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De: "Rachel Jacobson"
Sujet: Conviction for reckless HIV transmission relies on confession and results in one year in jail
Envoyé: Nov 26th, 2008 - 17:22:49

  Conviction for reckless HIV transmission relies on confession and results
in one year in jail

*Michael Carter*, Monday, November 24, 2008
An HIV-positive man has become the first individual to be convicted for
recklessly infecting a sexual partner with HIV since the Crown Prosecution
Service produced guidance on the offence for police and prosecutors earlier
this year. The conviction comes days after the imprisonment of an individual
for recklessly infecting his sexual partner with hepatitis
B.


The 41-year-old individual pleaded guilty to the offence and was sentenced
to one year in prison at Preston Crown Court.

Details of the case are sketchy, but the court was told the individual, who
has haemophilia and acquired his HIV infection from infected blood products
in his late teens, and is thought to have infected his long-term female
partner between 1994 and 1996. The couple first met in 1993, subsequently
separating for a time before the relationship finally ended in 2000. The
convicted individual never disclosed his HIV infection to his partner
because of the stigma attached to HIV. Condoms were used at the start of the
relationship, but as the relationship developed the couple had unprotected
sex.

Shortly after the final separation, the man's female partner was diagnosed
with HIV as was a subsequent male partner she is said to have transmitted
the virus to.

The first conviction for HIV transmission in the UK for over a year, the
case will be of concern to campaigners. Worryingly, the case appears to have
strong similarities with early convictions for reckless HIV transmission,
relying on a guilty plea and vague "scientific evidence". There will be
concerns about the nature and quality of the legal advice the accused
received.

The Crown Prosecution Service's own guidance for bringing cases of reckless
HIV transmission acknowledge how difficult it is for scientific evidence to
prove transmission. Charges of reckless HIV transmission have been
successfully defended after well-briefed defence teams used expert
virological evidence to show that the tests used by the prosecution are not
able to prove transmission between two
individuals.


It is of note that the one year sentence in this latest case is much shorter
than those handed down in any of the previous cases ending in a conviction
of reckless HIV transmission.

This may have been because the accused acquired his HIV infection from
infected blood products. In his sentencing comments, Judge Andrew Woolman
said: "You were the victim of both haemophilia and from the misfortune of
being given infected blood", adding "it is a tragedy that I have to be
sentencing you at all."

--
Rachel M Jacobson
Program Director
Global Youth Coalition on HIV/AIDS
www.iAIDS.org | www.youthaidscoalition.org




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