 Cal EMA logo, California Emergency Management Agency, California Victims Rights March. I want to welcome all of you this morning to the Sacramento headquarters of our program. And thank you very much for joining us this morning as we observe California National Crime Victims Rights Month. It's a privilege to be here today to honor the strength and the voice of the victims that are going to share their stories with us. Those are the stories that provide our team the inspiration, the strength, the motivation and the dedication and the compassion that our staff has in serving the victims of crime and their families. Crowds mingle and look at photographs of victims mounted on signposts. This is not about my story. My rape is really one of millions. Most stories remain untold. We stand united, shoulder to shoulder. Evil has affected you in so many profound ways, but justice is also affecting you. And through your solidarity, you can find the resources, the spiritual energy to overcome. Yes, you may never forget. Yes, the pain may never entirely go away. But just as in baptism itself, we renew ourselves not by our will, but by the grace of God. And I invoke that today as we ask to overcome this horrible pain that you've all experienced. We will overcome. It will be better. And while evil will not be overcome entirely in this life, we do not have to be overcome by it. And that's what we celebrate and recognize today. Thank you very much. For more information, visit CalEMA.ca.gov at CalEMA on Twitter. CalEMA logo, California Emergency Management Agency.