A chapter from the book The War on Sex edited by David M. Halperin and Trevor Hoppe.
March 27, 2017
•
By
Sean Strub
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Iowan Nick Rhoades is HIV-positive and has had an undetectable viral
load for many years, making it virtually impossible for him to sexually
transmit the virus. When he had sex with a man he met online in 2008, he
also used a condom. Despite these protective measures, Rhoades was
prosecuted and convicted for not disclosing his HIV status to his
partner before they had sex. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison and
lifetime sex offender registration.
Willy Campbell is
serving 35 years in Texas for spitting at a police officer; David
Plunkett served over six years in a New York state prison before an
appeals court ruled that saliva could not be considered a “deadly
weapon” in New York State. Monique Howell Moree was charged by the U.S.
Army for failing to disclosure her HIV-positive status to a partner in
South Carolina before having sex with him, even though the partner said
he didn’t want her charged and that she told him to use a condom. Kerry
Thomas is serving 30 years in Idaho, even though his accuser agrees that
he always used a condom.
All over the United States —
and in much of the world — people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHIV) are
facing criminal penalties for nondisclosure of their HIV status prior to
having sex or for perceived or possible exposure to, or transmission
of, HIV. About two-thirds of U.S. states have HIV-specific criminal
statutes, laws that only apply to PLHIV.
Most
people believe the law should apply equally to all and that creating
different statutes for different parts of society based on immutable
characteristics — whether it is gender, sexual orientation, race,
physical ability, or genetic makeup — is a bad idea. Yet here we are
doing exactly that, creating a viral underclass in the law with one
group singled out for different treatment.
Sero
Project, a network of PLHIV combating HIV criminalization, has
documented more than 1,300 instances of charges led under HIV-specific
statutes. But HIV criminalization isn’t constrained by geography; in
every state, regardless of whether there is an HIV-specific statute,
PLHIV can and often do face more serious charges or harsher sentencing
under regular criminal statutes than do HIV-negative individuals accused
of the same crimes. Texas and New York do not have HIV-specific
statutes, but as mentioned, have incarcerated PLHIV because they
considered their saliva dangerous.
These statutes and
prosecutions create an illusion of safety for those who do not have HIV
or do not know their HIV status, putting the entire burden of HIV
prevention on those who have been tested and know they have HIV. The
statutes undercut the fundamental public health message that HIV
prevention is a shared responsibility and that everyone should act in
such a way as to maintain their own health and protect themselves from
contracting HIV or other sexually transmitted infections.
Decades-long
sentencing and required sex offender registration are not unusual
punishments for HIV-related crimes in the United States, even though
actual HIV transmission is seldom (less than 5 percent of cases) a
factor in these prosecutions. Many cases boil down to whether the PLHIV
can prove they disclosed their status to their partners in advance of
intimate physical contact; it doesn’t matter whether there was even a
risk of HIV transmission. People living with HIV charged under
prostitution or assault statutes frequently face significantly more
severe penalties solely because they have HIV. They sometimes face
charges for spitting, scratching, or biting that are “pile-on” charges,
driven by accusations made by law enforcement, first responders, or
prison guards.
The first HIV criminalization laws in
the United States were passed in the late 1980s and early ’90s, largely
in response to a provision of the Ryan White Care Act that required
states, in order to qualify for funding, to demonstrate an ability to
prosecute what was then labeled “intentional transmission.” At the time
many considered any intimate contact with an HIV-positive
person a life-threatening risk; contracting HIV was believed by many to
be tantamount to a death sentence.
A second wave of
statutes was enacted after the introduction of combination therapy in
the mid-1990s, which fundamentally changed what an HIV-positive
diagnosis meant. What was once thought a death sentence had become a
chronic but manageable long-term health condition.
As
it became understood that PLHIV were surviving much longer, the public’s
perception of PLHIV also changed. Rather than objects of pity facing a
“death sentence,” PLHIV became seen as viral vectors, potential
infectors — an inherent threat to society. Living longer meant PLHIV
would be around longer to infect others.
The criminal
justice and public health systems began to define and treat PLHIV as a
dangerous population, one that needed to be sought out, tracked down,
tested, reported, listed, tagged, monitored, regulated, and,
increasingly, criminalized.
While the statutes were
used in the early years disproportionately often against heterosexual
African American men (often in conjunction with other criminal charges),
today they are used more broadly, typically in circumstances where
there was no intent to harm, often when there was no other crime
involved, and frequently for behaviors that pose no or little risk of
HIV transmission.
Beyond the blatant injustice, HIV
criminalization is also horrible public health policy, because it
discourages people at risk from getting tested for HIV and makes those
who do test positive less trustful of public health authorities.
To
be liable for prosecution, one must get tested for HIV and know one’s
HIV status. Current HIV criminalization punishes this responsible
behavior — getting tested — and privileges the ignorance of not knowing
one’s HIV status. Yet new cases of HIV are transmitted in
disproportionate numbers by those who have not been tested and do not
know they have it; those who do get tested and know they have HIV are
far less likely to transmit HIV than those with HIV who do not know it.
Although
the HIV-specific statutes were passed by state legislatures with the
intent to reduce HIV transmission, the evidence increasingly shows that
the statutes may be having the reverse effect.
The Sero
Project’s 2012 survey of more than 2,000 PLHIV in the United States
revealed that at least 25 percent of the respondents knew one or more
individuals who were afraid to get tested for fear of facing
criminalization. Research has shown that HIV criminalization makes those
who do test positive for HIV less likely to cooperate with traditional
disease prevention measures, like partner notification programs, or with
treatment adherence programs. Most recently, a study found that
HIV-negative gay men who knew they lived in a state with an HIV
criminalization statute were more likely to engage in unprotected
intercourse.
