Failing to disclose one's positive HIV status to a sexual partner may be objectionable, but is prison the answer? Science and medicine suggest not.
/ By Jessica Wapner
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Kerry Thomas was diagnosed with human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, in 1988. He was 24 years old at the time, living in Boise, Idaho, and figuring out what he wanted to do with his life. Chasing memories of childhood years in Southeast Asia with his Air Force father, he’d decided to enlist. A military physician discovered the illness during Thomas’ medical exam. He was called back for a discussion and left the office rejected by the Air Force and with the understanding that he had less than two years to live.
A year later, Thomas — now struggling with drug and alcohol abuse — had
sex with his roommate, Amy Davis. Some weeks later, due to either
suspicion about Thomas’ claim that he had leukemia (her story), or anger
because Thomas wanted her to leave the apartment (his story), Davis
rummaged through his belongings and found the military document with his
HIV test results. In April of 1990, she went to the police and detailed
how Thomas had attempted to expose her to HIV — a new crime established
under a law approved by the Idaho state legislature just two years
earlier.
"Thomas’ son still has some photographs from the prison where he visited his father. “We both look lost,” said Nygil. “Just real sad.”
The ensuing investigation turned up eleven additional victims.
Although the exact details vary somewhat, all the reports note that
Thomas ejaculated inside the women without using a condom and without
disclosing his disease status. The charges, spanning from April 19 to
May 5, 1990, included statutory rape, because one of the women he’d
slept with was under age 18. In a deal struck with attorneys, Thomas
pleaded guilty to that charge, and the HIV-related charges were dropped.
He was sentenced to up to 15 years in prison, but was released after 19 months.
In 1996, Thomas — now married — was arrested again for having sex
without disclosing his HIV status. The victim was Camille Garver, who,
according to legal documents, described herself as a preoperative
transsexual. After meeting at a club in downtown Boise, the two spent
the night at Garver’s apartment and engaged in anal and oral sex. This
time, Thomas refused to plead guilty and the case went to trial. The
jury believed the victim and Thomas was sentenced to 15 years.
The trial took a toll on his wife, Felicia Wells, and the couple’s
two-year-old son, Nygil. “They ended up putting my address in the
newspaper,” said Wells, who knew of Thomas’ HIV status when they
married. She separated from Thomas and moved to Portland with Nygil,
whose earliest memories of his father take place in the prison’s
visitation room. He still has some photographs from those visits. “We
both look lost,” said Nygil, now 22. “Just real sad.”
Kerry Thomas holds his son, Nygil, in this photograph taken during a
prison visit in the mid-1990s. (All family images courtesy Nygil
Thomas).
Thomas has been imprisoned multiple times for failing to disclose his HIV status to a sexual partner.
Nygil and Thomas’ wife, Felicia Wells, shown here with Thomas in 2003, have stood by him, despite his multiple convictions.
Thomas, shown here with an older Nygil, is now serving a
30-year-sentence for failing to disclose his HIV status. The earliest he
might be released is 2029.
Thomas was paroled in 2003. Five years later, he began dating Diana
Anderson, a former co-worker at the real estate firm in Boise where he
worked as an administrator. In the early weeks of their relationship,
Anderson invited Thomas and a couple of friends to a yoga class. One of
the friends thought he recognized Thomas, and soon remembered who he
was: the sexual predator who spreads HIV.
On December 31, 2008, Anderson went to the police. Thomas, who had
been in Portland visiting his son, was arrested at the Boise airport
upon his return for violating his parole. A few weeks later, he was
charged with attempting to transfer HIV.
This time, on the advice of his lawyer, Thomas pleaded guilty to two
counts of HIV nondisclosure. The prosecutor, Jean Fisher, requested the
maximum 15 years for each of the two counts. The judge agreed. “You have
shown that you cannot be trusted in this community to not create other
victims,” he told Thomas. He sentenced Thomas to a total of 30 years,
with parole considered only after at least 20 years were served.
Nygil was in the courtroom that day. “I get why he took the plea,
otherwise he might have been there his whole life,” he told me. “But he
got his whole life anyway.”
Now 52 years old, Thomas will be in prison at least until the year 2029 and possibly until 2039.
Today, Thomas admits to only three instances of having sexual contact
without disclosing his HIV status, all within the two years following
his initial diagnosis in 1988. He also accepts the statutory rape
charge. But he disputes all of the other HIV-related charges and
accusations leveled against him over the decades, and after several
phone interviews with Thomas, a seven-hour visit with him in prison, and
having read piles of related court documents, news stories and police
reports, I still can’t pin down the truth.
One fact, though, remains undeniable: Kerry Thomas has never infected
a single person with HIV. Whatever one thinks of this man — whatever
judgments we attach to the way he’s lived his life and the decisions
he’s made along the way — that fact matters. It may be the only one that
does.
States with at least one criminal statute targeting HIV
At least 30 states currently have statutes on the books that specifically forbid people infected with HIV from potentially exposing others to the virus. Several more states prosecute under broader communicable disease laws — and all of these laws persist despite what is now decades of scientific knowledge putting the virulence of HIV well below a menagerie of other common pathogens. Hepatitis B, for example, is another sexually transmitted virus with potentially life-threatening consequences, and while some states do include hepatitis B in their non-disclosure statutes, failure to admit an infection to a sexual partner is rarely, if ever, prosecuted.
Similarly, a person who knowingly boards a subway while sick with the flu can very easily infect — even inadvertently kill — an elderly person with a weakened immune system, all with a single cough. But a sniffling commuter would never be arrested, let alone charged with a felony.
