The Gracie Gato Podcast

Marsy’s Law, Money, and Power in New Hampshire

4 min · 28. jan. 2026
episode Marsy’s Law, Money, and Power in New Hampshire cover

Description

Marsy’s Law, Money, and Power in New Hampshire In this episode, I take a hard look at Marsy’s Law in New Hampshire—and the powerful network surrounding it, including Henry T. Nicholas III, Amanda Grady Sexton, and the New Hampshire Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence (NHCADSV). This is an examination of policy, funding, influence, and unintended consequences. We explore how victims’ rights legislation is shaped, who funds it, who benefits from it, and what happens when advocacy, politics, and money intersect without sufficient transparency. No conspiracy talk. No character trials. Just public records, ethical questions, and why scrutiny matters when laws affect due process, survivors, and the balance of power. Listen critically.

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7 episodes

episode “Rape Kit Rights in New Hampshire: A Conversation with Rep. Ellen Read” artwork

“Rape Kit Rights in New Hampshire: A Conversation with Rep. Ellen Read”

In this episode of The Gracie Gato Podcast, Gracie breaks down New Hampshire’s rape kit rights bill, HB1633, and asks a simple question: why is transparency around evidence still controversial? Forty-six states already have rape kit tracking or survivor notification laws. New Hampshire is still debating whether victims should have automatic rights to information about evidence collected in their name. Gracie contrasts the current bill with testimony from the 2023 version of the legislation (HB378), where confusion around definitions, survivor rights, and the role of evidence exposed a deeper tension: is the justice system centered on truth, or on protecting institutional control? State Representative Ellen Read joins the conversation as a key voice advocating for survivor access, accountability, and transparency. The episode explores how rape kit evidence should function in a justice system committed to both protecting victims and preserving due process — including the reality that evidence must serve truth, even when it complicates narratives. This episode sets the stage for a deeper investigation in the next installment, where Gracie follows the money, influence, and policy pipeline behind New Hampshire’s domestic violence and sexual assault advocacy ecosystem. Because evidence shouldn’t belong to institutions. It belongs to the truth.

29. jan. 202638 min
episode Marsy’s Law, Money, and Power in New Hampshire artwork

Marsy’s Law, Money, and Power in New Hampshire

Marsy’s Law, Money, and Power in New Hampshire In this episode, I take a hard look at Marsy’s Law in New Hampshire—and the powerful network surrounding it, including Henry T. Nicholas III, Amanda Grady Sexton, and the New Hampshire Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence (NHCADSV). This is an examination of policy, funding, influence, and unintended consequences. We explore how victims’ rights legislation is shaped, who funds it, who benefits from it, and what happens when advocacy, politics, and money intersect without sufficient transparency. No conspiracy talk. No character trials. Just public records, ethical questions, and why scrutiny matters when laws affect due process, survivors, and the balance of power. Listen critically.

28. jan. 20264 min