The married Ohio man is also accused of not telling her he was living with the virus.
June 12, 2017
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A married man living with HIV has been charged with murder after a
woman with whom he was having a long-term affair died of AIDS-related
illness, reports The Associated Press. The man, Ronald Murdock, is accused of not telling his girlfriend, Kimberly Klempner, that he was HIV positive.
Bond was set at $1.5 million in the Toledo, Ohio, case. Murdock is also charged with felonious assault.
According
to the AP, Murdock’s wife found out about the five-year affair and told
Klempner that Murdock had HIV. Klempner’s son, Josh, said that by the
time his mother learned about the situation, it was way too late.
The Toledo Blade reports
that Josh Klempner testified in court that his mother had been living
with Crohn’s disease and discovered her HIV status when the Crohn’s meds
stopped working and she became sick.
In Ohio,
according to the Blade, people living with HIV who don’t disclose their
status before having sex can be charged with felonious assault.
Neither
of the articles mentions whether the man was taking antiretrovirals for
his HIV or what his viral load was. (People with HIV who take daily
meds and maintain an undetectable viral load have virtually zero chance
of passing along the virus.)
Apparently, this is the
first such case in Lucas County to result in a murder charge; such
charges are uncommon across the nation.
In California,
the Senate just passed legislation to make intentionally infecting
someone with HIV a misdemeanor instead of a felony. For more, click here. To read the HIV Justice Network’s coverage of Canada’s first murder trial for sexual transmission of HIV click here. And for a roundup of similar POZ articles, click #Criminalization.
Read more articles from POZ, here.
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