backup.
No justice system built for her.
Sandy tried everything she could.
She fought.
She warned others.
She tried to protect herself.
But the law refused to listen.
đĽ Her Death Was Preventable
In 2000, Sandy Berfield was murdered when a package bomb was delivered to her homeâsent by the man who had been stalking her.
He had fixated on her.
He had targeted her.
And the law had failed to recognize the threat until it was far too late.
âď¸ The Law ChangedâBecause People Refused to Forget
In the wake of Sandyâs murder, advocates, lawmakers, and Survivors came together to fight for what shouldâve already been obvious:
Stalking is real.
Control doesnât require romance.
Violence doesnât care about legal definitions.
As a result, Sandyâs Law was passed in Massachusetts in 2010, expanding the ability of stalking and sexual assault victims to obtain restraining orders even when no intimate relationship existed.
This was a major victoryânot just for Massachusetts women, but for anyone whose safety has ever been threatened by a neighbor, co-worker, acquaintance, or stranger.
đ§đž A Reminder for This Generation
Some women believe they donât âneedâ feminism anymore.
They say, âWe have rights now.â
But those rights didnât just appear.
They were earned.
Fought for.
And yes, sometimes bought with the lives of women who had no protection when they needed it most.
đĄ Because of Sandy:
Stalking laws were reformed
The definition of “abuser” was expanded
Survivors now have more options and more power to seek safety
Another woman might live because of what Sandy went through
âThe law didnât protect Sandy. So her family and caring crew changed the law. Let her name be remembered as a turning pointânot just a tragedy.â
â WeSurviveAbuse.com