Require a Domestic Violence Offenders Registry

Recent signers:
Renee Johnson and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The Systemic Loophole and The Demand for Transparency

​Domestic violence is not just a private tragedy; it is a public safety crisis. While anyone can find themselves trapped in the cycle of abuse, the burden of survival, relocation, and protection falls overwhelmingly on vulnerable partners and mothers who are forced to navigate a justice system that shields offenders. The trauma of coercive control and physical violence leaves lifelong scars. But perhaps the most terrifying reality is that under current legal frameworks, an abuser's next partner is practically guaranteed to have zero warning.

The Era of Hidden Records

In the United States, the statistics are an epidemic: according to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, one in four women and one in nine men experience severe intimate partner physical violence. Yet, the current justice system operates on a policy of concealment.

​In the state of Indiana, data confirms a nearly 60% domestic violence recidivism rate—meaning repeat offenses are the standard, not the exception. Despite this, the public is legally forbidden from seeing the warning signs. Through pre-plea diversions and statutes like IC 35-38-9, violent charges are routinely downgraded to misdemeanors or quietly sealed to protect the offender’s "reputation and future." The courts are clearing their dockets by drawing a legal curtain over the domestic sphere, effectively prioritizing an abuser's privacy over community safety.

​Unplugging the Seismograph

A seismic fault line does not cease to exist simply because the state refuses to ink it on a map. Sealing domestic violence records does not stabilize the threat; it merely unplugs the seismograph. Abusers are allowed to legally manufacture a clean slate, leaving the next unsuspecting citizen to navigate the fallout blind.

​The blueprint for change already exists. In 2026, Tennessee launched the nation's first public DV Registry, proving that state-level offender transparency is both legally feasible and deeply effective. Meanwhile, Indiana citizens are still forced into the dark.

The INDVOR Initiative Demand

We cannot stand idly by as the burden of safety is placed entirely on the victims. The INDVOR Initiative is petitioning lawmakers to close the sealed-record loopholes and establish a comprehensive, publicly accessible Domestic Violence Offender Registry in Indiana, laying the groundwork for federal reform.

​A public database will serve as a critical preventive measure—deterring offenders, aiding law enforcement in identifying violent patterns, and most importantly, empowering citizens with the right to know exactly who they are bringing into their homes.

​You cannot protect yourself from a threat the state is actively hiding. Sign this petition to demand policy precedent. Let's map the fractures, close the loopholes, and ensure our communities have the right to bloom in safety.

 

Find us on Instagram: @in.dvor

 

🔗 Donate via our Website: https://www.indvor.org/donate

 

🔗 Donate via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EAWJ68TMWD5ZC

4,679

Recent signers:
Renee Johnson and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The Systemic Loophole and The Demand for Transparency

​Domestic violence is not just a private tragedy; it is a public safety crisis. While anyone can find themselves trapped in the cycle of abuse, the burden of survival, relocation, and protection falls overwhelmingly on vulnerable partners and mothers who are forced to navigate a justice system that shields offenders. The trauma of coercive control and physical violence leaves lifelong scars. But perhaps the most terrifying reality is that under current legal frameworks, an abuser's next partner is practically guaranteed to have zero warning.

The Era of Hidden Records

In the United States, the statistics are an epidemic: according to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, one in four women and one in nine men experience severe intimate partner physical violence. Yet, the current justice system operates on a policy of concealment.

​In the state of Indiana, data confirms a nearly 60% domestic violence recidivism rate—meaning repeat offenses are the standard, not the exception. Despite this, the public is legally forbidden from seeing the warning signs. Through pre-plea diversions and statutes like IC 35-38-9, violent charges are routinely downgraded to misdemeanors or quietly sealed to protect the offender’s "reputation and future." The courts are clearing their dockets by drawing a legal curtain over the domestic sphere, effectively prioritizing an abuser's privacy over community safety.

​Unplugging the Seismograph

A seismic fault line does not cease to exist simply because the state refuses to ink it on a map. Sealing domestic violence records does not stabilize the threat; it merely unplugs the seismograph. Abusers are allowed to legally manufacture a clean slate, leaving the next unsuspecting citizen to navigate the fallout blind.

​The blueprint for change already exists. In 2026, Tennessee launched the nation's first public DV Registry, proving that state-level offender transparency is both legally feasible and deeply effective. Meanwhile, Indiana citizens are still forced into the dark.

The INDVOR Initiative Demand

We cannot stand idly by as the burden of safety is placed entirely on the victims. The INDVOR Initiative is petitioning lawmakers to close the sealed-record loopholes and establish a comprehensive, publicly accessible Domestic Violence Offender Registry in Indiana, laying the groundwork for federal reform.

​A public database will serve as a critical preventive measure—deterring offenders, aiding law enforcement in identifying violent patterns, and most importantly, empowering citizens with the right to know exactly who they are bringing into their homes.

​You cannot protect yourself from a threat the state is actively hiding. Sign this petition to demand policy precedent. Let's map the fractures, close the loopholes, and ensure our communities have the right to bloom in safety.

 

Find us on Instagram: @in.dvor

 

🔗 Donate via our Website: https://www.indvor.org/donate

 

🔗 Donate via PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=EAWJ68TMWD5ZC

The Decision Makers

Todd Barton
Crawfordsville City Mayor
Responded
Thanks for reaching out. I looked at it [petition] and I am generally supportive of the concept if the database is based on convictions and is applied equally to both men and women who have been convicted. However, this isn’t an issue for which local legislation can be passed in Indiana. The request needs to be shared with state legislators. Thanks, Todd D. Barton Mayor City of Crawfordsville Note: The Change.org Civic Engagement Team reaches out to decision makers to let them know about petitions in their community and to help facilitate engagement with supporters. This was an email response we received regarding this petition.
U.S. House of Representatives
2 Members
Jim Baird
U.S. House of Representatives - Indiana 4th Congressional District
André Carson
U.S. House of Representatives - Indiana 7th Congressional District
Indiana State Senate
6 Members
Jeffrey Raatz
Indiana State Senate - District 27
Greg Taylor
Indiana State Senate - District 33
Aaron Freeman
Indiana State Senate - District 32
Indiana House of Representatives
3 Members
Carey Hamilton
Indiana House of Representatives - District 87
Phil GiaQuinta
Indiana House of Representatives - District 80
Cherrish Pryor
Indiana House of Representatives - District 94
Crawfordsville City Council
2 Members
Mike Reidy
Crawfordsville City Council - At Large
Andrew Biddle
Crawfordsville City Council - At Large

Supporter Voices

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Petition created on December 29, 2025