Repeal of HIV criminalization statutes is
necessary both to protect the rights of people with HIV and to reduce
the transmission of HIV.
An individual who demonstrates
a premeditated malicious intent to harm another person can be
prosecuted under existing assault statutes, whether they use a gun, a
baseball bat, their fists, or a virus. The HIV-specific statutes are
unnecessary and, worse yet, they stigmatize people with HIV/AIDS,
discourage people at risk from accessing testing and treatment services,
and feed a public bloodlust for punishment. In short, they are
worsening the epidemic.
The prevention of HIV — or
preventing any sexually transmitted infection — is a shared
responsibility, but that does not mean there is not harm inflicted when
someone misleads another person and transmits an infectious disease. In
those circumstances, the injured party may seek recourse in the civil
courts or possibly through a restorative justice process.
In any
case, incarceration of PLHIV does not necessarily prevent further HIV
transmission, as there is significant HIV transmission within penal
environments, where condoms are seldom available.
Advocacy
to repeal HIV-specific statutes, modernize public health statutes
concerning perceived or possible exposure to, or transmission of, HIV
and other infectious diseases, and educate law enforcement, prosecutors,
and other actors in the criminal justice system has been under way for
several years.
A network of survivors of HIV
criminalization prosecutions, launched in 2010, has helped to educate
and mobilize affected communities. This HIV criminalization reform
advocacy has received support from public health professionals and
policy leaders, including the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS,
the National Alliance of State and Territorial AIDS Directors, UNAIDS,
and the American Medical Association.
The first
national conference on HIV criminalization in the United States was held
in June 2014 at Grinnell College in Grinnell, Iowa. Organized primarily
by PLHIV — including participation by a dozen PLHIV who had been
prosecuted for “HIV crimes” — the conference included participants from
28 states. It focused on how HIV criminalization affects communities of
color, transgender women, sex workers, and gay men. It also showed the
impact of HIV criminalization on how members of those communities (and
others) access HIV prevention, testing, and treatment and whether they
decide to disclose their HIV status. Finally, the conference highlighted
effective strategies for reform.
The only state, so
far, to modernize their statute substantively in recent years has been
Iowa, where the conference was held. After a four-year education and
lobbying effort led by Nick Rhoades and other PLHIV in the state, the
Iowa legislature repealed its HIV-specific statute in 2014. The
legislature replaced it with a new statute that addressed several
infectious diseases, required a higher standard of intent to harm, and
established tiered punishments. Similar efforts are under way in about a
dozen states. A few weeks later, the Iowa Supreme Court overturned
Rhoades’s conviction and removed the sex offender registration
requirement for all others previously convicted under the Iowa statute.
HIV
criminalization is an extreme manifestation of stigma. That is
particularly true of HIV-specific statutes that create a viral
underclass in the law, establishing a different criminal law for one
segment of society based on an immutable characteristic. Despite the
biomedical advances in the treatment of HIV, HIV-related stigma remains
stubborn, driven in significant part by HIV criminalization.
It is time we learned a basic lesson: HIV can be prevented or it can be prosecuted, but not both.
Sean Strub is executive director of the Sero Project and the founder of POZ. He is the author of Body Counts: A Memoir of Politics, Sex, AIDS, and Survival.
The War on Sex
contains two additional pieces on HIV criminalization: Gregory Tomso’s
chapter, “HIV Monsters: Gay Men, Criminal Law, and the New Political
Economy of HIV,” and Hans Tao-Ming Huang’s essay, “HIV Care as Social
Rehabilitation: Medical Governance, the AIDS Surveillance Industry, and
Therapeutic Citizenship in Neoliberal Taiwan.”
POZ readers are offered a 30 percent discount on their purchase of The War on Sex. Click here to order and use coupon code E17POZ to receive the discount.
Book Description: The past 50 years are
conventionally understood to have witnessed an uninterrupted expansion
of sexual rights and liberties in the United States. This
state-of-the-art collection tells a different story: while progress has
been made in marriage equality, reproductive rights, access to birth
control, and other areas, government and civil society are waging a war
on stigmatized sex by means of law, surveillance, and social control.
The contributors document the history and operation of sex offender
registries and the criminalization of HIV, as well as highly punitive
measures against sex work that do more to harm women than to combat
human trafficking. They reveal that sex crimes are punished more harshly
than other crimes, while new legal and administrative regulations
drastically restrict who is permitted to have sex. By examining how the
ever-intensifying war on sex affects both privileged and marginalized
communities, the essays collected here show why sexual liberation is
indispensable to social justice and human rights.
Contributors:
Alexis Agathocleous, Elizabeth Bernstein, J. Wallace Borchert, Mary
Anne Case, Scott De Orio, David M. Halperin, Amber Hollibaugh, Trevor
Hoppe, Hans Tao-Ming Huang, Regina Kunzel, Roger N. Lancaster, Judith
Levine, Laura Mansnerus, Owen Daniel McCarter, Erica R. Meiners, R.
Noll, Melissa Petro, Carol Queen, Penelope Saunders, Sean Strub, Maurice
Tomlinson, Gregory Tomso
About The Editors: David
M. Halperin is W. H. Auden Distinguished University Professor of the
History and Theory of Sexuality in the English Department at the
University of Michigan and the author, most recently, of How to Be Gay.Trevor Hoppe is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University at Albany, State University of New York, and author of Punishing Disease.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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