A survivor is sharing her concerns over a proposed parole reform bill in New York state.

On Valentine’s Day in 2009, Audra Dillon and her then-boyfriend Randal Norman were driving past what is now Strong West in Brockport, when they witnessed a man assaulting a woman by the name of Mary Silliman.

They tried to intervene, but the man — Frank Garcia — shot all three of them. Only Audra survived.

“I’m still here,” Dillon said. “I’m still sitting here. But there are days where I don’t get out of bed. There are days that I’m depressed. I’m worried about my grandchildren. I worry about my daughter.”

Garcia went on to kill two others that night, and is now serving a sentence of 25-to-life in prison.

But Garcia could be eligible for parole if a new criminal justice reform bill is passed, which would grant any incarcerated person 55 or older a parole hearing if they’ve served at least 15 years.

“Angry. Scared. Not just for myself but — it seems impossible, it seems ... you know, why? Why? Why?” Dillon said.

She says seeing Garcia in the news Thursday in relation to this bill has been re-traumatizing.

“You think it’s all over,” Dillon said. “You think it’s all said and done. Here we are, like 12 years later, and all of a sudden he’s on TV. No notice, no nothing. It’s shocking.”

She spent all of Friday morning on the phone with lawmakers, asking them to consider victims like her before moving forward with such a bill.

Now she’s working on a petition, and is asking for the community’s help in reaching out to legislators too.

“Please don’t let this bill go through,” Dillon said. “I’m begging you. Talk to law enforcement. Talk to your congressmen.”

Advocates of the bill say there is no guarantee of release, and there’s no need to fear the bill, which aims to help address mass incarceration in the state.

But Dillon says if it passes, she’ll be leaving New York.

“I have a life sentence, he should have more,” Dillon said. “I have a life sentence dealing with what I’m dealing with. I lost a lot. What has he lost?”