What does this mean? What effects are you talking about here?
Let me try to explain it this way. Imagine an electric field between two plates of metal. The field is there because the plates are charged (one positive and one negative). If the field gets strong enough, the air in between the plates will ionize and a spark will jump from one plate to the other and discharge part of the field. That's an example where the relevant laws of physics describing the region between the plates changed dramatically when the field got very strong. Of course we know what and how and why in that case, but only because we've been able to experiment with air, we know how it ionizes, what it's made of, etc.
That same effect - ionization and discharge - can happen even if there is a
perfect vacuum between the plates. The reason is quantum mechanics. Even a perfect vacuum is actually constantly boiling with electron-positron pairs that appear and annihilate. Normally this happens so fast you can't notice it - but if the electric field gets strong enough it will pull those pairs apart and send them to the plates, where they will partially discharge them. So if the field is strong enough even the
vacuum ionizes.
What does this have to do with black hole singularities? Well, if the gravity field is strong enough, one should expect effects like this. Pairs of.... something should appear, annihilate, and disappear - but if the field is strong enough, they should have a strong and lasting effect. It's not clear how to "discharge" a singularity, because there is no known negative "charge" in gravity (energies are positive), but there should still be some kind of effect analogous to the vacuum ionizing. That effect, whatever it is, shouldn't be confined to the singular point, it should extend around it in the region where the field is sufficiently strong.
What I was wondering is if the gravitational forces could get so high as to cause the velocity of the falling body to exceed the speed of light.
Measured from infinity, that happens at the horizon (which can be very far from the singularity). That's another way of saying that the horizon is the surface from which light cannot escape. Measured locally by the infalling observer it never happens, although of course at some point she will be torn apart and find it difficult to make accurate measurements.