In contrast, those convicted of HIV-related offenses can, like Thomas, face decades of life behind bars. Some states require people convicted for HIV-related crimes to register as sex offenders — a punishment sometimes worse than prison time.
An exact count of arrests and convictions under these laws is impossible to make because the data aren’t available and many defendants plead guilty to lesser charges. Some states, such as New York, prosecute HIV nondisclosure with regular felony laws. The Center for HIV Law & Policy, a legal aid service, counted 226 arrests or prosecutions between 2008 and 2015. A 2010 report on HIV criminalization by the Global Network of People Living With HIV estimated the total number of prosecutions at more than 400 and total number of convictions at more than 300. According to the United Nations, many of these rulings carried sentences of 25 years or longer. A recent ProPublica investigation found more than 500 convictions between 2003 and 2013.
Whatever the real number, AIDS activists — and most researchers familiar with the disease — say it is too high, and they insist that the laws are an affront not just to human rights, but to science itself. Some signs of reform have begun to emerge, but the stigma of HIV — born out of a lingering mix of early-epidemic hysteria and banal racism, classism, and homophobia — is a high hurdle.
“Any law that criminalizes behavior based on the medical condition of HIV,” wrote Eve Hill, Deputy Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, in a statement provided for this story, “should reflect the modern science of actual risk of transmission.”
To date, most laws do not.
Treatment, of course, is not curative. No matter how low the viral load gets, HAART can never eliminate the infection because some of the virus exists in a latent form. That is, anyone infected with HIV carries with them some virus that, while not actively replicating, remains dormant inside the T cells. HAART can’t target particles that aren’t replicating, and some T helper cells are long lived. To make matters worse, these latently infected cells may be cloned, so even their death does not end the disease.
Latent HIV is one reason why the infection risk is not zero. Another reason is the “blip.” Someone with years of viral suppression can occasionally have a sudden increase in viral load. Skipping medication for a day can lead to such a blip, as can the presence of another infection, like a cold, or a flu shot. Blips disappear and don’t cause long-term damage, but they can be unpredictable.
Undiagnosed disease also poses an obvious infection risk. Soon after the virus colonizes a new host, it replicates in skyrocketing amounts. The first weeks following an infection are the most dangerous in terms of transmission because the viral load is exceptionally high, and however advanced the antiretroviral regimen, unprotected sex with someone who is HIV positive does carry some risk.
“The standard recommendation that I still give to all my patients is use barrier protection,” said Dobkin.
Fauci also cautions that the threat of HIV infection from any given sexual encounter depends on several factors, such as the presence of another sexually transmitted disease, like genital ulcers. Having multiple sex partners matters, too. “Sometimes it’s one in a thousand sexual acts,” Fauci said. “Sometimes it’s one in a hundred.
“Sometimes,” he added, “you’re unlucky.”
This is precisely why discussing and disclosing any potentially transmissible illnesses with intimate partners is encouraged by public health officials. And yet, while laws and public health measures have been enacted around some other communicable diseases, such as tuberculosis, no other disease has been as aggressively criminalized as HIV — even though the virus today is a manageable disease that, when treatment and prevention are used, is exceedingly difficult to transmit.
Kerry Thomas has been in the legal system for half his life, and as of now, he will be incarcerated until he is at least 65 years old. He was locked up when his mother died, and he remained behind bars when he became a grandfather in September 2015.
On the day I visited him in prison in May of last year — and over several phone calls — Thomas was friendly and warm, but also reserved. He mixed earnest reflections with wistful humor as he recounted his version of the circumstances surrounding his various arrests, and his feelings on HIV criminalization laws in general. “The way that these statutes are prosecuted is, in a sense, saying that people who have HIV can’t live a normal life,” he said.
Thomas now serves on the board of the Sero Project, a nonprofit organization that advocates against HIV criminalization laws, and he has delivered telephone addresses from his confinement in Idaho to conferences in the U.S. and abroad. He says he is in good health and that he sees a physician just once a year.
As Thomas likes to say, the only side effect he’s ever experienced from his disease is the legal system.
“The stigma surrounding [HIV] has been my biggest burden,” he said.
That stigma, along with the criminalization of HIV transmission that it engendered, rose directly out of the earliest days of the AIDS epidemic, which were drenched in hysteria. Even though casual contact was ruled out as a threat by 1983, little could be done to quell the fear of catching AIDS from everyday encounters. When parents panicked and forced the closing of a New York City public school after a single second-grader — in another, undisclosed school — was diagnosed with the disease, a 1985 headline in TIME magazine referred to AIDS patients as “The New Untouchables.”
That same year, a Los Angeles Times poll found that of 2,308 people surveyed, more than half favored quarantining anyone who tested positive for HIV. About 15 percent of respondents thought infected people should be tattooed to warn future sex partners or needle sharers.
Although the concept of the “AIDS predator” was already looming in the American imagination, the introduction of Gaetan Dugas gave credence and shape to that fear. Dugas was an HIV-positive flight attendant from Quebec who’d had sex with 40 of the first 248 AIDS patients in the United States. The CDC had identified Dugas during its early contact-tracing, which led the agency to conclude the disease was sexually transmitted. But it was the journalist Randy Shilts’ book “And the Band Played On,” which chronicled the early years of the epidemic, that brought Dugas to national attention.
Religious protestors outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral during a Gay Pride march in Manhattan, New York City, June 1985. Visual by Barbara Alper/Getty Images |
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